RH In The Studio With: Ajani Jones

When I started rubyhornet damn near 10 years ago, one of the biggest things for me and Virgil was being the studio with artists. Just the idea of “the studio” was a magic place, something like behind the curtain of the Wizard of Oz. I remember those early days fondly of being in the studio with artists like Naledge, GLC, Mikkey Halsted, Rhymefest and many others. The studio is where Closed Sessions launched, where I first met a 15 year-old Vic Mensa, and got to watch a hero like Raekwon breakdown his approach to music. I think back on that time, my early and mid-twenties, running around like a kid in the candy store. I had a flip cam, and would just hit record. One of my favorite articles on RH were the in-studio pieces where artists would share their creative process and their new work. Since I’m back at rubyhornet, we want to get back to some of our strengths, and the In The Studio articles are at the top of the list.

For this edition, Cooper Fox hung out with Ajani Jones at SoundScape Studio. He talked to Ajani about his new music, life since he released Eternal Bliss last year, and got a glimpse of new music to come. Check out the piece below, and look for more of these on the regular.

RubyHornet: What are you working on today?

Ajani Jones: Today I’m working on "Bloom", a song I did with my Manager (Alexy), and (Netherlands-based producer) Pim. And it’s going on a project called Cocoons.

When going into these sessions are you looking to build towards a project or just recording songs and figuring it afterwards?

Ajani Jones: I usually come up with a concept before I start a project. I like to have a genuine message behind what I’m doing, so when I get into it it’s not just music. There’s something behind it. Cocoons is an EP, and I have an LP I’m also doing after. They tie together, this one’s called Cocoons and the other one’s called Dragonfly. I have a third one, which I’m still working on. It’s basically all symbolizing growth, growth as an artist, growth as a human being. And having fun and being happy in life.

RubyHornet: What would you consider your ideal situation going into a session?

Ajani Jones: I don’t produce. I like to be with a producer. Usually it’s Banks The Genius or Boathouse. Both of them I can make a song with in 20 minutes. The vibe is, they start working and I let them do them. If there’s something I don’t like, I’ll say it, but for the most part I let them inspire me and I’ll go from there. I put down my ideas and it’s usually just we’re working together to complete the record.

RubyHornet: Do you usually come into them with a game plan?

Ajani Jones: It’s definitely off the cuff, they’ll play some shit and I’ll be like 'fire, lets run it.' And that’s what I do, it’s just good vibes everywhere.

RubyHornet: What’s been going on since putting out your last project Eternal Bliss?

Ajani Jones: The game plan after that was to push it, work on making a better sound than we made before and bettering our situation. And we did that. We now have the resources to work as much as we want, and be more creative and have the quality there as well. That was the plan and now it’s about delivering and letting everything come together.


[RH Interview] Evidence - A Lesson In Thematics

In their 1998 classic, "Intergalactic", Mike D of the Beastie Boys rapped, "got an A from Moe Dee for sticking to themes." The brag's origins come from Kool Moe Dee's 1988 Rap Report Card, in which he doled out grades to some of the genre's top artists through a variety of categories. It should be no surprise that Kool Moe Dee gave himself the highest ranking, with stars like Run DMC, KRS One, Rakim, LL Cool J, Heavy D, and many others receiving marks.

Today's rap scene lacks any kind of formal report card. Critics and fans alike hand out accolades on the daily via podcasts, website lists, and the almighty social media. However, if Kool Moe Dee decided to do a 2018 edition of his infamous report card, Evidence would have a rock solid case for a perfect score in the themes department as well.

Evidence is nothing if not consistent. Since the late 90's, he has consistently released music through his group Dilated Peoples, his Step Brothers project with Alchemist, or on the production side for a growing list of artists, which has seen him helm entire projects for emcees such as Defari, Planet Asia, and most recently Domo Genesis. But the creme de la creme for Evidence fans is his ongoing "Weatherman" saga that has produced 3 solo LP's and one EP,  starting with The Weatherman in 2007.

Evidence has used these solo projects to explore his own psyche, and get personal with listeners. Whereas stories about self-doubt, the loneliness of being an artist, and the death of his mother don't necessarily fit on Dilated Peoples albums (those also relied heavily on sticking to themes), Evidence has used his solo work as an open space for their exploration. And he has done so exceptionally well, mostly over dark and thumping production handled by a tight-knit crew of producers.

It's been a minute since his last solo LP, 2011's Cats & Dogs. The long absence was not necessarily planned, and is partly the result of personal struggles. Many of those struggles have found their way onto his newly minted Weather or Not, which was released last week to strong reviews and an open-armed fanbase.

"I'm going through the hardest part of my personal life right now," Evidence tells me via phone, roughly a week before the LP drop. The final song on the album centers on the birth of his first son and the child's mother finding out that she has breast cancer while breastfeeding him.  "It's hard to rap about being great when you're going through shit like that."

Evidence worked through the struggles and turned them into a new album, one that will serve as the end of something and the start of something else. Weather or Not is the end of the tightly themed "Weatherman" projects, the same projects that won him fans but also saw him get comfortable in a routine and style of making music. Itching to ditch that comfort and create new challenges for himself, he's onto the next thing, while he doesn't quite know what that is just yet.

"A big question mark after this, which is what I need right now," he tells me. "But to move onto something next, I gotta move into the unknown and either make my best or my worst record. I got to risk it a little bit more next time."

In this new interview, Evidence speaks in-depth about making his new album, maintaining a "brand", the response his new music has garnered, as well as the transparency-element in today's music scene. Check it out below.

Rubyhornet: Do you like doing this part of releasing a project? Do you like doing interviews again?

Evidence: It kind of depends where your life is each time... I don't mind it, I like talking about it. Sometimes you make a record and get so immersed in it that it's nice to do shows or do interviews. You spend so much time with the product alone that it's kind of like going out once in a while. It could be good, could be shitty.

RubyHornet: You have a line on "Jim Dean", 'I went from slow flow, to never the same flow, cause doing part 2 ain’t the reason I came for.' What is the purpose with this LP? I know it's not a part 2, but there is connectivity throughout your catalog.

Evidence: Yeah, all of my solo releases are involved in the weather theme. The Weatherman, Layover, Cats & Dogs, and now Weather or Not, kind of saying 'take it or leave it.' I'm putting it to bed. But in that process - I'm not competing, but I'm definitely competing with myself. You know when you get into a pattern. You know when it's time to close something. Sometimes you listen to what people say, sometimes you don't take it all in and maybe some of it is important. For me, just being innovative when I make a beat or do anything creative, I'm not trying to repeat something. It's kind of a catch 22 that this is a sequel or something that it's still within a theme, but still trying to keep each episode alive so it doesn't turn into "Godfather 3", where it just goes to complete shit. To stay in a pattern with a theme requires focus, to test yourself in that, takes a lot. I'm always trying to push a boundary or try something unfamiliar, even within something as scripted as the Weatherman theme.

