 on the pad right on the machine. And I had my back turned to it and she snuck down and she just came and the machine was on and she just slapped the pads. Step that far. And it sounded really good. And she slapped the pads and whipped up, brought upstairs and came down and I heard her go, oh my God, that's the damn drums that they got. That's hot. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101. The music, man, that bout it, man. That bout it, that was, hey, listen, man. Man, you know, I ain't gonna lie to you. When I heard it, bro. Everybody by, oh! I represent, I represent. I'm a young kid, bro, really. How old was you when y'all done that? I don't know, but my second daughter was two and she did the drums on that record. Are you serious? No. Yes. How old? Two? She was two. Wow. Are you serious? Yeah. How did she know? Well, I can't say that. Because they born into it. Well, it was more, she didn't initially, well, let me tell you how it went. Well, I was up in there, I was working, I had my drum machine right here, I had my keyboard right there and I had my drum machine in loop mode and record. Yeah, yeah. But she used to always come down there and just see me hitting on the pad, right? On the machine and I had my back turned to her and she snuck down and she just came and the machine was on and she just slapped the pad. Stuck, stuck, stuck, stuck, stuck, stuck. And it sounded really good. And she slapped the pads and whipped up, bought upstairs and came down and I was like, yo, God, oh my God, that's the damn drums that you got there. That's hot. That's hot. So loud. And it worked. And it worked. It worked for me. Man, I ain't gonna lie to you, bro. That thing made us turn up. Every city, you had to feel that, man. Yeah. Did you know it was that, let me ask this, did you know it was that impactful when you done it? Nah, because it's like, I really don't have this thing about when I make music, especially back then, I just made it whatever sound good. Why, if it felt like it was something else worth keeping, I just kept it. Wow. But I never knew that the beat itself had that impact, but the beat I was doing it, it was for a song for Mr. Servon. Okay. Called, it was a song called Bucking Like a Winchester. Okay. That Full-Blooded from No Limit, one of the artists that I bought there, he was helping him and Servo's writing that record, but that's what happened. And that was at the beginning stages of me meeting P. And P came to New Orleans and he needed to cut a commercial for Wild Wayne at the radio station. Okay. And it just happened, that beat was up. And he came, he cut the commercial and before you know it, the commercial got hot and he took it, we took it to California and made a full song of it. That thing went in. It was a remix too, wasn't it? No, no. That one now? Wait, which version is that? Is that the one on Ice Cream Man album? Yeah, that's part two. That's part two. I knew it was two of them. That first one. The first one was on the TRU album with my daughter did the drums. Did the drums. Yeah, that's part two. I knew it was two of them because I listened to both of them things. So whenever your daughter got of age and you told her what she did and that she's actually on the album where she could understand what she did, what was her response? She like, whatever. You wanna know? Yes, I do. Okay. When she used to see and understand what publishing was, she used to see these big Manila envelopes with all my checkers coming in. So when she found out that she did it, she said, with that, if I did the beat. Where's my check? Why I ain't gonna pay for it. I need that. That's it. Them girls gonna listen. No, they ain't gonna play with you. Yes. He's like, where am I cut? Oh yeah, them girls ain't gonna play with you, man. So are any of your kids in music? No, but my grandson, he wanna do it so bad. Really? How old is he? He nine. Okay, you working with him? You been letting him hang around you? When I say working, which he's gotta see. He see me do it. I promise you. It's just natural to him. Pawpaw, you gonna teach me the day or what? Every time. He wanna do exactly what I do. That's hot. But you know with technology and everything like that, nowadays he'll go on YouTube and figure it out and stuff and say, Pawpaw, guess what I learned? Let me show you. Right, exactly. Because let me tell you something. I remember when he was like three and I promise you, we was in the bed watching TV, right? And I think he was watching Animal Planet or something and he was doing something about the prehistoric animals. Okay. And I promise you, and I'm not exaggerating. He was telling me all of these animals by these scientific name. Pawpaw, that's not a T-Rex, a Tyrannosaurus. Wow, he knew it. Yeah, he said, Pawpaw, that's a pterodactyl. He owned it. So. Kind of like Malachi. Malachi, I was son did the same thing. And just think about this is something, they're not teaching him this in school. No, he just like, nothing like that. No, he just like it. It's something that, I was son did the same thing. They go through this stage because he went through, our son went through the stage where he was into all the dinosaurs. He could, I'm like, where did you learn that? Sometimes it'd be on cartoons and the things that they pick up and we thinking that these cartoons are rubbish. Right. Unless it's just a totally educational. Right, right. But even the ones that are not totally educational, they still learn a lot from. Yeah, we on boss talk one on one.