MF DOOM
SeTi I---
Demographics
Gender Male
Birth Name Dumile Daniel Thompson
Birthplace Hounslow, Middlesex, England, U.K.
Birth Date July 13, 1971
Ethnicity Southern/Central/West African
Father Zimbabwean
Mother 3/4 African-Trinidadian, 1/4 African-Barbadian
Nationality English
Career Rapper, record producer
Color Season Dark Winter
Notes and Motifs
Se-Lead rapper
Also known as King Geedorah, Viktor Vaughn, Metal Fingers, Doom, Metal Face, and, in collaboration, Madvillain, with Madlib; Danger Doom, with Danger Mouse; JJ Doom, with Jneiro Jarel; NehruvianDoom, with Bishop Nehru; and Czarface
Leading figure of underground and alternative hip hop
Known for his metal mask and resultant supervillain persona, emulating Marvel villain Doctor Doom, he was recognized for his unique lyrical and production style; which included complex wordplay and references to other comic book characters and television shows
SeTi I--- Directive
DOOM: "The 'Doom' thing is to be able to come at things with a different point of view. I decided the mask would just add to the mystique of the character as well as make Doom stand out. I though it'd be an easy way for people to see and differentiate between characters, sorta like when an actor gains weight for a role."
DOOM: "I have no friends here apart from the dudes at my record label, and I didn't go to school with no one. Nobody knows me - I'm incognito. It's all new, all fun."
DOOM: "Ever since third grade, I had a notebook and was putting together words just for fun. I liked different etymologies, different slang that came out in different eras. Different languages. Different dialects."
DOOM: "Being older now, grown, I'm like, 'What do we really do that's fun?' I'm kind of corny when you think about it. What could I rhyme about? Let me see, um, I gotta pay the rent today."
DOOM: "I liked being able to speak to somebody and throw it back and forth, and they can't predict what you're going to say next."
DOOM: "I spent 35 years growing up in the U.S., and it had its ups and downs."
DOOM: "I'm always trying to show versatility. I'm juggling, and I'm flipping fire, and I'm chewing gum and rhyming at the same time... on a unicycle, while playing the drums."
DOOM: "Doom is a classic supervillain, akin to the Phantom of the Opera. It's not about revenge so much as, like, 'I'm back - now watch this!' It all boils down to the music. The mask is a slight theme for people to enjoy, and it adds mystery."
DOOM: "I can't perform without the mask or be seen without it on stage, or else it'll distract from the whole persona."
DOOM: "The idea of having different characters is really just to get the storyline across, you know? Coming from one particular character makes, to me, the story boring. I get that mainly from novels and that style of writing or movies where there's multiple characters who carry the storyline."
DOOM: "A visual always brings a first impression. But if there's going to be a first impression, I might as well use it to control the story. So why not do something like throw a mask on?"
DOOM: "Everybody nowadays rhymes, but out of the people that really, really do it well, it's still a small community of artists. We all tend to be in the same circles - people like my Wu-Tang brothers, or Black Thought from The Roots."
DOOM: "Hip-hop is so saturated with the same old same old that people always expect the guy to actually be the guy. They want you to be real and straight from the streets and all that."
DOOM: "I make hip-hop, but use Doom as a character to convey stories that a normal dude can't. You have writers that write about crazy characters, but that doesn't mean the writer himself is crazy."
DOOM: "I think - a lot of times in hip-hop, especially - artists get kind of pigeonholed into being 'the guy,' and it's kind of limiting in a way."