Jake One
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Jake One

Seattle, Washington, United States

Seattle, Washington, United States
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"Best Seattle hiphop video ever: Jake One - "Home""

Posted by Andrew Matson

"Home" is the best song from the best Seattle hiphop album of 2008 (and maybe ever), Jake One's "White Van Music." The video just hit the blogosphere.

"White Van Music" was Jake One doing vignettes. He's a producer, a scene-setter, a director of movies for rappers to act on. "Home" is the "I love Seattle" vignette.

The beat on "Home" is a low-key, sleigh-bells-y, memory lane-ish thing, and the rappers' lyrics are sentimental waxings about life in the 206.

Vitamin D says the clouds in a Seattle sky are actually made of marijuana smoke (little known fact), C-Note's rapping about KingCo is probably a first, Maineak Tubman raps "I read Seattle Times," which I gotta love, and Ish outs himself as a true-blue Seattleite, a good revelation for rap fans the world over, who most likely thought he was from New York because that's what he used to rap about (remember jazz-rappers Digable Planets? Please say yes...)

The video introduces another character: Seattle itself. Sir Mix-A-Lot's there, still hanging out in front of Dick's on Capitol Hill after all these years -- but the "Posse On Broadway" car is now an orange Lamborghini -- and a few Central District spots make appearances. There's just something special about elevating Catfish Corner on MLK & Cherry and especially the Grocery Outlet on MLK & Union to landmark status.

Jake One directed the song, but the video was directed by Zia Mohajerjasbi, aka the brother of Sabzi from Blue Scholars. Check Zia's YouTube profile for his other work. Over the past few years, he's risen to be undoubtedly the best hiphop music video director in Seattle. All his stuff has a full-bleed, color-saturated tone that lends instant nostalgia to the action. The style is perfect for "Home."

h/t Hustla

Copyright © 2009 The Seattle Times Company - The Seattle Times


"Seattle producer Jake One comes out of the shadows with his debut album"

Seattle producer Jake Dutton, aka Jake One, is releasing a debut album called "White Van Music." Its lineup includes indie favorites like MF Doom, Little Brother and Casual of the Hieroglyphics, as well as chart toppers Young Buck and Busta Rhymes.

By Marian Liu

Seattle Times staff reporter

"I just sit down and make whatever comes to my head," says producer Jake Dutton, aka Jake One. His debut album, "White Van Music," comes out Tuesday.
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Jake Dutton, 32, starting taking his high-school hobby more seriously when he got to University of Washington.
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To hear music by Jake One, go to www.myspace.com/jakeone
Concert preview

Jake One Release Party
9 p.m.-2 a.m. tonight, The War Room, 722 E. Pike St., Seattle; $10 (21 and up, 206-328-7666 or www.myspace.com/jakeone).
His beats are sprinkled across a who's who of hip-hop. 50 Cent, De La Soul and Snoop Dogg are all customers.

But this time, Seattle producer Jake Dutton, aka Jake One, is producing an album for himself. Called "White Van Music," the record boasts a lineup of rappers from both underground and mainstream arenas. There are indie favorites like MF Doom, Little Brother and Casual of the Hieroglyphics, as well as chart-toppers Young Buck and Busta Rhymes.

Hip-hop blogs have been buzzing about his album, with a critic from XXL Magazine hyping it as possibly one of the best of the year. "White Van Music" comes out Tuesday on the respected indie hip-hop label Rhymesayers Entertainment. And, for a producer who usually remains in the sidelines, this is Dutton's time to shine.

"I looked at the album like a big commercial for what I do," said Dutton, 32.

In fact, a lot of the artists, like Scarface, loved Dutton's production so much, they claimed songs for exclusive use on their own solo albums. Still, his album is packed to the brim with 22 singles. And unlike many albums that offer more fat than meat, this one is quite hearty.

Dutton's beats — think of beat-making as composing, and producing as conducting — are rooted in traditional hip-hop, he says, with a lot of soul and hard drums. He also mixes in live music, as opposed to relying simply on sampling.

"He's a super talented dude that is creating his own lane," said Jonathan Moore, a music manager who serves on KEXP's advisory board and hosts a Sunday night show on KUBE-FM (93.3). "It's a combination of the music and the person ... . The music speaks for itself. Also, Jake represents his music well — in a professional way, in an amicable way. He's relatable as a person, and that makes it easier for him to work with such a wide range of people and get the best out of the people he works with. He's nonjudgmental. He's in it for the music."

And Dutton freely creates, without catering his beats for anybody.

"I just sit down and make whatever comes to my head," said Dutton, who uses guitars, bass and various vintage keyboards to compose his songs. "Anytime I try to make a particular beat for anybody, they don't like it ... . People tailor-make stuff for people, but they're not exactly looking for what you think they are."

Before, Dutton had tried rapping on songs, but "never thought they were any good," he said.

"As much as I liked rap I just couldn't see myself getting on top of a stage and rapping," said Dutton, who has only one line in his own album. "I'm way too much of an introvert to be doing that. I'm definitely low-key. I don't like the spotlight that much, so producing is perfect for me."

