Carlos Stephens

Carlos Stephens

Contributor

After the No Limit army had risen to enormous heights and then just as suddenly found itself in need of reorganization at the end of the '90s, Master P proceeded to dismiss the ranks of his prolific production team, Beats by the Pound, with the sole exception of Carlos Stephens. Since first collaborating with Master P on his 1996 Ice Cream Man album, and also producing beats for future No Limit soldiers Kane & Abel and Skull Dugrey circa 1996, Stephens quickly found himself a member of the Beats by the Pound production squad, also including Mo B. Dick and KLC. For the next few years, Stephens played a major role in defining the omnipresent No Limit sound on countless albums to the point where his once trademark sound had become a bit trite and generic. The public began to take on his opinion around 1999, and by the beginning of 2000 Master P began seeking out a new production aesthetic, dismissing Mo B. Dick and KLC from their ranks and making Stephens his producer of choice. On high-profile tracks such as "Bout Dat" and "Back up off Me," Stephens retained his emphasis on hard-hitting drum machine beats -- particularly 909-style bass kicks and shuddering, machine gun-like 808 high-hats -- but began to integrate inventive synth lines somewhat in the spirit of Swizz Beats or Mannie Fresh in an attempt to re-define the No Limit sound. ~ Jason Birchmeier