FSD: Who could we expect to see on the tour?
DLow: Well, I’m not sure yet. We still gettin it together.
FSD: Do you see bop breaking through on a national level in the near future?
Yeah of course. I’mma make sure it gets there, myself. Just know if nobody else does I’mma fight till it gets there.
FSD: Where do you see bopping, in relation to your own career, in two years?
DLow: I see it being a major thing as far as like, for example, now when MC Hammer came out with the Hammer Dance, for a couple of years that dance was hot. What I want to do is make this dance everlasting, which means regardless to how many years pass, everywhere people are still doing it.
FSD: Thats kind of unprecedented. So you want to associate bop with more of a movement than just a dance?
DLow: That’s exactly what I want to do.
FSD: Have you spoken to any major artists yet about collaborating?
DLow: No not yet. But it’ll be in the works pretty soon.
FSD: You’ve hit a whirlwind of success recently including your deal with Atlantic records. Is the success creating any friction between you and Kemo?
DLow: Naw. We gotta understanding, regardless of who makes it first we both gonna go. That’s the type of brothership we have. There’s no tension, no nothing. We good.
FSD: As the preeminent bop success out of Chicago do you feel any pressure to take bop national?
DLow: No. I mean, I feel like it’s my job to take it national. No stress, no worry, no nothing, I’m ready.
FSD: Can you detail the nature of your deal with Atlantic?
It’s a single deal with an optional album. We gon do the album.
FSD: What can we expect from a full DLow album?
DLow: I’m an artist. I just came up with something creative that got me to that point that I needed to be. So, you can expect more from me I’m going to be very diverse which means I’m going to have dance songs, I’m going to be a pop artist, hip-hop, maybe throw some rap in there, I’mma have all different genres of music.