RubyHornet: The press release said that this album will conclude the Weatherman Saga, which I thought was interesting. As someone who has listened to your music going all the way back to the The Platform, You've been referencing rain, the weatherman since way back, what does that mean "the end of the Weatherman phase"?

Evidence: The title's from The Platform where I said, 'some think I'm clever, others think I'm the one who makes too many references to weather... or not...' So, I knew. And I knew on "Mr. Slow Flow" when I said, 'umbrellas up, it's raining cats & dogs' that was going to be another solo record. I get inspired by a line and then make it work. There's something about safety about that, that I want to shed. I want to move into uncertainty a little bit more. I still feel like, I'm not imitating by any means, but the emulating thing is still there a little bit for me where I care what Premier thinks. I still care what this rapper would think, or whatever. With these records, with the first one it worked out the same way that Dilated did, I didn't want to make all the beats, because I wanted to focus more on the rhymes. I felt like if I made a beat, I actually made my album. I didn't just make the album cause it's mine.

But I found a formula. I'm around the best producers like The Alchemist, Premier, and all these people. It does make it a little safe when you do that. You know you're going to have bangers. So you gotta be careful with those so you don't make a playlist record instead of an album. I did my best to do that with this one, but it's hard cause I'm trying to throw everything against the wall with this one. I'm trying to make it feel heavy.

I want to move away from that idea, get into more of my own production. I don't know what I'm going to call it. A big question mark after this, which is what I need right now. Because I feel like knowing where you're going might not be as gratifying. I'm not downplaying my record right now, I think I did great. But to move onto something next, I gotta move into the unknown and either make my best or my worst record. I got to risk it a little bit more next time.

RubyHornet:  The album's title is a question, and you pepper the album with questions throughout both internally and externally, what were some the biggest questions you had to deal with in making this project?

Evidence: What is a brand? What is a person? I kind of battled this one a little bit. I'm going through the hardest part of my personal life right now, which is what the last song on the album ("By Your Side Too") is about. I just had a son, and being so excited, and his mom's trying to breastfeed and figuring out she has breast cancer. Here's that wakeup. So I had to be home and I'm trying to rap at the same time. It's hard to rap about being great when you're going through shit like that. Then I had the questions, if you buy a brand - what's a brand you like?

RubyHornet: Adidas.

Evidence: Ok, if you're buying Adidas, you don't know what the owner's wife is going through. Adidas is a brand, moving forward regardless, it's not a human. So I have to be careful sometimes on how to maintain my brand. But my brand is based upon a human that is going through shit right now. It was a little harder for me to figure out this time around. I had to take breaks, cancel tours, do a few things like that. But then sharing, once again made realize that I'm not alone, we're not alone. Humans are fucking fragile, and we're all going through something. So then it opens up different stuff.

RubyHornet: Throughout your music you talk a lot about not accepting compliments and issues with self-doubt. That's present again on this project, but it sounds like there's more peace with it or you are getting better at accepting the compliments.

Evidence: Actually it's the opposite. I might have said this in another interview, so don't get mad, but there was no high-fiving here at mastering or when the label sends you a gift and a notecard.. I've made those kind of records. That didn't happen here. It was taking too long, can't get this right, can't get that right. Things aren't lining up yada, yada, yada. Then it's done and it's like, 'how'd that fucking happen?' I just worked through it. I stayed working through the problems. 'Let the fever feed it,' or whatever they say.

What I am doing is waking up and creating every single day. Maybe that's what it is. I'm lifting weights so-to-speak. So when I go back to the gym I'm not rusty. In that process, your sword gets sharper a little bit, without even realizing it. I take photos, the same thing happens. I look at photos from 3 years ago, 'wow, that thing sucks.' I didn't realize I was getting better as I was moving on. So if you're loving what you're doing, progress comes with it. I do love what I do. This proved it because I do it everyday even under non-ideal terms. There's maybe only one or two other things I'm good at anyway.

Questions always go out as far as how much to share with the public and how much to keep to yourself. It's a fine line, and I got to walk that line sometimes.

RubyHornet: You mention the fans in a number of records. What do your fans give you? What do you hope to give them with this album?

Evidence: Fans give me hope to keep going, and fans give me a lot of stress. But I realized that the stress is from a passionate place, and I accept that. If people like something they want to hear more of it, and they want it to keep going. It's not unwarranted. It's just when you can't defend yourself cause you don't want to share the reason you're being absent, it gets frustrating.

Then I always got to remember, most people when they make their first record, the majority of artists don't have any fans. And they made that record because they made it from their heart, and that's what brought the fans. I try to not think about fans when I'm creating, but be conscious of 'hey, sorry if I'm being shitty for dipping this long, but it's not by -' you gotta realize this is what I do everyday. So if I'm not out, it's for a reason. It's not time or there's something going on, or I'm working on something. I'm working on a better way to communicate with them, whoever they are or may or may not be.

RubyHornet: You have a line, 'Stay elusive, in the process get forgot about.' In this longer absence you just mentioned, did you have fear that people would not be listening?

Evidence: Yeah. Yeah. 'Things I never thought about, try to be elusive, in the process get forgot about.' That's real shit. You try to be mysterious and you put your trench-coat up, you say no to the photo and you turn down the cameo, you pass this up all in the process of trying to be like MF Doom or some shit and then nobody cares. And then after a while people are like, 'oh, you're busy. We'll move on.'

You got to know the camera's not rolling all the time. Trying to be this mysterious, mythical creature can be dangerous sometimes in the business of selling music. If you don't want to be business, you can do that shit all you want. It's scary. You're trying to dip. I'm trying to take photos and not do selfies, artistic shit for merit and you realize people are not paying attention sometimes. It could be frustrating. It could make an artist wonder. So, yeah, I just do what I do until it's time not to. I skated until I hurt myself. I did graffiti until I got arrested. I just keep doing what I do until there's a sign to quit. Right now people are showing love, and it's so rewarding taking a little more time off than an artist should maybe.

RubyHornet: Did you expect such good responses from the videos? It seems like people are genuinely excited? Do you look at those?

Evidence: I made a promise not to read any youtube comments this campaign, so I pride myself that on the three videos out, I have not read one comment on youtube. That's just because I don't need to put myself in the loop right now. Once things calm down and everything's out, I will come back to that. But yeah, I'm really happy. I feel like we're focusing on being us creatively. I feel like visually and the way I represent myself, I'm definitely not trying to even look at the rap game. I feel like I'm way over there, and I don't even know where this fits. But I know when I show it to people, it resonates as art and they fuck with it. It's telling me I'm doing something right, and maybe I shouldn't be trying to fit in so much my whole career, or worry about things. It's been a big growing couple of years for me. I'm humble, but at the same time I got to be cocky when it's time and really put it down when it's time to. There's a time and place for everything and I'm really learning.

RubyHornet: "Half like Mike, Half Like from Pac Div."

Evidence: "Half like Mike, plus half Like from Pac Div." I don't think many people will get that.