Getting the beat out

In high school at Garfield and Mountlake Terrace, making beats was more of a hobby; he was more focused on baseball and basketball. It wasn't until he was a freshman at the University of Washington that he started taking the art more seriously.

"I had one foot in, one foot out," said the sociology major. "I was going to school, making beats, going to buy records."

Dutton met another music aficionado, Supreme, and started working for Supreme's Capitol Hill label, Conception Records. Dutton was only 19 when his first songs came out.

DJ Premier of Gang Starr — a hip-hop tastemaker who has produced for the likes of The Notorious B.I.G., Jay-Z and Nas — actually spun one of Dutton's songs ("World Premier") at a concert in town. On top of that, an R&B artist sampled Dutton's beats in one of her songs.

"To me, it couldn't get any bigger than that," said Dutton.

The situation fizzled out soon after, but at 20, Dutton admitted that he was too young and inexperienced to succeed. So he made a point to do more networking.

He hustled to a radio-industry convention in San Francisco, called the Gavin Seminar. There, he passed out 50 beat tapes and met his first manager. After that, his beats started getting more recognition. Several middlemen started shopping Dutton's beats for him, to get their own cut of the money. As essentially a songwriter, a beat-maker earns half of the profit generated by a song's release.

Working with G-Unit

During this time, Dutton met various people in the music industry, like Denaun Porter, an original member of Eminem's group D12. Porter came into town with the Anger Management Tour and introduced him to Sha Money, president of G-Unit, 50 Cent's record label. Before, Dutton's only interaction with G-Unit was through middlemen.

"It was almost like hitting the lottery," said Dutton. "I would hear — oh, they got a song, they wanted beats, oh, they're not using it, and I just kind of got frustrated."

Dutton gave Sha Money some music and a week later Sha called back, saying not only did he use Dutton's music on one of the G-Unit soundtracks, he wanted to be Dutton's manager. All Dutton needed to do was e-mail over beats and the label would make songs.

"It definitely put me in a different light in the mainstream, being part of that much successful stuff," said Dutton. "But it was kind of weird because this whole time, I haven't been trying to make music for them necessarily. It just kind of happened."

Dutton is more of a freelancer for G-Unit rather than a staffer, but he did receive a spinner watch from the G-Unit family for Christmas.

"I've met everybody but 50," said Dutton, who has produced many songs for the rapper. "At this point, I don't think it matters. It's like, for whatever reason, he gravitates toward the stuff I do and that's good enough. I don't want to ruin the perception he has about what I look like or what I do."

Now, sticking to his home base of Seattle, he's working on several albums, including some for the artists on his record's lineup. He's also producing for a certain bigwig in hip-hop. Dutton won't say who on the record, but it's someone coming out of a long retirement.

"Just to have my idols acknowledge me is enough," said Dutton.

Marian Liu: 206-464-3825

or mliu@seattletimes.com

Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company - Seattle Times


Discography

1998 - 3rd Degree "Uprising" (Conception)
1998 - Four-Fifths "EWF (remix)" (Conception)
1998 - Diamond Mercenaries "Block Drama" (Conception)
1998 - Jake One feat. Kutfather "No Introduction"/"No Introdeezy" b/w "One Man Band" (Conception)
1998 - Kutfather "Neva Scared" b/w "Thoughts I Generate" (Conception)
1999 - Eclipse w/Arcee "World Premiere" (Conception)
1999 - Arcee "Essay On Pseudoism" (Conception)
1999 - Nomad (Da Nomadic) "Sedated Thoughts" (300 60 Degree)
2000 - Encore "Filthy (remix)" b/w "Ice Age (remix)" (Certified)
2000 - Kutfather "Hardcore"/ "Transmission" (Certified)
2000 - Mr. Supreme feat. Al Tariq "Run The Show (remix)" (Conception)
2001 - Nomad (Da Nomadic) "Worldwide" (300 60 Degree)
2001 - Arcee "The Exquisite" b/w "Supereducated" (Certified)
2001 - Boom Bap Project "The Trade" b/w "Writer’s Guild" (Darkside)
2001 - Ranahersi "Dangerous" - B-side of "Ranahersi" (Certified)
2002 - Arcee f/ Kardinal Offishall "Stripes" b/w "Primetime" (ABB)
2002 - Planet Asia "Charcoal" (Fat Beats)
2002 - Sly Boogie "Fatal Mistake" (Urban Legends)
2002 - Sly Boogie "Walk With My Dogs" (Urban Legends)
2003 - Rasco "We Get Live" (Pockets Linted)
2003 - Krondon "Feels Good" (Fatbeats)
2003 - Semi-Official "P.A.A remix" (Rhymesayers)
2003 - Rah Digga f/ Lloyd Banks - "Party Over Here" (J Records)
2003 - Encore "Zigga Zigga" b/w "Essentially Yours" (Hiero Imperium)
2003 - Rakaa "Ends To Means" (Sequence)
2003 - Vitamin D "Enstrumental" " B-side for the single "No Good" (Rhymesayers)
2004 - Gift Of Gab "Rat Race" (Quannum) 2004 Eyedea & Abilities "E & A Day" remix ?B-side of "Now" (Rhymesayers)
2005

