Rap legend Slick Rick on Mobo honour and shaping hip-hop: 'We took novels to the next level'
Rap legend Slick Rick on Mobo honour and shaping hip-hop: 'We took novels to the next level' 4 hours ago Mark SavageMusic Correspondent If hip-hop is the folk music of the post-industrial age, then Slick Rick is it's Woody Guthrie.
Amy Winehouse immortalised him in the song Me and Mr Jones.
Speaking from his home in New York, Slick Rick is remarkably humble about the honour.
"That feels great, the appreciation," he says. "
He emigrated with his family to the Bronx in 1976, when he was 11 years old.
But New York was a different city then.
Gripped by a financial crisis, drugs and crime were rife.
The infrastructure was crumbling and travelling alone was unwise.
"If you were poor and coming up, you were pretty much [stuck]," says Rick.
"We still had fun but when you look back, you say, 'Wow, that was a lot of us on one mattress. '"
By chance, however, he'd ended up in the birthplace of hip-hop, right at the moment of conception.
"People would bring out sound systems and set them up in the parks," he recalls.
"It drew the youth because it made you dance and have fun.
"We didn't have instruments or nothing.
And every other day, we would write a rap to try and impress each other. "
It's a style he developed in the hustle and bustle of his busy Bronx home.
"As a kid, I'd tell stories and jokes in front of my uncles and aunts and see the effect on them.
I was just having fun, I don't know how to explain any better than that. "
It's now the most sampled hip-hop song of all time, appearing on more than 1,000 different tracks.
In 1993, Snoop Dogg covered it in its entirety on his landmark album Doggystyle.
"Snoop's cover was definitely the best," says Rick. "
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"I guess it's trying to be dramatic, to give it like an adventure feel," says Rick.
"He was running down street, the police was chasing him, he jumped into a stolen car, he hit a tree.
You can still see it, even though there's no visual. "
"It's a broadening your horizons type of a thing.
We don't have to be one dimensional.
"It's good to express your childhood, when you was in high school, the first time you ever fell in love, your first heartbreak and stuff like that, and write it down like a diary. "
It's a description he wears with pride.
"That's my way of venting about the errors we see in leadership," he says.
"I feel like the world needs a moral compass, you know?
So what keeps him going, almost 50 years after he stepped up to the mic?
"You know, the main thing is just that music enriches your existence," he muses.
"Then you bring it to the marketplace and enrich others.
But it's really just about enriching your own life. "
The Mobo Awards take place on Thursday, with highlights shown on BBC One on Friday at 23
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