RubyHornet: I was not expecting a Pac Div shout out... I want to talk about the features you have, Alchemist, Defari, Krondon, Rakaa, and then Babu produced the title track. I think there’s something important about collaborating with the same people for roughly 20 years. How does it feel to have them in your corner, when making the project is it a question of when they’ll take part instead if they’ll take part?

Evidence: No it's more a puzzle piece. I've done so much reaching out and so much collabing through the history of my career, I was like, 'this one is going to be honest.' From Styles P to Rapsody, everyone was at my house doing shit. Rakaa, Jon Wayne, Slug might have done his verse in Minneapolis but he set it over here and recut it there. This one was just whoever was around, who was fucking with me. A virtue of that is you're going to see those people, those are my real friends. I think Mach Hommy is the only person I haven't known for a long period of time. Him and I have become real close in a short period of time, I'm really happy to have him on there.

RubyHornet: The song with Defari is great. He kind of reminded me a little it of Slick Rick in his first couple bars.

Evidence: "My pistol knows..." We just did that one and had fun. I made the beat right there, we wrote the rhymes right there. That was one of the moments on my album where I didn't feel like I was making it.

RubyHornet: In “10,000 Hours” you talk about not wanting to see your heroes selling verses on Twitter, when you started your music career on Capitol Records it was a like completely different scenario - do you miss that time of MTV videos and selling CDs? You’ve have a unique perspective as someone who started in that era but has also successfully navigated this new one. Do you ever miss that older time period, did things seem simpler?

Evidence: It kind of showed me everything is a lie, which is fucked. Maybe if Twitter was around then I might not have liked half the people I liked, cause I didn't know much about them. I would know their name, their rhyme, their interview they would give me in a real guarded rap type voice and then they'd fly away with their cape and you'd see them once in a while. I didn't get to follow them and go 'fuck, Taco Bell's closed what am I gonna do?'. Lame. You know what I mean, that's the fuck part about this new shit. You'll find out there's a lot of talented people who are just the kind of people you might not want to hang out with. In that era you were protected. You never got to learn, you could focus on the person's craft. You never got to find out what they were like in life.

RubyHornet:  This might be a cliche question, but has parenthood changed your creative process at all?

Evidence: Ummmmm, no not really. I'm making time for everything. I have to be prepared to sacrifice other things, so maybe that's sleep... I feel more inclined to drive to make my son proud of his father and ultimately be able to support him and leave him whatever I can. I found a new motivation to be honest.


RH In The Studio With: WebsterX

When I started rubyhornet damn near 10 years ago, one of the biggest things for me and Virgil was being the studio with artists. Just the idea of "the studio" was a magic place, something like behind the curtain of the Wizard of Oz. I remember those early days fondly of being in the studio with artists like Naledge, GLC, Mikkey Halsted, Rhymefest and many others. The studio is where Closed Sessions launched, where I first met a 15 year-old Vic Mensa, and got to watch a hero like Raekwon breakdown his approach to music. I think back on that time, my early and mid-twenties, running around like a kid in the candy store. I had a flip cam, and would just hit record. One of my favorite articles on RH were the in-studio pieces where artists would share their creative process and their new work. Since I'm back at rubyhornet, we want to get back to some of our strengths, and the In The Studio articles are at the top of the list.

For this edition, Cooper Fox hung out with WebsterX at SoundScape Studio. He talked to Web about his new music, life since Daymares, and got a glimpse of music to come. Check out the piece below, and look for more of these on the regular.

RubyHornet: What were you working on today?

WebsterX: I was working on this song with BoatHouse, that is either going to potentially be on his project or something for me. Right now I’m just making a whole bunch of stuff. Yesterday I cut nine demos with Kolar, it was pretty crazy. It was awesome. That’s what I’ve been trying to do lately. A lot of the people I’ve been working with on the West Coast and in the Midwest too, we’ll build stuff in person and it’s never finished. That’s how I like to write too, I don’t want to have to necessarily finish something unless I’m presented with a finished beat. We just build it in layers, I’ll record all these demos and send back vocals to them and then we’ll go back and finish the whole song.

RubyHornet: How do you feel about the idea that some people assume that songs are made very quickly and that there’s not all these moving parts and back and fourths going on behind the scenes?

WebsterX: I vibe with that though because I also write really quickly. If I’m making something, the production that a producer and I will make is usually made in an hour to an hour and a half. I’ve stopped thinking so much when I write and let whatever’s going to come out, come out and just do it.

RubyHornet: When heading into these studio sessions what’s the mood and what’s the ideal situation.

WebsterX: The whole mood is pretty much "go hard." I come into sessions doing one of two things, recording or making music. So if i’m making music, the music will be based off whatever I’m feeling, whatever the conversations are about in the studio, whatever’s happening in that room. And then when I’m recording, there is no mood really besides "let's get this in." I have everything prepared already, all the lyrics are on my iPhone. When I’m writing at the crib, I’m reciting that shit like a thousand times over and over again, that’s how I memorize my music and add more lyrics as I go.

RubyHornet: During these sessions are you working towards a larger project or just making it happen and finding a place for the track later?

Right now the phase I’m in is like, let me just create the music at a steady rate, do it however I want to do it and then whatever it is, I’ll just know when it’s complete. I got that intuition and instinct that I trust. I just allow myself to be smooth with it and know when to get it crackin’. It’s way more relaxed now, which is dope. It's less conceptual, I’m just getting it how I get it. Before I used to try to plan every little step. I was very anal about how everything was presented, never just going with the flow. That was the past and now I’m starting to just let stuff happen in regards to making music. I’m just trying to challenge myself and do it in a different way, it’s a new phase and I’m trying to keep evolving.

RubyHornet: What else has been going on between Daymares and now?

WebsterX: I’ve got a few shows coming up between February and March, I’ll be at SXSW and doing a bunch of stuff with NPR in the next couple months because of the Slingshot program, which is cool as hell. The public radio door is really open for me now so I’m trying to go across the country and do as many public radio things as I can do. AND hopefully get that KEXP in-studio performance. I’ve been obsessed with them for a long time. Hopefully I’ll do a Tiny Desk this year, we’ll see. Beyond that, I’ve been really finding out what it means to be real studio rat. Usually if I’m making music it’s not in a way where I need to create every single day. I like to experience things so I can write about it. But now I’m just like, 'let's get it,' because I’m trying to get this cash up, I’m trying to get everything up. I’m trying to make sure I’m doing this for a long time. Kicking up the pace but still keeping it natural and relaxed.

RubyHornet: How did it feel to be apart of the 2018 class of NPR Slingshot Artists?

It felt really good, it felt full circle because my dad used to play NPR every morning before I’d go to school and that was my first time hearing it. It was a needed step and I like how it’s at the start of the year, it just makes everything more crackin’ for the rest of the year, it shows the pace that we’re going to be on. I had this thing I used to do a lot where I’d like to drop something and wait a little bit. But now how the industry is growing, everything is rapid pace. I’m not fully playing to that because I’ll never fully submit myself to how things are ran, but I’ll play the game a little bit. I’m just excited to see what’s going to happen.


