Large Professor
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| Large Professor | |
|---|---|
| Background information | |
| Birth name | William Paul Mitchell |
| Also known as | Large Pro, Large P., Extra P |
| Born | March 21, 1972 |
| Origin | New York City, United States |
| Genre(s) | Hip Hop |
| Occupation(s) | MC, producer, DJ, musician |
| Instrument(s) | Turntable, sampler |
| Years active | 1988–present |
| Label(s) | Wild Pitch//EMI Records Geffen/MCA Records Matador Records |
| Associated acts | Pete Rock Nas Main Source Eric B. & Rakim Akinyele |
William Paul Mitchell (born March 21, 1972), best known as Large Professor, also as Large Pro and Xtra P, is a New York based hip hop record producer and emcee. He is also best known as a member of the influential underground hip hop group Main Source, and for discovering popular emcee Nas.[1]
Contents |
[edit] Biography
[edit] Early life and career
Mitchell was born in 1972 in Harlem, New York City. He moved in his early childhood to Flushing Queens, were he was raised. His production career started early in his adolescence. As a young teenager, he would make pause tapes, in which he would pause a beat and blend it in with other sequences. Eventually, he mananged to own a Casio SK-1 sampling keyboard that allowed him to make his beats in the comfort of his own home. He became a protégé of the late Paul C, a record producer and musician, with whom he credits for teaching him virtually everything he knows about record production as well as the associated technology used for making hip-hop music. Paul C was doing production work with Eric B. & Rakim and Super Lover Cee & Casanova Rud, and then at age 17, Large was given the opportunity to program beats for Eric B. & Rakim's album, Let the Rhythm Hit 'Em (1990), while still attending high school. While working with Eric B. & Rakim, he discovered Nas. Nas got a management deal with Serchlite Publishing (headed by MC Serch from former group 3rd Bass) and Large produced three tracks on Nas's debut album, Illmatic (1994), after he was signed by Columbia Records. His work with Eric B. & Rakim album eventually led him to work on Kool G Rap & DJ Polo's Wanted: Dead or Alive (1990).
[edit] Career with Main Source
In 1989, he joined the group Main Source, which was also comprised of K-Cut and Sir Scratch from Toronto. Main Source recorded one album with Large called Breaking Atoms, which was released in 1991. It included hits such as "Just Hangin' Out", "Looking at the Front Door," and Nas makes his first public appearance on a track called "Live at the Barbeque", along with Akinyele and Joe Fatal. In 1992, its success allowed it to record"Fakin' the Funk", a track on the White Men Can't Jump motion-picture soundtrack. Because of business differences, Large and Main Source quietly parted ways and Large went on to sign with Geffen/MCA Records. During and after his tenure with Main Source, he worked with Pete Rock & CL Smooth, and he produced a number of tracks for Nas, Busta Rhymes, Masta Ace, The X-Ecutioners, Tragedy Khadafi, Big Daddy Kane, Mobb Deep, and others during the 1990s.
[edit] Solo career
In 1996, he released two singles for Geffen/MCA Records, "Ijuswannachill" and "The Mad Scientist", for which videos were produced for both tracks. He was to have his highly anticipated solo album The LP released around the same time, but it was never released because of label politics. Geffen and Large Professor eventually parted ways, and he signed with Matador Records, which generally specialized in marketing and promoting contemporary rock and alternative tracks as well as electronic music. Although his album for Matador, 1st Class did not receive mainstream acceptance, it gained favorable reviews by fans and critics. The album included guest appearances by Nas, Busta Rhymes, and Q-Tip. The album also included the moderate street hit "Radioactive."
Large's publishing company is named Paul Sea Productions as an homage to his late mentor.
