RH Collectors: DJ RTC
Many music heads are also collectors. There's a common thread between seeking out new and rare sounds and using that same drive to acquire and celebrate other passions that ties collectors of all kinds. RH Collectors is a series that aims to showcase the collections of the various music heads in Chicago and beyond. In our last edition, we spoke to the Stitch Gawd, who showed off her collection of art and memorabilia that she has collected throughout her time in the Chicago music scene. Today, we turn the spotlight onto Closed Sessions + rubyhornet honcho, DJ RTC.
Going back to his early childhood, RTC has been an avid baseball and basketball collector, and boasts an impressive collection. For this installment, I spent time with RTC's card collection and asked to speak on a few choice cards. Peep it below.
If you've got a collection you want to talk about, hit us up. We want to talk to you.
What got you into collecting cards?
I think it was partly playing sports, and playing on teams all based on major league teams. My first team was the [Atlanta] Braves. I was young, like 6 or 7 years old. I just remember watching the real Braves on TBS and all my teammates wanting to be certain players. The first baseball player I really knew and wanted to emulate was Dale Murphy. Later, my brother introduced the concept of baseball cards to me and I got into keeping stats and dove into the card collecting heavy with many of my friends. It turned into a big social activity. My friends and I all played in the same baseball league, and we all wanted to be like our favorite players. We picked our jersey numbers based on those players. We would hang out all day playing sports and/or trading cards. Then from there it became more obsessive, it was all about who could get the most rare cards in your peer group. It was a good era to be a kid in that the popularity of cards was at an all-time high. It was a great way to feel closer to the game.
Ozzie Guillen: 1985 Fleer Extended Rookie Card
Ozzie Guillen was a shortstop on the White Sox from 1985 to 1997. Then he briefly went to The Orioles, then the Braves, and ended his career with the Devil Rays. In 2003 he came back to manage the White Sox. Ozzie Guillen was my favorite baseball player growing up. I modeled my stance in little league after him, many coaches corrected that because it wasn’t an ideal stance for a little kid to have (fundamentally speaking). My dad started taking me to this card shop by Comiskey Park, and I also got a subscription to this magazine called Beckett that listed the value of baseball cards, and I started noticing this thing called the XRC card, which stood for “extended rookie card.” I saw Ozzie Guillen’s XRC in Beckett and finally tracked this down . I don't even know at what point I got it, but it took a while. My dad and I got it at Grandstand in Bridgeport. Definitely a prized card, many Sox fans around my age view Ozzie as the man. I can't speak for older or younger fans, but definitely in my age group, Ozzie was the man. If we could one day throw a Closed Sessions party with Ozzie Guillen in attendance, that’d be great.
Sandy Koufax: 1963 Topps
I connect with Koufax on many levels. One of the great things about baseball, why I also think I like it so much, is that my dad, he kind of got into it with me. My dad's older, he had me much later in life, when I was 10 he was already 55. For him, his generation of baseball player was from the ‘50s and 60’s. Sandy Koufax was revered in every Jewish household, he was one of the first athletes to proudly be Jewish. Game one of the 1965 World Series games Yom Kippur, which is the Jewish day of atonement. Even for Jews who don't go to synagogue regularly, Yom Kippur is the one day where you’re supposed to sit back and observe. Sandy Koufax was the Dodgers best pitch and was supposed to pitch that game, he decided to sit out and observe the holiday and became a Jewish folk hero. That’s one piece of it for me, another is in Sunday School there was this teacher who always labeled me as a trouble maker for whatever reason. Whenever anyone did something, he would blame me and send me to the library. So I would be able to get out of Hebrew class and go to the library, and I actually preferred it like that. I’d have nothing to do, so I'd just check out books. There was a book about Sandy Koufax, and anytime I was sent to the library, I’d find the book and pick up from wherever I left off. I learned that the first few years of his career he was really bad, he was 2-2, 2-4, 5-4, 11-11, ERA was high, he wasn't very good. He had to figure out how to succeed, and its unique because he’s in the Hall of Fame and revered as one of the greatest pitchers ever. He only had a few great seasons, but they were so good that he ended up as one of the best. He also retired early because although he could still play, he said he wanted to “live the rest of my life with the use of my arms.” So I think Sandy Koufax has a lot of things that make him unique: from almost being cut to becoming one of the best, to retaining personal beliefs over sports, and even the idea of quitting while you’re ahead, athletes using their bodies while they still can. Thats why I connect with Koufax on so many levels. This card from 1963 I got at a shop in Skokie. It was one of my first major cards for sure.