"Kaysarasara" feat. Estelle (from the Kardinal Offishall album Fire and Glory)
"This Is It", "Ice Cold", "Everyday Shit" (from the I Self Devine album Self Destruction)
"The Time is Now", "Just Another Day", "We Didn't Want You To Know" & "Know The Rep feat. Freddie Foxxx" (from the John Cena album You Can't See Me)
"Sick Wid' It Is The Crew" feat. E-40 (from the Turf Talk album West Coast Vaccine: The Cure)

2006

"Wasn't for You" (from the De La Soul album The Impossible: Mission TV Series – Pt. 1)
"Moonlight Melodic Pt. 2" (from the Planet Asia mixtape The Sickness Part One)
"Memories" (from the Deep Routed album The Second Coming)
"Let Go" (from the Joy Denalane album Born & Raised)
"You Ain't Ready" (from the Yummy Bingham album The First Seed)

2007

"Down In New York City" (from the Evidence album The Weatherman LP)
"Clean Up Man", "Buck The World" feat. Lyfe Jennings (from the Young Buck album Buck the World)
"Movin on Up", "All of Me" (from the 50 Cent album Curtis)
"Initiated (Nu-Mixx)" feat. Boot Camp Click (from the posthumous 2Pac album Nu-Mixx Klazzics Vol. 2)
"Don't Kill Me", "Fukk Kramer Radio (Interlude)" (from the Bishop Lamont & DJ Skee mixtape N*gger Noize)
"It's Over" (from the Freeway album Free at Last)
"Beast" (from the Guilty Simpson mixtape Stray Bullets)
"Resist the Temptation feat. Amel Larrieux" (from the posthumous 2Pac album Best of 2Pac)
"FK 10 (from the Freundeskreis compilation album FK 10-Best Of)
"North By Northwest" (Jake One Remix) (from the Blue Scholars album Joe Metro EP)
"Superburn" & "The Squeeze" feat. Smif-n-Wessun (from the Lifesavas album Gutterfly: The Soundtrack)

2008

"Digital Motown" (from the Kardinal Offishall album Not 4 Sale)
"4 All My Niggaz" feat. Planet Asia, Mistah F.A.B. & Ya Boy (from the Black Milk & Bishop Lamont album Caltroit)
"Ready or Not" (from the G-Unit album T.O.S: Terminate on Sight)
"Shed Thy Blood", "Damn Daddy" (from the Prodigy album Product of the 80's)
"High Note" (from the Scarface album Emeritus)
"Differences", "I Can't Decide (Everywhere at Once)" (from the Lyrics Born album Everywhere at Once)
"Where I Been" (from the Skillz album The Million Dollar Backpack)
"Count On Free", "Blauh" (from the Freeway mixtape Month Of Madness)
"City To City (from the Ca$his mixtape Loose Cannon)
"Catapults (from the Now On album Tomorrow Already)
"Shake That Shit", "A Lil Sum" (from the Faculty album Phar From Home)

2009

"Ballskin", "Rap Ambush", "Microwave Mayo", "More Rhymin'" (from the DOOM album Born Like This)
"Won't Be Long" (from the Rakim album The Seventh Seal)
"Dream" (from Elzhi mixtape The Leftovers Unmixedtape)
"The Return", "Wake Up", "Yah Have Mercy" (from the D.Black album Ali'Yah)
"Get Right" feat. Mistah F.A.B. & Baba Zumbi, "Seasoned" feat. Nightclubber Lang & "Cali" feat. Spank Pops & J Billion (from the Jern Eye album Vision)
"No Substitute", "Life Line" feat. One Be Lo (from the Supastition album Splitting Image)
"Back On The Map" feat. Maino (by Skyzoo on The Power Of Words Mixtape hosted by DJ Drama & Statik Selektah)
"They Don't Know" feat. Mohalyn (by Kaze (rapper) on the First In Flight

Photos

Bio

Jacob Dutton, better known as Jake One, is an American hip hop record producer from Seattle, Washington.
Dutton grew up in Capitol Hill and moved to the North End of Seattle when he was 15. He started making music on a Casio keyboard in 1992. He attended the University of Washington and gave a tape of his music to a friend who worked in a local record store. One of the store's other employees, the DJ Mr. Supreme heard the tape, and when he set up his Conception Records label, he used Dutton to create backing tracks. The first record he produced was Eclipse's "World Premier".

His early influences included Pete Rock, Dr. Dre, DJ Premier, and Marley Marl.

He was a part of the G-Unit production team, The Money Management Group.

His first album credited to Jake One, White Van Music, was released on October 7, 2008 on Rhymesayers Entertainment, which features contributions from Brother Ali, Young Buck, De La Soul, M.O.P., Freeway, DOOM, Slug, and Keak da Sneak.[5][6][7]

He has had tracks included on the soundtracks to films such as Get Rich or Die Tryin' (50 Cent's "I Don't Know Officer"), The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift ("Jake Alert"), and Gone Baby Gone.

In 2010, Jake One released two collaborative albums, The Stimulus Package with Freeway and Patience with Truthlive.