For many years, people thought that Large Professor directly taught DJ Premier how to use the Emu SP-1200 sampling drum machine, which Large used to help program many of his beats during the 1990s. However, according to Large Professor, he just showed DJ Premier to enhance what he already had. This is an excerpt from the November/December issue of Scratch Magazine:
| “ | Since people see Professor, they say, 'He taught Preemo'. Nah, what happened was that we traded off. Preem showed me an ill beat and at the time I was filtering records like taking the bassline out of a record and filtering. I showed him how to do that on the Akai S-950. Premier doesn't even use the 1200; he's never used the 1200. Just people throughout the years to take shit and run with it. We just traded off. He shown me the "Brethren" (break) beat and I showed him how to muffle out the bassline. That's all it was | ” |
Large Professor DJs at clubs, parties, and events worldwide and still engages in music production. He released an instrumental LP in 2006 called Beatz Vol. 1. Its sequel, Beats Vol. 2, was released in 2007. He is currently doing production work for emceess Jin, Cormega, U-God, and Jurassic 5.
[edit] Discography
[edit] Albums
- 1991: Breaking Atoms (with Main Source)
- 2002: The LP
- 2002: 1st Class
- 2006: Beatz Volume 1 (instrumentals)
- 2007: Beatz Volume 2 (instrumentals)
[edit] Production
- 1990: "Wanted: Dead or Alive" (Various songs on album by Kool G Rap & DJ Polo)
- 1993: Vagina Diner (Album by Akinyele)
- 1993: Keep It Moving (from the A Tribe Called Quest album Midnight Marauders
- 1993: "Niggaz Never Learn" (from the Big Daddy Kane album Looks Like a Job For…)
- 1994: "Stress (Remix)" (from the Organized Konfusion 12" Stress)
- 1994: "One Time 4 Your Mind", "Halftime", "It Ain't Hard To Tell" (from the Nas album Illmatic)
- 1995: "Resurrection '95" Extra P Remix (from the Common (Sense) 12" Resurrection)
- 1995: "Resurrection '95" Large Professor Remix (from the Common (Sense) 12" Resurrection)
- 1996: "Extra Abstract Skillz" (from the Mad Skillz album From Where???)
- 2000: "The Heist" (from the Busta Rhymes album Anarchy)
- 2001: "You're Da Man", "Rewind" (from the Nas album Stillmatic)
- 2002: "The Come Up" (from the Cormega album The True Meaning)
- 2002: "We Are the Future," "It's Us," and "Drug Music" (from the Non Phixion album The Future Is Now)
- 2004: "What They Want" (from The UN album UN Or U Out)
- 2006: "World Wide" (from the Boot Camp Clik album The Last Stand)
- 2006: "Right 2 Know" (From the Prince Po album Prettyblack)
- 2006: "I Be Thuggin'" b/w "Mack of the Year" (Grand Daddy IU Single)
- 2007: "What Makes You Think", "I'm Up Now" (from the Mic Geronimo album Alive)
- 2008: "L.E.O (Love Equals Omnipotence) - Spirtual Intelligence / All tracks produced by Large Professor.
[edit] Appears on
- 1990: "Money In The Bank" (Kool G Rap & DJ Polo album "Wanted Dead or Alive")
- 1993: "Keep It Rollin'" (A Tribe Called Quest album "Midnight Marauders")
- 1994: "Stress (Remix)" Organized Konfusion 12" Stress)
- 2000: "The Last Shall Be First" (Cella Dwellas album The True Meaning)
- 2002: "XL" (The X-Ecutioners album Built from Scratch)
- 2002: "Hip Hop On Wax" (Rob Swift album Sound Event)
- 2002: "The Come Up" (Cormega album The True Meaning)
- 2004: "Sugar Ray and Hearns" (Cormega album Legal Hustle)
- 2006: "United" (MF Grimm album American Hunger)
- 2007: "The Radar" (Marco Polo album Port Authority (album))
- 2007: "The Purist" (Polyrhythm Addicts album Break Glass)
- 2008: "Conquer Mentally" (Presto album State Of The Art)
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Large Professor's MySpace page
- Biography Sketch at Matador Records website
| Persondata | |
|---|---|
| NAME | Professor Large |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Mitchell, William Paul |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION | Rapper, Record producer, Disc Jockey, musician |
| DATE OF BIRTH | March 21, 1972 |
| PLACE OF BIRTH | New York City, United States |
| DATE OF DEATH | |
| PLACE OF DEATH | |