[RH Interview] Jabari Rayford speaks on Jack Red moniker, singing with Wyclef Jean, & More

Soundscape Studios has been a staple in the Chicago music scene for years. A who’s who of artists have recorded there from Chance The Rapper to FKA Twigs to Chet Faker and so many more. But the work that goes into the music doesn’t stop with the artist. Engineers are often very literally the unsung heroes in the music world. In our new series we will interview engineers from the one and only Soundscape Studios to show you who has the magic touch behind the boards. They are artists in their own right, any music fan should be at least somewhat familiar with the people who make the music sound radio ready. This week we have Jabari Rayford aka Jack Red.

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Where does the stage name Jack Red come from?

It stemmed from what I do in my creative process. I’m an engineer, producer, vocalist, and songwriter. A Jack of all trades so to speak. Nowadays, the name’s meaning changes more and more with every song I make and every story I tell.

What artists inspired you to sing?

I grew up on Motown so artists like Otis Redding, Teddy Pendergrass, Marvin Gaye really inspired my vocal style. Also artists like Tank, Frank Ocean, Mac Ayres, really have a vibe that keeps me fed.

How do you maintain the creative energy to make music and balance running sessions all day?

They all work together. I’m fortunate to be mostly working with artists that appreciate my creative arsenal toolbox and allow me to access as much of it as needed.

What have you learned in your time at Soundscape?

I’ve learned that music is just as important to the world as it is to me. I grew up in a musical family with parents that are musicians and in the industry. So, to be in an environment where most if not all the people need music as much as I do is a motivating feeling.

Recount a memorable session that you’ve ran

Definitely most memorable session was with Wyclef Jean.
Mike hit me saying he was coming through with Young Chop, who at the time I was working fairly often with. Wyclef gets there on time and Chop is about 2 hrs late. Very unusual for him. While we waited, Wyclef picked up a guitar and started playing. The man is a genius, no doubt in my mind. As he played and began to hum, mike and I set up a couple mics to capture the brainstorm. As I said, I’m a singer at heart. No music can be played without me singing to it. NONE. So as I set him up, I was harmonizing to the melody he was playing. He heard me and said, “Hey, you got a voice. You wanna sing this with me?” Hell the f*** yea I do! Being the singer that I am, and having an opportunity to “show what I got” to the legendary Wyclef‐ I began singing my entire heart out; runs and all. After a while he stopped and said, “Hey do you smoke weed?” I hesitated because I had no clue where he was going with this. “I have.” I replied. Wyclef continued “You know how when you’re high, sudden moves and loud noises kinda throw off the vibe?” *insert the saltiest face ever made here*. “That’s how it is making music. You gotta catch the vibe. I’ll start again, listen for a bit, catch the vibe, then come in.” He began to play and sing, “Shoot first, Think last....” After a few bars I joined in with a lower harmony. He smiled, nodded in approval, and we continued the vibe. That song would go to garner millions of views on Worldstar and I believe a shout out from Oprah. My creative process was forever changed.

Photo by Cole Cooper

How did you end up singing backing vocals on DJ Khaled’s album Grateful?

I was at CRC recording some vocals and making some arrangements with Peter Cottontale for his project. Along with artists: Lisa Mishra, Teddy Jackson, Yebba, Sherren Olivia, and Mickey Miller. Too much hotness in one room. We were in Studio 1 i think and I walked over to Studio
4 to see what Chance was working on. As I walk in, I hear Marvin Sapps ‐ “Never Would Have Made It”, interpolated into this beat. Quick backstory. I sang that song at my Kenwood high school graduation and definitely hold that song near and dear to my heart. Ok I’m back. Yebba was in the booth at the time singing over the vamp. I turned to Chance and said I gotta do a pass on the record. He said, “Definitely.” When I tell you I blacked out singing lol. The wild part is you can barely tell my voice apart from the sample. I hit Pat after I saw the tracklist come out and asked they kept my vocals. Once he confirmed, I then had my first Platinum selling album placement.

Does music ever take time away from your marriage? What’s it like being married and working in the music industry?

Can’t lie, it used to. With anything new there’s an adjustment period. My wife first met me at a show when I was like 14 years old. This has always been my life. But it’s all about priorities. Music is my passion and happens to be my job as well. I’m blessed to have a wife that understands that. When she wakes up and goes to work, that’s what it is. Same for me. When it’s time to go to work, then it’s time to work. We just happen to have significantly different business hours.

What’re some projects you’re working on that people should be excited about?

I’m releasing a visual EP in episodic form in December. Every Friday we’re dropping a new part. All the content will be available exclusively on my website and available on all streaming platforms on Dec. 29th. We are also, setting up pop up viewing stations around Chicago to give a sneak peak of all 5 parts.

Photo by Cooper Fox

What did the local music scene look like to you when you were attending Kenwood? How did growing up in the city affect your outlook?

I didn’t know much about the local music scene when I was in highschool. I didn’t get into the scene until my college days. A that point it was, The Cool Kids, Kids These Days, the Savemoney Crew, Treated Crew etc.
Growing up in the city made we less open to people. Chicago is an amazing city and so are mosts of its people. But it is definitely not for the faint of heart or weak minded. I’ve learned to always be on my toes, always prepared. In any setting. The city also gives you a brief glimpse at how separated the world is. Neighborhoods, people, social class,opportunities, etc. You got two options. You can find out where you belong and live life blending in. Or you make your own way.

What are some go to albums you reference for mixing?

Kendrick Lamar ‐ GKMC
This album is always a go to. I really rock with the way Ali mixes Kendrick’s vocals.

Coldplay ‐ Ghost Stories
I love the space they create between the leads and the world around it.

PND ‐ TWO
I go to PND songs for that INDIE/MAJOR sound. His vocals have this very rough, harsh sound but it works for certain styles. They are very effects heavy but still cut and are gigantic to me.

How does being an artist affect engineering other artists songs?

I think it makes for a better final product. Being an Artist myself, I can hear what's missing from a record that makes the artist shine. I bring that perspective to other Artists' songs that I Engineer.

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[RH Interview] Rich Jones: A Lot To Smile About

photo credit: Katie Levine

Hailing from the Northwest side of Chicago, IL, Rich Jones is a seasoned veteran of his local Hip-Hop scene. Jones has been throwing and hosting events since 2012, his monthly series “All Smiles” hosted at Tonic Room is an apt description of the friendly emcee. Jones, a firm believer in the power of positive energy and reinforcement has invested his life’s work into the city's scene. With the dividends finally showing themselves over the course of the past year with the success of his Vegas EP, a future blending Pop record that showcased just how diverse the 29-year-old wordsmiths’ musical palate is. Whether crooning like an old Chicago blues man or singing like a top 40 artist or reciting his thoughtful everyman’s raps, Jones is true to his authentic self. His musical catalogue has grown immensely over the past half-decade and will only continue to evolve.

