De La Soul – The Making of “Me Myself and I” (Vevo Footnotes) thumbnail

De La Soul revisits iconic scenes from their “Me Myself and I” music video exclusively via Vevo Footnotes

De La Soul is a legendary rap trio from New York. In the latest installment of Vevo Footnotes, they took fans behind the scenes of the official music video for their “Me, Myself and I” single via Vevo Footnotes. The exclusive content is part of Vevo’s celebration to honor the historic 50th Anniversary of Hip-Hop.

De La Soul – The Making of “Me Myself and I”

During the episode, Posdnuos of De La Soul discusses the creation of their iconic song, and how it allowed the group to address negative media labels. He highlights how the “Twilight Zone” influenced the video’s opening segment with producer, Prince Paul, and their comedic approach to the video, playing off their hip-hop style.

Posdnuos explains the video aimed to underscore individuality and confidence, and he suggests that if they remade the video today, they might focus on inner growth instead of external independence. He also shares a standout memory from the video’s scene with teacher Def Beat and reveals that Ali Shaheed Muhammad from A Tribe Called Quest wrote “De La Sucks” on the bathroom wall.

Below is a complete outline of “Me, Myself & I” I Vevo Footnotes:

00:19 – I’m a big “Twilight Zone” fan, so when it was time to figure out how to include [producer] Prince Paul in the video, we went with him being a hip-hop Rod Serling to set up the story. – Posdnuos

00:43 – The words were written pretty quickly. The cadence was taken from a song called “Black Is Black” by Jungle Brothers, featuring Q-Tip. “(Not Just) Knee Deep” by Funkadelic was a song Maseo always wanted to sample. He and Prince Paul put the bulk of it together. – Posdnuos

01:08 – The press was referring to us as the hippies of hip-hop. This song became a way to express that this wasn’t a gimmick and that we were being ourselves. This is why in my first verse I say, “You say Plug 1 & 2 are hippies, no we’re not, that’s pure Plug bull.” – Posdnuos

01:28 – We did it in a comedic way playing off what was considered the conventional look for a hip-hop kid versus a non-conventional way of looking. –Posdnuos

01:54 – [A standout memory was] shooting the scene where the teacher Def Beat throws the record into one of the student’s heads. All the students were all fans of our music and were happy to have the opportunity to be in the video. – Posdnuos

02:13 – Ali Shaheed [from A Tribe Called Quest] was the guy who wrote De La Sucks on the bathroom wall. – Posdnuos

02:43 – This video underscored individuality – confidence in owning who you are and want to be, regardless of what others think. It was our first video with a budget. – Posdnuos

03:13 – [If it were remade today] maybe you could flip the video on its head, where everyone is dressing so differently and cool and loud and someone wants to dress down and plain because they are more focused on their inner growth than their out[ward] independence. – Posdnuos

Vevo celebrates Hip Hop at 50

Vevo celebrates Hip Hop at 50

Vevo is the world’s leading music video network, connecting an ever-growing global audience to high-quality music video content for more than a decade. Founded by Universal Music Group and Sony Music Entertainment in 2009, Vevo offers fans worldwide a vast array of premium content to choose from, showcasing official music videos alongside a constantly developing lineup of live performances and innovative original programming. From top superstars to rising new talents, Vevo brings incomparable cross-promotional support to artists across the musical spectrum, at every stage of their careers.

Vevo has consistently evolved over the past decade to lead within today’s ever-changing media landscape, embracing partnerships with a number of leading distribution platforms to deliver extraordinary content within ad-supported environments. With more than 25B views across television, desktop, and mobile devices each month, Vevo brings music videos to the world – when, where, and how fans want them.

De La Soul – “3 Feet High and Rising” album
De La Soul - 3 Feet High and Rising album cover

We recommend adding De La Soul’s “Me Myself and I” single to your favorite hip-hop playlist. Also, let us know how you feel in the comment section below. Mel Blanc’s famous catchphrase, That’s All Folks! Thanks for reading another great article on Bong Mines Entertainment – the hot spot for new music and entertainment news. Always remember that (P) Positive, (E) Energy, (A) Always, (C) Creates, (E) Elevation (P.E.A.C.E). Contact us on social media via Twitter, YouTube, Instagram, or Facebook, and let us know what’s going on. Disclaimer: This post contains Apple Music affiliate links. If you make a purchase after clicking a link, we’ll collect a share of sales or other compensation.

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