Busdriver's hip-hop delivery is fast and creative on 'Jhelli Beam'

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buy this photo Busdriver's hip-hop delivery is fast and creative on 'Jhelli Beam'

When it comes to word speed and creativity, rapper Busdriver runs over Jay-Z, Snoop Dogg and the rest of mainstream hip-hop culture.

Born Regan Farquhar, he delivers his rhymes with dizzying, almost brain-frying quickness and clarity. He blurs ideas and quirky humor in a style of hip-hop that is challenging, if not purposely difficult. Musically, Busdriver can be equally surprising. His best-known song, "Imaginary Places" -- used in the video game "Tony Hawk's Underground" -- is driven by Bach and Paganini flute melodies. Midway through the hyperactive tune, Busdriver slows down enough to declare, "Kids, if you want to (tick) off your parents, show interests in the arts!"

Phoning from his home in Los Angeles, Busdriver, 30, spoke -- surprisingly slowly -- about his new album, "Jhelli Beam," and his current tour with fellow rapper Abstract Rude:

Q. The type of words used to describe you have always been "crazy auctioneer" or "Gatling gun vocals" or "tongue-twisting speed." How did you come up with that approach to rap? How did you develop that style?

A. Well, I didn't come up with it. I'm from an open-mike called Project Blowed, which was an extension of another open-mike, the Good Life Cafe.

That kind of approach to rap was kind of patented there. Or it was a very unique spin that was done on there. And I've always kind of had that instilled in me. So, yeah, it's part of my, my independent rap upbringing.

But aside from that, I do have a musical sensibility that -- I mean what sets me apart from everybody in Project Blowed and the Good Life is that my music sensibility is not always akin to everything that Aceyalone and Abstract Rude would do. But I just get it from my roots, my old rap crew, my open mike, stuff like that.

Q. When you talk about your music sensibility, are you talking about beats and production? I heard Paganini in "Imaginary Places."

A. Well, I've always had a willingness to seek out electronic musicians to do production with me. ¦ Nothing that I've ever seen as being unusual, but things that people wouldn't necessarily see as being traditionally rap or not necessarily even traditionally leftist rap, which is usually electronic musicians and indie-rock people and stuff like that, and using them in ways that aren't necessarily recommended.

Q. If you are forced to label yourself, is indie-rap what you would call the genre? I don't think "conscious hip-hop" fits you. Maybe unconscious hip-hop.

A. (Chuckles.) Maybe subconscious hip-hop, I don't know. It's all rap music. I don't know what kind of subgenre to assign it.

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