Sitting down with him in the lobby of Soho House Chicago, he pauses thoughtfully after every question, sipping a cup of coffee while gathering his thoughts. Clearly he has absorbed a lifetime's amount of information through his music and the pursuit of reaching wider audiences. His seemingly tireless work ethic would impress even the busiest workaholic, but Jones insists that it’s all in line with his teenage dreams of musical pursuit. The end game being not just furthering Jones’ own art, but also putting on for a community that has helped him grow time and time again.

Alexy:
Where are you from & what’s your family background?

Rich Jones: I’m from the Northwest side of Chicago. My mother is a former musician and now works at Northwestern. My father used to work for the Chicago Reader and now he’s an editor at a poetry journal and does some other freelance work.

Alexy: What got you started hosting events?

Rich Jones: I began hosting events and all that starting in 2012 I believe. I was in a group called SCC (Second City Citizens), I wasn’t trying to bother promoters anymore. I wanted to start doing stuff on our own. So it just made sense to kind of make that happen. Also, it worked out that we had already had a great show at the Tonic Room and they said whenever we wanted to go back we should hit them up, so I just happened to pop in there and that’s kinda how it all started.

Alexy: Did you go into it looking to make it a monthly series?

Rich Jones: I went into it thinking it should be a consistent thing. That way the group could have consistent money coming in too. I also was looking at it from the perspective of, how could I get my friends on shows and potentially break into other venues that artists had connections with? You know by kind of being able to trade like, 'hey we have this, could you possibly get us on something in the future?' And it worked pretty well for a while. We had some really awesome years while the group was more active so when the group kind of went on hiatus back in 2016 we rebranded to “All Smiles” because I wanted to keep throwing shows even if we weren’t performing every month. I had friends from out of town that I wanted to take care of and offer them shows in the same way they take care of me in other cities.

Alexy: The Vegas EP was a very different sound than your previous work, what brought about that stylistic chance?

Rich Jones: With Vegas EP, I wanted to give more straight up pop records a chance in terms of writing them and executing them. I’ve always had a pop element to my music so it made sense. I really wanted to go all out with it and see where it led. At the time I also felt like I had hit a wall with what I was able to make, so I wanted to break out and try something different, and it felt really good. I had a wonderful partner in crime with Ryan Lofty just because he had been having a lot of success with placement on television and commercials, stuff like that. So I was kind of going out there (to Las Vegas) to try my hand at songwriting for other people, but also to get more prominent looks for the music I was making. And I’d say given all that’s happened in the last 10 months or so when the project dropped, we achieved a lot of what we wanted to achieve, especially in terms of gaining a little bit more exposure for what I’m doing. Especially with the music I’m making, it showed people I was more than someone just trying to make Hip Hop records. It showed people I was committed to making solid records that were eclectic and interesting. In terms of presenting that by using a full band or more live elements to it, I think it ultimately forced me to up my game across the board.

Alexy: How’d you link up with Ryan Lofty?

Rich Jones: I met Ryan in 2010 after a holiday party. A friend was going to a bar and Ryan happened to be deejaying and we exchanged contact info and hit it off. That was kind of it, we just got along really well. He’s a really funny goofy guy from Iowa and you know, we just clicked. Seeing how seriously he took music; they say the people you surround yourself with are kind of a reflection of yourself. So while I wouldn’t say I was Blue Days hip or anything, I definitely respected him for his work ethic. A big reason for why we stayed in touch is we’re both driven in what we want to do and still are driven.

Alexy:
Do you plan to continue with that same sort of singing sound?

Rich Jones: I think whatever the record calls for is the best answer there. But at this point I’ve proven I can excel making that style of music and I already have my background as an emcee making more Hip Hop slanted music. I just want to combine all those worlds. I do have pop influences, I do have Hip Hop influences. I listen to a lot of different types of music. It’s really important for me to do that because it keeps the sound interesting. It keeps me open to different musical approaches in my craft and there are definitely records from the Vegas sessions that we plan to release at some point so there are more songs in that part of the catalogue like that. Plus, I’m actually going out there in November for a couple days to work on more songs along those lines. So I’m definitely not going to say the intentionality is as strong as it was 2 years ago when we started working, but we intend to keep doing more. His (Ryan Lofty) strong suit is more power pop sounding stuff and I think mine is an interesting lyricism and all the kind of weird sounds I like, so when we come together we make some pretty interesting shit.

Alexy: I first heard your music because of your project Pigeons & Waffles in 2015, what did that time period do for your career?

Rich Jones: Well, I guess backing up a little bit before we get to Vegas, I had been hoarding music for about 3 years. Pigeons & Waffles and Pink Slips (the follow up to P&W) were both kind of bookend projects, they’re kind of relevant to each other because they’re from a similar batch of music. With Pigeons & Waffles, the big thing I was excited for was being able to make a complete project with Montana Macks, one of my oldest friends and musical collaborators. Having the opportunity to hunker down and finish records we had been working on for a while and make new things that compliment that, that’s what was important for us in that project. Also, with the title itself people joke that the city bird of Chicago is the pigeon so I just kind of decided to make that a play on words from the classic dish chicken & waffles.

I was actually really happy with that project though because in a lot of ways it was as complete as I was capable of making it at the time. I felt up to that point, because I had been hoarding records, people didn’t really know what I had unless I was playing it for them. I remember Fake Shore Drive did a panel with Salam Remi and Just Blaze, one thing they talked about was how at some point you just gotta get the records out. A big part of tempering expectations is by setting that baseline so people can know what to expect from you and have any reason to be excited about you. In terms of my previous work, it’s funny, I sometimes go back and listen to the project around the same time of year it dropped and I hear all sorts of things I’d do differently and sometimes I’m like 'damn I see why they didn’t like that.' But it doesn’t work to get stuck in the past. I would say with that project we showed we could properly rollout a project, promote it, attach other content like videos to it just to kinda keep people engaged with what we were doing.

That worked out really well with getting people’s attention online, because the next year with Pink Slips we were able to take some of that buzz and put that into the venue setting. We threw a free show at Schubas on a Tuesday, it was a rainy day but that place was over capacity. That to me was a very exciting show because up to that point I had never had a solo show where there had been that sort of reception or build up. We got some key looks building up to that, that got more people interested in what I was doing. Pink Slips didn’t do as well numbers wise but it was really key in terms of convincing venues I was viable.

Alexy: What’re your goals/plans for the next year?

Rich Jones: I’ve got an EP called "Light Work" with the producer Vapor Eyes dropping in December, I’ve got a release show for that coming as well. The EP features Kosha Dillz, ShowYouSuck, & Sports Boyfriend. After that I’ve got a project with the producer WalkingShoe. We have a group called “Bad Ambassadors” that we started that is the perfect blend of my Hip Hop influences with the Pop you’ve seen on Vegas.

