DJ MAJ
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Artist: DJ Maj
Genre: Rap
Label: Gotee
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Orbiting around DJ Maj's prodigious, red-hot remix talents is a single,
burning question—and Maj knows exactly what it is. '"Who
is he?'" Maj imagines his fans remarking. "'I see him on the
CD covers, but I rarely hear him on the record.' People have been wanting
to know who DJ Maj really is—well, this album is me. It reflects
my personality. Before I was the conductor—but this is the Maj
album."
After years of successfully twisting, turning, and transforming other
artists' hit tracks into gems, DJ Maj shines up his own set of jewels
as MC with BoogiRoot—a head-turning testament not only to Maj's
talent for skillfully laying down rhymes on the studio mic but also
for penning complex, literate, miles-deep lyrics. It's the kind of album
that inspires as much (or more) attention to every last word as the
beats and melodies themselves.
The instrumentally spare opening track, "Rated R," hints
at what's to come. After dcTalk's Michael Tait's brief tongue-in-cheek
intro, Maj cranks up the metaphor knob with a vengeance as he gradually
and poetically reveals the meaning behind the album's core theme: turn
it up so all my people can see the secret of the BoogiRoot is the grave
empty…
Maj builds on the theme of life and life everlasting with the title
track, "BoogiRoot (The Anthem)," a brightly rhythmic tune
that finds Maj taking on the role of a party herald to a diverse, worldwide
crowd that hasn't yet found its way to the shindig: the party's on LA
to Queen's Bridge/Miami Chitown Houston Phoenix/so shake your melon
from innocent to felon / and respect the veteran reverend from the pelican
/ I'm repping for the haters who cannot get in / keeping my hands in
the air 'til they all get it…
"BoogiRoot is a play on words," Maj explains. "In one
sense it's a kind of ingredient—just like the ginger root or beet
root, the Boogiroot is my spice that I'm putting in the culture from
a hip-hop perspective. In nature, the root goes to places the rest of
the plant or tree can't go—yet it remains a part of the greater
plant body. The nutrient finder and provider. Same truths, same nutrients,
different perspective. I feel in my gut that this record has the potential
to go places where others haven't gone—I want to bring spiritual
nutrition to culture as a whole. And the boogie part is just me saying
that we should all have a good time while we're getting the message,"
he adds with a chuckle.
The album's first single, "Love (So Beautiful)"—which
chronicles a couple's lifelong love—is a grand example of Maj's
storytelling abilities: they had the same luggage, name tags and all/even
signaled for the same sky cap on call/fast forward 40 years through
peace and arguments/they still hold hands on that old park bench…
The tune is the combination of "several stories," Maj reveals.
"I'm in airports a lot, and I watch people embracing each other
in baggage claim—and I wonder what their story is. It's about
finding your loved one—and about finding God's love, ultimately."
The construction of Maj's multilayered lyrical themes was a labor of
love. "I'm very picky about my vocal delivery and about word selection,"
he notes. "There was a lot of experimentation because I want to
communicate the best I can to my audience, regardless of their background."
Maj ups the ante high in the sky with two tracks that speak to that
very audience. "H.A.N.D.S", a rock 'n' rap tune that again
features Michael Tait's vocal prowess, is a subtle shot of evangelism
filtered and tempered by Maj's intelligent poetry: picture a city where
mentality's one cross / and one boss strips it all down to 10 laws /
I gave up the wrestling became a resident / deserted earth and left
for rest in it…
"It's a song of surrender—a white flag," Maj explains.
"It's a cry to those in this world who continue to feel that uncomfortable
tug that there's got to be more to life than what they're experiencing
every day. It's me saying, 'I know you're tired. So why don't you just
give it all away? Starting with your life to God himself—why not
just surrender it all so you can get it all back brand new?'"
Another dcTalk alum, tobyMac, helps give wings to "Can't Take
It Away." "It captures what's in my heart and what's in Toby's
heart—that nobody can take our peace, our joy," Maj remarks.
"You can lock us up in jail, but we'll just go on singing. It's
inspired by Paul and Silas.
"I also want people to think about my references to The Passion
of the Christ and also to artists like Mase and Kanye West and Vanity.
I want our culture to see that there's something about these people
that made them start talking all that Jesus stuff. What made them want
to do that? Why would someone like Mase leave all he has?"
"Ballin' Chains" solidifies Maj's musical outreach effort:
you live then you die then it's off the planet… I say we take
it back to the place / where life is more than chasing groupies and
cake…why you standing outside in the pouring rain / let's do away
with the ball and chains…
"In hip-hop culture, ballin' means that you have all the money
and all the girls," Maj offers, "so again, it's a play on
words. The idea is that we're killing ourselves just to attain the ball
and chain which has the potential to be the very thing that's dragging
us down and killing us anyway."
But as promised, Maj also injects some fun into the proceedings, and
the sheer bravado in the adrenaline-packed "Let's Go" and
"Up All Nite" (the latter featuring vocals from L.A. Symphony)
as well as the nostalgic tributes to old-school hip-hop artists captured
in "uAppeal" (which lands a coup with famed rapper Special
Ed's vocals) gets the job done. (When he's not behind the mic on stage
or in the studio, Maj does his part promoting positive hip-hop through
his syndicated weekly radio show Virtual Frequency.)
DJ Maj doesn't exit without revealing a bit of himself—the finale,
"Gotta Go Now" (featuring guest vocals from new Gotee artist,
Liquid) is his tribute to his wife. "I want the whole world to
know that I'm thankful for my wife—she's a champion," Maj
says proudly. "But it's for everyone who supports spouses who travel
and fight for family."
With his rapping gaining quick appeal after a recent tour with tobyMac,
Kutless, and Audio Adrenaline, DJ Maj is confident that BoogiRoot can
find fertile soil among music lovers of every stripe. "I really
believe that we as humans are searching for purity, in one way or another,
and we're trying to quench that thirst with everything but righteousness…and
we keep coming back full circle. I want the BoogiRoot album to lead
others to that pure drink of water that people are looking for.
In the end, it's about living in constant pursuit of true life. Parallel
to a picture in an art gallery, one can see BoogiRoot at face value
and totally miss its essence. On the other hand, one can discern its
core essence as a work of art inspired by God, the creator of the universe.
The question isn't necessarily getting to the meaning of BoogiRoot,
but what it means to you—so listen and fill in the blanks.