Jackie Robinson: 1954 Topps
My brother's friend Josh was cleaning up his room and that included getting rid of a slew of all of his baseball cards. He dumped them all in one big bag. He called me up and said, 'if you want to sort through this bag and keep the cards, that's fine but just know its mostly scrub players, worthless cards.' So I’m like, 'ok, I got nothing to do.' It was summer vacation, I was probably in 3rd or 4th grade. He lived next door, and I went over got this large paper shopping bag of cards. I take them home and start going through them. It's been a few hours, I’ve gotten some good cards but nothing special... I picked up the next card by the back, I see "Brooklyn Dodgers" and some stats and I’m just getting this feeling like, 'oh shit, oh shit.' I was maybe 11 or 12 at the time. It only took a second, but I remember turning the card over in slow motion, in my head thinking 'please let it be, let it be' and I remember just having a heart attack. A real life Jackie Robinson baseball card! My mom had these books at home that were called "ValueTales", they are a series of books that taught kids morals and to believe in themselves etc... There was a book about the story of Johnny Appleseed, Abraham Lincoln, but as cartoons and starting as kids. One of my favorite editions of the series was the Jackie Robinson story, which taught the value of courage. I remember viewing him as this epic figure, and here I was with his baseball card. I remember I was so naive that I called Josh up and was like, 'thank you so much! I can't believe there was a Jackie Robinson card in there,' when he was probably on the other line thinking, 'damn...' It was my prized possession, I had it in a single case, one day I guess I left it on the couch or somewhere, I go to bed, then later hear my mom on the phone, all of a sudden all I hear is 'OH NO, THE DOG HAS THE JACKIE ROBINSON CARD OH MY GOD!" I jumped out of bed, found it in this (ripped) condition, had a meltdown, I probably wanted to kill the dog. I was so sad I probably cried myself to sleep that night. I was so angry and sad I told my mom I didn’t even want it, get rid of it, I didn’t even look at it for maybe 6 months. But she always kept the card around, so later I healed enough to finally put it back in my book and accept it, because it is still a real Jackie Robinson card - it is ripped, but at least I have one, So (Shrugs)...
Michael Jordan: 1990 Upper Deck
For anyone that doesn’t know, really sadly Michael Jordans father was killed the summer after the Bulls won their third championship, the first 3 peat and as a way of coping Michael Jordan stepped away from the Bulls and pursued baseball because that was his dad's dream (to play in the major leagues). Jordan was good enough to get to the minor leagues with the Birmingham Barons, it had always been known before that he could play baseball well. This card was actually from before that, when he would play in spring training games. The White Sox and Bulls have the same owner. If you’re a real collector you have to have this. It was one of the first years of upper deck coming out and this was just a dope card to have.
Bo Jackson: 1991 Topps Traded
This was big because he was severely injured playing football. He had to retire from the sport and took a while off from baseball. Many people thought he was done. He was released by the Royals right before the season started, the White Sox signed him after the season started and everyone was pretty excited. This was included in Topps “traded edition”, which would come out midway through the season every year and multiple brands started following that format, reissuing cards for marquee players. This was the first card of Bo Jackson as a member of the White Sox. It was significant because he was such a famous player and so heavily tied to the Royals. And extra significant to me as a lifelong White Sox fan. My dad used to take my brother and I to Toys-R-Us and we’d buy packs of trading cards and my brother would always end up taking the best cards because he was 8 years older than me. He’d give me some of my personal favorite players that I'd heard of but actually sucked, while he’d pocketed a Mo Vaughn rookie card or this Bo Jackson card. One day I decided it was time to take them back, so I hope he’s not reading this because I did in fact steal this card back from him. So yeah, First ever Bo Jackson card on the Sox, the highlight of the Topps Traded Edition 1991.
