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A walk in the Paak

Anderson .Paak’s hopes his music creates a resurgence of musiciansh­ip in rap.

- By GARY GERARD HAMILTON

GETTING Dr Dre to produce his entire album had Anderson .Paak (pic) feeling like “the prodigal son”, as he puts it, since it’s rare that you’d find Dre overseeing an entire music project these days.

“To see him so inspired and genuinely having fun with a project is really dope, because I don’t feel like he’s been this involved with a project, probably since Eminem’s first stuff,” said Paak, now signed to Dre’s Aftermath Entertainm­ent.

That project is Oxnard, named after Paak’s California hometown. Released last month, it’s the third volume in his “beach series”, following 2014’s Venice and 2016’s Grammy-nominated Malibu.

Paak, an eclectic musician who blends funk, hip-hop and R&B, was featured on six songs from Dre’s latest album, 2016’s Compton .In recent years, Dre has become more famous for pushing the Beats by Dre brand though his resume includes producing hits for Eminem, 50 Cent, Tupac, Snoop Dogg, Mary J. Blige, and Eve, as well as launching his own multi-platinum albums.

“I remember when we wrapped up (Dre) was like, ‘Thank you, man. I know this is helping you, but it’s also helping me a lot’,” Paak said. “I feel like it gave him a spark again.”

Dre isn’t the only famous name to appear on Oxnard, Kendrick Lamar, Snoop Dogg, J. Cole, Q-Tip and Pusha T are also on the album.

“I feel like there are a lot of features, but it didn’t feel like a lot of features. It was almost like, ‘Oh, shoot – surprise’,” said Paak, adding that he was “humbled to be able to be in the same room with some of these people.”

Paak, a church-grown percussion­ist, describes his latest work as “fun”, but “same man, new car”. The vibe on Oxnard is different compared to Malibu, a shift that was purposeful.

“We’re never trying to just do the same thing twice – it’s not interestin­g for us. We just want to keep growing as artistes,” said Paak. “We did a lot of rapping on this album. It was a lot of fun songs, a lot of songs to dance to, a lot of big, hard-hitting production.”

The musician’s unique sound has been spreading throughout the industry, and he’s well aware of it: “I’m looking at some of these dudes like, ‘Mo-fo, that sounds like me! What the hell?’”

He said though he’s “flattered”, he hopes it creates a resurgence of musiciansh­ip in rap.

“I would love to open up a lane for more musician-rappers in hiphop, more people playing an instrument and performing in hiphop, which is something you really don’t see too often,” he said.

Paak, 32, will get to show off what he can do on stage when he launches his Andy’s Beach Club World Tour next year. It kicks off Feb 11 in San Francisco – one day after the Grammy Awards, where Paak’s song Bubblin’ is nominated for best rap performanc­e.

Winning a Grammy is one of Paak’s goals, among other things.

“We cracked (the) Billboard (chart) this time around, and I never really knew what that was like, so it’d be nice to stay within, you know, keep cracking that, getting higher and higher up. Snatch some awards, some Grammys. I would like to continue to build a top-notch show. I want to be able to be one of those bands, like legacy bands, that can tour forever,” he said. – AP

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Photo: AP

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