Aside from that I’ve got a ton of music in my catalogue and given what’s occurred in the last 2-3 months with some of the looks we’ve gotten in the media and also with the performance looks like playing North Coast, I’m looking to keep the momentum. I’ve got a ton of music that I’m excited about and I think the key difference between 2 years ago and now is that I’m not as worried about how a song does. If it doesn’t pop off immediately or the way that I pictured, I’m just not gonna freak out about it because guess what? I’ve got so much other shit. I try not to be unrealistically positive, I definitely try to keep an even keel and see how things are going just as long as I see forward motion I’m happy.

Alexy: Who’s one rapper who you’ve studied?

Rich Jones: I think recently because his shit is so effortless is Guru from Gangstarr; I think more MCs need to study him. That was a big artist Montana Macks and I bonded over because Montana was the one who told me I should buy Moment of Truth. I had been familiar with some of their work because of the LimeWire era but that album is just so… you’re listening to something where every single song has meaning and a message attached to it and it wasn’t so preachy that it was unlistenable either. You also have to give credit to Premier because his production on that album is crazy. Post-Vegas I kind of got back in touch with my MC roots and Guru's someone that I’ve thought about a lot because he could say things in such a monotone matter of fact way. Not getting himself all worked up for nothing, being angst-y for no real payoff, one thing I’ve never been good at is getting extra energetic in my shit. It just doesn’t sound sincere and doesn’t really mesh with my true character. I can do some turn up shit but again it all comes back to can you do that while making it look effortless.

Alexy: You went to school in Appleton, Wi. Discuss your time there and who you leaned on for growth while being away from the city and its music scene.

Rich Jones: I had a couple friends at school who started a studio senior year at the radio station. They really made it possible for me to finish my first post-college project Sweater Weather. When I came to Chicago I linked with my friend Kyle Resto and we finished the job but they were really instrumental in getting me going to finish something. Although there wasn’t a huge Hip Hop crowd up there and not necessarily any mentorship for that, I was on the phone with (Montana) Macks pretty much every day. Talking about Hip Hop and everything under the sun but mainly a lot of music. Having that outside line to someone who knew a lot more than me but had the time and inclination to help teach me from afar, that was really helpful.

Alexy: With all the things you do outside of creating music, where do you find the time to actually make music?

Rich Jones: This year the best decision I made on some time management shit, I decided that I need to be in the studio at least once a week for an extended period of time. My friend Joel Gutman runs a studio called Fat Tongue and he owed me some time because I literally helped bring in all the lumber that he used to build the studio. After recording the Vapor Eyes EP with him I realized I really liked him and had a lot of other production that I was sitting on, or in the process of getting from people so it just kind of clicked. So give or take a week or two, I’ve pretty much been there every week since the end of March. Making a commitment to be there anywhere from 6-10 hours in a week, Joel’s been really generous in making sure I’m not breaking the bank on this. We take care of each other, when I go in there he makes sure I can get the time I need because he likes what I do, respects what I do. Having someone on the engineering/mixing/mastering end is an integral part of the process.

Alexy: What was it like playing North Coast Music Festival this past summer?

Rich Jones: It was pretty surreal; we had been working hard to get the live set up to a place where it could really shine in that sort of environment. My backing band Cool Runnings, we really gelled because the rule at the beginning of the summer was we had to have everyone play every show that I had that called for a band. So we played Logan Square Arts Fest, A Benefit concert at Lincoln Hall for ALS, and North Coast. Between those three shows, everyone really came together and created a wonderful unit of musicians that I really respect and have fun playing with. So to kind of have everything culminate like that for us was really cool.

Aside from the band aspect, being able to have my parents experience that moment with me and have them see people enjoy my music and see all my hard work and investment pay off. I think in a very real sense they’ve been pretty much on board with this since day one. Give or take a couple of days because like any parents they just want what’s best for me and they want me to be happy. I showed early on that I was committed, so for them to see that time commitment pay off it was really good for them because I know they want the world for me as much as I want it for them and myself, so that was really special. Also to share the stage with so many other great artists that performed that day and meet some of the people performing was a real crash course in knowing what to expect for similar shows like that in the future. We were also able to bring on my friend Bob Zeigler who’s the visual guy for Chance The Rapper and he put together an amazing visual show to compliment what we were doing. I don’t usually get to really stunt on a set so we just figured we’d just pull out all the fuckin’ stops and try to make this as impressive as possible. It was definitely an investment.

Alexy: What motivates you to keep this hustle going?

Rich Jones: Ultimately I have to remind myself sometimes that regardless how 29-year-old me is feeling about it, 14-15-year-old me would be over the moon with what I’ve been able to accomplish. A lot of the things you want in life, you get them but they don’t often arrive in the way you think they would or are what you think they would be. I try to be very appreciative of what’s being offered to me, there’s a lot of people who work very hard, people that I look up to, that haven’t gotten the looks I have or have gotten different looks. Everyone’s path is different; you can’t be jealous or upset about other people’s successes. A lot of the time the best way to feel about certain things at least for me, is if I can through any way help my friends and if we look out for each other I think that’s the healthiest environment and headspace to approach it from.

I remember 10-15 years ago they used to call Chicago “Haterville”. It was a really big deal that Longshot, an MC from the North Pole-Rogers Park area made a mixtape called Civil War Pt 1 & 2 and brought artists from around the city to work together. It comes back to how do we keep this going, how do we keep supporting each other staying positive because look man, this is an industry that is prone to fuck shit and people that aren’t the highest character in terms of how they conduct themselves. I think as long as we’re looking out for each other and making sure everyone is being honest it makes all of our lives way easier. So I think to roundabout answer your question is the idea that this is a community worth investing in and that it isn’t just about my personal success.

As far I’m concerned I want to see Chicago grow, I want to see the region of the Midwest grow in terms of the spotlight that’s being placed upon it. Making sure these artists are getting their just due whether it’s me or anyone else. I remember seeing Chance The Rapper open up for my group SCC; there was 10 people there, RTC (Closed Sessions label head) was there, he deejayed that show, and within like 2-3 years Chance is playing for thousands of people at Lollapalooza. You know I had a chance to run into him backstage after that set and I point blank just thanked him and said “hey man you know you proved 17-year-old me right” in that you could be an artist from here, stay at the crib, you don’t have to move and go elsewhere to be successful.

I know that was our goal (SCC) but it doesn’t matter that it wasn’t us, it mattered that it happened, because it only makes it easier for everyone else. Not everyone’s going to be happy with other people’s success, you can call it jealousy or whatever you want to call it but at the end of the day having an artist like that, it brings more opportunity. The more institutions we have that are legitimized we have to support that, because that’s how others will start taking us as a city seriously. There’s a lot of money invested in the coasts and you have to go there, but I think one thing that’s overlooked about here is the possibility of travel is so doable. Knowing the right time to not leave here permanently but just go elsewhere, that’s a big way to not only expand one’s perspective on what’s out there but also on what you can bring back to home. Seeing so many amazing performers and different things in this country, it’s made me better in the sense of what could possibly be fostered here so that we’re a happier and healthier community.