Shawn Respert: 1995 Classic Wooden Award Contender (autographed)
My brother went to college at Michigan State and Shawn Respert and Eric Snow were there and they formed Fire & Ice. He is was the school leader in 3 pointers made, and Michigan State's all-time leading scorer. This card is special because it came from his collection, which is pretty interesting that I think about it. He graduated in 1995, and was my favorite basketball player at that time. When he got drafted, I wrote him a letter wishing him good luck with The Bucks and stuff. He wrote back with this signed basketball and that cemented him for me as one of my favorites. He never really made it in the NBA. It came out years later that he had stomach cancer and just never told any of his teams. But man he was a hell of a college player and a great guy.
Kobe Bryant: Fleer Ultra 95-96 Rookie Card
Outside of Kevin Garnett, Kobe Bryant really opened the floodgates for high school players to go straight to the NBA. This was during the height of my card collecting. Getting a Kobe rookie wasn’t much of a big deal at the time, since he hadn’t done anything in the NBA yet, but I had a feeling that this was gonna be special. Similar to music, and how you can tell certain artists are going to be something special, I saw that with Kobe Bryant and basketball. I got this one in a pack. So many years later during his famous feud with Shaq I remember a lot of people siding with Shaq and at the time I was in teach for america training which was in Long Beach, California. There were a lot of kids from LA in that program and we were on the school bus one day and the radio announced that Shaq had just been traded to The Heat. All the kids were like “oh no!! Fuck Kobe” while I was just laughing since I was just a Bulls fan with no particular stake in either side.
RH Weekly Playlist Volume 5
We've been out of it recently with SXSW and Spring Break exploits taking up most of our time so let's play some catch up with our favorite new music from the past couple weeks:
1. Kaina - 4u
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I love this song and EP so much. Kaina is truly one of Chicago's brightest gems when it comes to true passionate music.
2. Mulherin - Alone
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A smooth R&B track oozing in vibes.
3. Redpest - Angelic
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One of my favorite Lofi Hip-Hop Soundcloud producers, Redpest showcases his trademark chillhop sound on Angelic.
4. KilaMDaPro - Grateful
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An unconventional drum rhythm makes Grateful all the more funky from the DMV producer.
5. Falcxne - Nothing I Can Do
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A glorious flip and a head knocker meant for riding in the vehicle with the roof down.
6. Cae Jones - Honestly
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A surreal vocal delivery and minimalist production make Honestly a must listen experience.
7. Jayaire Woods - Frat Rules Freestyle
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A hype lyrical display and delivery from the Chicago MC.
8. Sean Deaux - Iceberg Slim
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You could say its a gang thing as Sean Deaux and Jayaire Woods rip apart the beat.
9. MANWOLVES - Weather Is Warm
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An uplifting track with a lyrical dexterity that is uncanny. Manwolves continue to be one of the freshest acts inhabiting the Chicago scene to date.
Your Nature - Iris Temple
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One of the next great R&B acts, Iris Temple, repping Chicago by way of Kansas City, have dropped off their latest single 'Your Nature'. The track is a guitar led jam oozing in emotion pieced together with all original production. The infinitely talented duo continues to amaze with their lush vocals and tender songwriting. Anytime these two drop something it's a must listen so stream above.
Be sure to also purchase tickets to their first headliner at Schubas here.
Lex the Radical - Choices
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Lex the Radical is a rapper, producer and songwriter from Detroit, Michigan. He is a co-founder of the Captwolf Collective and is currently a student at Columbia College Chicago. His new track "Choices" is a self produced 808 laced joint that is equal parts smooth and hard hitting. His delivery is made for the track; never stumbling his bars hold conviction as he tells of the choices one must make in life.
