Last month, Detroit rapper and producer Black Milk released his fifth studio album, No Poison No Paradise.

In a recent interview with Montreality, Milk discussed his opinion of Detroit’s current Hip Hop scene. “I think it’s great. I think it’s incredible. …I’ve been telling a lot of people, I feel like…this is the first time I’m feeling a certain kind of energy coming from the D where we have … a nice amount of artists in the industry that’s kind of giving Detroit a certain presence in the game, and I think it’s gonna get crazier in the next year or two.”

Black Milk also addressed the possibility of recording with fellow Detroit native, Eminem. “I would definitely like to see something like that, too. I don’t know, It’d sound like Black Milk on a beat, it’d sound like Em on the verse, you know what I’m saying? Me doing what I do, Em, him doing what he does.”

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The discussion stayed on Detroit icons, this time the late J Dilla, who passed away in 2006 from a blood disease. “The record we did, it was a Slum Village record,” said Milk. “It was called ‘Reunion’ that I did the beat for, I produced the track, and Dilla had spit a verse on there. Like, one of Dilla’s illest verses. Like, top five, top ten Dilla verses. That was the first time I heard him on one of my beats… I was already like a Dilla stan or whatever, Slum Village stan, so to hear that, that shit kind of solidified and kind of let me know I was on the right path with what I was doing musically, production-wise, so that was kind of like my little stamp of approval. That was probably one of the craziest moments of my career.”

Black Milk also reminisced about another late Detroit staple, Proof, who was fatally shot in 2006. “It was a few moments, because I actually went on tour with D12 in like, 2004, I think. I can’t even think of one because it’s so many. It’s so much crazy shit I seen from Proof. But that was the thing about Proof: he was wild but he was still focused. He was still aware of what was going on around him, whether it was music or just people in general. I actually got a chance to work with him, too, on one of his albums, and do a couple beats for him also. Those was like the two mayors and forces of Detroit city Hip Hop. Dilla, Proof. I’m just fortunate I got a chance to work with both of those dudes.”

Watch the interview below:

Black Milk released his latest album through his own label, Computer Ugly, and recently collaborated with Lauryn Hill and Jack White.

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RELATED:Black Milk Talks “No Poison No Paradise” & Working With Jack White [2013 INTERVIEW]