RH Interview: Andrew Barber Talks FakeShoreDrive At 10 and Much More

The first time I met Andrew Barber  (fuck, 10 years ago!) I couldn't wait for him to shut up and leave me alone. In response, he (unsurprisingly) thought I was kind of a jerk. It was December 2007, and I was DJing an event at the Nike Offices entitled The Brotherhood. It was a coming together of formidable streetwear brands at the time - PHLI, LEADERS, and Self-Conscious and a celebration of the budding streetwear scene, one that has birthed Fat Tiger, Don't Be Mad, Jugrnaut, and of course the long-lasting St. Alfred. Along with being one of the DJ's, I was helping get the word out and handled press invitations. That was some shit I did, especially for Dave Jeff of PHLI, who took me under his wing as a mentor.

A week or two before the event, I got an email from a guy named Andrew Barber, who had just started a blog called Fakeshoredrive. He had limited posts up or a big audience, but after briefly checking out the site (I loved the name), I hit Dave and said we should hook this dude up with a pass.

Fast forward to the night of the event, and Andrew walked up to me while I'm DJing, introduces himself and thanks me for the invite. If memory serves, he then asked me something about going to IU, where he also attended college. I can't say for sure because I was trying to pay attention to my blend - I think it was something like "Da 80's" by Styles P into "EMG" by El-P. I made quick work of it, and we went on to respectively enjoying the night.

I didn't know it at the time, but that night kicked off a routine of seeing Barber damn near every week, sometimes there would be weeks where we'd run into each other every other day. It was the birth of the blogosphere and Fakeshoredrive and rubyhornet collectively were the frontlines of the Chicago Hip Hop sector of the Internet. Go back to early posts on either site and "props to ______" litter the pages. That's how you got props back in day. Be the first to post new music, have some kind of exclusive content, and "get your name up" around the interwebs.

"'I'd see you guys do something really dope and be like "damn I wish I would've thought of that first,' or see you guys beat me to an idea or an event or an exclusive. It kept me on my toes for sure," Andrew Barber tells me on the cusp of Fakeshoredrive's 10th Anniversary party happening 11/4 as part of Red Bull Sound Select Presents: 30 Days In Chicago.  "We had to always be innovative and we had no blueprint to follow. We were really just tinkering around to see what would float. Trial by error."

The errors and the trials were both aplenty, but Fakeshoredrive also had tremendous breakthroughs from the raging comment section, the classic Lupe Fiasco leaks, Shade 45 Mixshow, and early discovery and championing of artists such as Chief Keef, King L, and Chance The Rapper. We could go on and on, but the legacy speaks for itself and there's a bevy of Chicago emcees, producers, designers, and just passionate Hip Hop fans that would agree.

Andrew always said that when FSD hit 10, he'd have a big party. Well, FSD finally hit double-digits and it's time to celebrate. In honor of the 10 years, I chopped it up Andrew about reaching this point, quitting his day job, how the role of blogs has changed since we started, and much more.

Peep it below... and see you Saturday.

RTC: I remember back in the day, every time the FSD anniversary came around you would say, “at 10 we’ll have a party.” In those early years, was getting to 10 years something you saw as realistic? I know it may be tough to go back, but how do your thoughts on the future of FSD back then compare to the reality right now?

Andrew Barber: Haha, I finally had to do it. I never really wanted to do a party celebrating the brand or myself or anything like that. I like to let the work speak for itself. I prefer to keep my head down and keep working, and put that energy into how we're gonna stay around for another year. But making it to 10 is a milestone, so we had to do something special for it.  I honestly didn't envision this thing lasting 10 years. I mean, you saw this thing from day one, and it was really just a hobby at the time -- it wasn't my career. I'd always hoped to make it a career, but at the time it was unfathomable. The fact that anyone cares after a decade is just crazy to me. Stuff hardly lasts 18 months in the music industry.

RTC: When you started the site, you had a full-time job and were writing from your desk. What pushed you to blog so heavy back then?

Andrew Barber: I was just doing it out of love. I wanted to be a part of the local scene and the hip-hop community in any way I could, so it just seemed like a cool way to get involved. There was definitely a void for what we were doing. At that time in 2007, it felt like there was something special going on here. Something untapped. It was an exciting time to be involved in the scene. It had a certain magic to it, and it wasn't super crowded.  But I was sort of living a double life. Going to hip-hop events at night and working a corporate gig during the day. I did that for about four years.

RTC: Following up on the double-life you were living at the beginning. Did that get progressively harder as the site grew? Was there any specific tipping point that was like – I’m done, or was it a planned out process to leave your job?

Andrew Barber: For the first couple of years, it was still pretty underground, so my coworkers had no idea. But once I got my first press -- a spread in the Chicago Reader -- everything changed. I'll never forget the day that issue dropped -- my boss called me into his office and asked me to close the door. I thought I was going to get fired right there on the spot. But he was super cool about it. Some of my other superiors weren't as supportive, so needless to say my corporate gig was pretty weird after that. Understandable, though.

It took me another two years to leave that situation, but I finally made the leap on my own. In fact, it was my wife who pushed me to quit and focus on FSD full time. I was just missing too many opportunities being confined to a cubicle all day. A lot of people tried to talk me out of quitting since I had a cushy gig with benefits and a 401K, but my now-wife, believed in me and told me that if I didn't do it then I'd probably never do it. She said she'd have my back if I failed and would help me get back on my feet if it didn't work out. I quit and never looked back.

RTC: I’d say Chicago Hip Hop is skeptical, what was it like proving yourself to artists and the community, was that acceptance immediate – how did you start to gain the access and respect of everyone?

Andrew Barber: Chicago was so skeptical -- especially trying to come in as a "blogger" in 2007. It certainly wasn't the cool thing to do back then.  I remember people thinking I was some computer dork or whatever. Keep in mind, this was still the mixtape era, so you'd go to events and people would be selling their CDs out front. Eventually, they began passing them out for free, but in those early days, it was still a hand-to-hand hustle. The idea of people giving me their music for free was pretty foreign in Chicago at that moment. Also, the scene wasn't really utilizing YouTube at the time to drop their videos -- everyone was still trying to get play on MTV or BET.

I feel like GLC understood that super early. As did The Cool Kids, Mano, Holt and Mic Terror. I remember Astonish having a really dope video early on when he was with the Molemen. L.E.P. as well.

RTC:  You once asked Yung Berg if he was Jewish to kick off an interview – which I thought was hilarious. Do you have a favorite article or piece you’ve done? Maybe not your favorite, but one that was significant for the growth of the site?

Andrew Barber: Wow, I forgot about that. You have a great memory. I remember that was a controversial interview at the time because he made some comments about the L.E.P. Bogus Boys, and they had a rebuttal and everything. That was a crazy time, because the only real social media site that was around was Myspace. So people actually went to blogs to get content and information, and they would share feedback in the comments section -- and our comments section was off the chain at one point.