Peep the young artist's new track above and stay tuned for more from the Detroit MC.
Ruby Hornet Weekly Playlist Volume 4
It was a great week for music, Phonte brought back the old school, Valee showed us whats good with his new project, and plenty more strong releases this week.
Valee - Vlone
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Valee is such a welcome addition to the rap game, his absurdity knows no bounds and his delivery matches his ethos perfectly.
Musa Reems - Lingo
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A genius take on Big L's classic Ebonics track.
Cbakl - Amour
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An absolute vibe from the Northern Ireland based producer.
Tory Lanez - Hate To Say
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Go off Tory!
Casey Veggies - Broke
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The triumphant return of Casey Veggies!
Dweeb - '72 Audi Coupe
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Just some straight lo-fi goodness from the talented producer.
Slowly, Slowly - Hobbes Was Real
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A hauntingly beautiful guitar led instrumental piece.
Topaz Jones - NECTAR
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RH favorite Topaz Jones returns with his trademark buttery delivery.
[RH Premiere] Musa Reems Shares "44 4's" Video + Interview
A RH favorite and insanely talented West Side MC, Musa Reems, is giving his fans content on the regular. After dropping his single 'Let Em' Know' the young spitter came right back with an insane Curdbside Jones produced joint titled "44'4's'". The beat is nuts and Musa's intensity matches it well.
Today "44 4's" get's the video treatment, shot in the cities underground, the symbolism is heavy for the rising MC. To go along with the video's premiere, we talked to Musa about the track, as well as his forthcoming EP, Lately I've Been Sol Searching 2. Peep it below.
rubyhonret: What is the inspiration behind the “44 4’s” – beyond the tie to Jay-Z’s “22 2’s” and his new LP, what drove this to happen?
Musa Reems: The inspiration behind “44 4’s” came from many directions. In terms of writing new music, I wanted to use more literary devices and to be clever with my wordplay. I started to think about words that could be used repeatedly and that would tie into the “soul searching” theme of my project. I began to think about why I love hip hop and what I do it “for”. I always say that I want to rap as bad as I want to breathe, so I thought the perfect way to portray this was by showcasing my lyricism in an intricate way. This whole project dives deeper into who I am as a person, so I thought that listing my passions and what’s important to me in one song was essential. I wanted each song on the project to have a theme that tied it all together. I knew I had to tell stories and write from a more introspective viewpoint to make this happen. I wanted to write Lately I’ve Been Sol Searching 2 like it was a movie. Curbside and I talked about how we see music in colors and how it’s about creating the perfect painting. I felt like “44 4’s” was a vibrant, rich color to preview my project perfectly and show a sneak peak of what the rest of the painting will look like. This is why I also wore certain colors in the video. "44 4's" sounded like a white, royal blue, and yellow color scheme to me. Jason Yaccino and I discussed how the snow would be a perfect backdrop for this to come into fruition. The production from Curbside reminded me of Chicago, so I wanted to make sure that we captured key features that make the city unique like the L, alleys, murals, and subway tunnels.
rubyhornet: The record is a lot about motives, what gives you this mind-frame? What does hip hop music mean to you?
Musa Reems: I feel like my music has a lot of motives because I grew up on concept hip hop albums from MF DOOM and Biggie. I’m also a huge fan of Sean Price and a lot of artists on Duck Down Music. I grew up on a lot of New York Hip Hop. Mm.. Food is my favorite DOOM album and throughout the project he uses food as a metaphor to relate things to everyday life. With Biggie, he released Ready to Die and Life After Death. Those titles tied the idea of living and dying together to help Biggie display his story. With Lately I’ve Been Sol Searching and Lately I’ve Been Sol Searching 2, I wanted to use those two ideas from MF DOOM and Biggie in my own way. I have a full length project titled, Where The Sun Never Rises, so using the sun (sol) as a metaphor of life, growth, understanding, and energy was something that I wanted to use throughout multiple projects that I have. Hip Hop means the world to me. It changed my mindset and my identity. It made me want to work harder and understand who I am as a young man. Lastly, it showed me that I have the ability to make changes to my life and inspire people that are around me as well as complete strangers. Music is universal and art imitates life.
rubyhornet: Do you see a difference between intention and outcome? Does an artist’s intention influence how you see them from a music fan’s perspective?
