During a recent event at Brisk Iced Tea's Brisk Bodega event in Miami, Florida, DJ Mustard spoke about his alleged fight with Mistah Fab. The famed producer remarks that he has too much money to be fighting, and says the whole incident was "uncalled for."

"The Internet can make it whatever they want to make into," Mustard says. "LA to the Bay—it's not like that. I have some real friends in the Bay Area. I got some family in the Bay Area. It was never that. He felt how he felt, I guess. He swung. I guess he didn't know that all those people were with me. I only run with one security guard. So, it wasn't the security. Everybody keeps saying it was the security, but you know, that's how it goes sometimes. I done got into millions of fights. That was just one of the fights that people have seen because of who I am. When people's careers go down, they'll do anything to get back up. You've gotta expect stuff like that and you've gotta tighten up your security and make sure nobody can get to you like that."

DJ Mustard says the altercation was a result of Bay Area artists accusing him of not crediting their region with his signature sound. While he credits Lil Jon for his sound, because that's the era he grew up in, Mustard says that he's starting to discover the true origin of his sound.

"I met with my boy Dame, he works down there. He played me this beat. I never got why they were saying that. Why do they keep saying I sound like [The Bay]? He played me a song called "Dope Fiend Beat" by Too $hort and I was like, 'Oh. OK.' And Lil Jon got his style from that. I'm like, 'I get it. I get what you mean, but at the same time it was like, that's why I really push the Lil Jon thing, because I always listened to Lil Jon. That was my era. I was born in the 1990s. [Mistah F.A.B.] can't blame me for not knowing where the Lil Jon sound came from."

Speaking about the actual incident, the beatsmith said he couldn't make out what Mistah F.A.B. was saying, but claims the rapper took the first swing.

"He wanted to take a picture with me. Nah, I'm just playing. I didn't really hear him, man. I was in the middle of my set. It was uncalled for. What I look like fighting? I've a million-plus dollars. I'm a millionaire now so I ain't really worried about fighting. I don't wanna fight ni**as when I see them. I ain't tryna fight. I got a hundred ni**as for that. That's not what that was for. I didn't come to the Bay to start nothing. I ain't gonna start a fight or do nothing like that. That's not what it's about. It's about getting your money, feeding your family. If you wanna holler like men, we can holler like men after that. The conversation wasn't a conversation. It happened so quick. [It can happen to] anybody. If I walk up to you and sock you and you with 100 people, what are those people gonna do?"

DJ Mustard also spoke with VladTV in an exclusive interview about perceptions of his music being heavily influenced by the Bay Area. He says that "it's all one West Coast," and says he doesn't understand why people are so focused on that.

Source: HipHopDX