Musa Reems: Yes, I do see a difference. I think that an intention has to be clear in order to have certain outcomes. Without clear intentions, a reasonable outcome isn’t likely. I also know certain artists may want certain ideas to be left up to interpretation. Personally, I think an artist’s intention doesn’t affect the influence on my perspective. I tend to put my own meaning to songs and how it applies to my life, then I like to see what the artist may have wanted me to think or perceive. I think it makes the viewer more open-minded and allows the artists to have multiple meanings that are relatable in their music. This is what makes me a fan of certain emcees, because they may have multiple layers and a deeper intention. In my opinion, that’s a form of skilled creativity.
rubyhornet: You have a new EP on the way, what is the hope for the new music?
Musa Reems: I hope my music continues to grow and I want to continue to understand my ability as an artist. I would also like for my music to continue to spread and be as relatable to others as possible. Being outside of my comfort zone is extremely important to me when creating. When I first started rapping over production from Curbside and S.K.I.L., I didn’t know how to approach it. I want to stretch my creative limits on a daily basis and reach past the ceiling. I’m very excited about performing new music and connecting with other talented artists this year. I look forward to seeing it grow and touching as many people as it can.
Ruby Hornet Weekly Playlist Volume 3
Our favorite songs from the last week or so that we didn’t get a chance to cover:
Mick Jenkins - Earl Sweatshirt Type Beat
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A genius wordsmith, the originality of Mick's bars continue to defy conventional wisdom.
Nafets - Blue Skies
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An infectious hook makes Blue Skies irresistible.
CrazyJaZz - Harmonious
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An absolute gem of an instrumental with a beautiful piano lead.
Seneca B - Spartacus
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A chilled head knocker.
Towkio - Forever Ft. Vic Mensa
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Stand out cut about pain and self-medication. Vic and Towkio tackle deep topics against a happy backdrop that only adds to the message.
Matt Muse - Getting To It
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Matt Muse delivers a powerful track with a strong unique delivery.
Chase Alex - Madonna Ft. Sydny August
An emotional instrumental and wavy chorus plus a beautiful feature from Sydny August.
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Kiraly Payne - Wide Awake
A strong percussion section and motivated lyricism with Kiraly Payne trying to do better in his life make for a potent track on Wide Awake.
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Caleborate - Real Person
The title track to Caleborate’s 2017 LP, it is criminally slept on and so is this Berkely-born emcee. He hits Evanston 3/28.
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Ruby Hornet Weekly Playlist Volume 2
Our favorite songs from the last week or so that we didn't get a chance to cover:
1. Dabrye Feat. Guilty Simpson - Tunnel Vision
A synth led musical trip with some bars on top.
2. Chuck Strangers Ft. Joey Badass - Style Wars
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A gritty track with longing lyrics of times past, Strangers and Badass approach the beat with a calm collected delivery.
3. YGTUT Ft. Isaiah Rashad - Trill Dreams
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Although technically not a new song, Trill Dreams is an absolutely perfect cut for blasting in the whip, and it was recently freed from YGTUT's vault.
4. Kembe X - Goofass
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Kembe is on his lyrical shit, calling out the goofys of the industry, he tears apart the slow paced production like a rabid dog.
5. God - God-Right Now
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An impressive lyrical display from God, he wields a confident delivery that instantly grabs the listeners attention.
6. Human - Alive
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An aggressive demeanor and witty punchlines put over a dirty beat.
7. Eliana - All4U
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A beautiful voice, a great rhythm section, and great song arrangement from singer Eliana.
8. Papi Beatz - Saturday Night Fevers
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An honest hardrock/punk ballad, Papi Beatz really impresses with a barebones production and solid mic presence.