I think a lot of those early interviews were crucial to the growth of FSD. I met Shake and Bump J super early on -- months after starting the site -- and they introduced me to so many people. From Mikkey to No ID, who then introduced me to Traxster and Twista. Things just began to fall into place after that. One door opens another, and so on and so forth. I was stalking people on Myspace for interviews, some would respond, but most wouldn't.

RTC: You mentioned the comments in your response, and I can’t believe I forgot about the comments.  What was your initial reaction that part of FSD? That had a big impact too on fostering a community and really providing a chance for people to talk to each other. Your post wasn’t fully-fully official til there was a comment.

Andrew Barber: Yeah the comment section kind of took on a life of it's own. This was pretty much still pre-social media, so the comment section was a place where people could argue, talk shit, give props -- whatever. A lot of people just came to read the comments! They didn't care about the actual content, it was all about the action in the comments. And it could get pretty ugly in there. I'd get calls at all hours of the night from people asking to take down certain things people said about them or a bad review or whatever. It could rattle people, myself included. Sometimes things would get really personal and people would cross the line talking about siblings or spouses and I'd try to monitor that stuff and take down if people asked me to. People would also put phone numbers and addresses in there, and that type of stuff wasn't cool. In fact, I know a handful of artists used to fabricate their own comments and start up drama just to bring more attention to their posts. Some posts would have like 500 comments! It would be Christmas and people would be on there arguing and my email would be getting pinged. It was crazy.

To be honest, I was happy when the comments section ended, though. I think it was the precursor to what we see now in the social media era, where people are just ready to tear someone's head off over a difference of opinion. I feel like Twitter in particular is essentially a comment section on super steroids.

RTC:  It’s really weird to type, but was there an element of danger to the comment section and just running the site? I feel like a few times things got vicious.

Andrew Barber: Yes of course there was. There is always that element. You always have be aware of that. I definitely witnessed and took a number of verbal lashings over the years. One day I'll have to write a book, haha. It's not time for all of that yet.

RTC: It would be an understatement to say that blogs have changed since we started doing it. Back then it was very amateur and almost all of the bloggers were really just fans that went that extra step to cover the music and then developed a following. Now it seems like blogging has been bought out by major companies, and the little guy (or girl) blogging from their bedroom is going to have a tremendously tough time making a way. In your opinion, what allowed “bedroom bloggers” to flourish back then? Is there still a place for that?

Andrew Barber: I look at that moment, specifically 2005-2008, as a disruptive time in the music industry. Which I believe happens every 10 years. In 1999 you had Napster. In 2017 you have streaming. The mid-00's was a time when the industry was picking up the pieces, and the people got the power back. It allowed literal unknowns to get an audience and share music and thoughts. It was like the wild wild west online. There was also an element of  "okay, we aren't supposed to be doing this," which also made it kind of exciting. The industry was playing catch up. Now, of course, they have the ball back, but at that time the people had more control and more say so. Of course, once the bigger and better funded sites saw what was going on, they were able to pounce on the small guys and snatch up the best talent. But at the time, it was very special and independent.

RTC: I think when we started, blogs were really built off a couple key things – being first, being unique, and creating exclusive content that would be reposted and you earn your stripes. I remember the first time Nahright wrote “shout out RTC and rubyhornet”. That made my day.  What makes a “good blog” now? What is the purpose?

Andrew Barber: It used to be all about exclusives, or digging up rarities.  Now, not so much. Music and video posts aren't what they used to be - and neither is being first. Everything is largely done through social media now, so they've effectively cut out the middle man, which is the website. It's a very different climate.

But yes, I do remember that at the time, getting a shout out by eskay on NahRight meant the world. That was literally the most powerful hip-hop site on the planet for a while. And if you made it on eskay's NahRight Lite on the side column? Forget about it. I feel like that's how most people found out about FSD.

RTC: What role do you think blogs played in connecting some of the dots for Chicago Hip Hop? 10 years ago the hate was real and the crab in a bucket mentality was how many described the city. I don’t think that exists as much today and FSD played a critical role. Do you agree?

Andrew Barber: Yes, as did Ruby Hornet. We can't forget about what you guys did either. You specifically played a crucial role in helping all of this happen. I know we can't take all the credit, but I feel like the internet era kind of lifted the curtain, and opened everyone up to what was happening around the city. More people could see what was happening in their respective scenes. Like when you guys did "Swagger Like Chi" -- you were able to get guys like Bump J, GLC, Mikkey and Naledge all on the same record. I feel like that wouldn't have happened one or two years before that.

RTC: You mentioned rubyhornet and "Swagger Like Chi" – just curious how you viewed that site and how RH being there related to  FSD? I don’t think RH would’ve been the same if there wasn’t FSD. I think some artists took us to be purely competitors, but I think it was like continually being pushed to be dope, and someone else there to cover the scene from a different perspective. That’s kind of how I saw it... And of course, it birthed a phase of Chicago Hip Hop Photography w/the AB “insert rapper” RTC pics... But I’m just curious of how you saw it back then, really.

Andrew Barber: RubyHornet pushed us to be better, period. To think better, to create better, to challenge FSD to come up with better ideas. I'd see you guys do something really dope and be like "damn I wish I would've thought of that first," or see you guys beat me to an idea or an event or an exclusive. It kept me on my toes for sure. We had to always be innovative and we had no blueprint to follow. We were really just tinkering around to see what would float. Trial by error. Those who came after us got to see what we did right and wrong, and improve on that. I do feel like we were blog pioneers to some extent. I certainly remember it wasn't a cool thing to be at the time.

I know people really wanted us to beef and be at odds, but we actually were cool. We'd party together and hang out, but people really wanted there to be an issue between FSD and RH. But there wasn't. It was just friendly competition. I mean, we had no other choice but to hang out with each other in those early days. We were the dorky media guys haha. The only media people there would be like FSD, RH and Gowhere Hip Hop. Can't forget about them.

RTC: The generation of Chance, Vic, Chief Keef, etc – that 2012 class really blew the doors off between the industry and Chicago. What is the mix of the talent and energy of that class vs. also the opportunities afforded that didn’t exist prior? How much did the digital age catching up play a role? Why didn’t necessarily the same happen for the generation prior of The Cool Kids, Kidz In The Hall, Mikkey etc...

Andrew Barber: I think the earlier era had great success, but the world just hadn't come online yet, so they unfortunately had a cap. They were so forward thinking and the internet and blogs weren't what they eventually became in 2012. They absolutely paved the way for what's happening now. They also didn't have social media as we know it now, which really helped propel the class of 2012. I feel like when we first started, we were all kind of waiting and looking for the actual industry approval. But the kids of 2012, were like "FUCK THAT, we're not waiting. Here we come!" They watched what came before them, and used the internet as their own weapons.

RTC: You have The Big Tymers reuniting to headline the show, and you’ve previously booked Master P, Juvenile, and Mannie Fresh at your parties. What is your connection to the dirty south rap of the late 90’s? Why is that the sweet spot for you?

Andrew Barber: Haha, I just really loved No Limit and Cash Money. They made some of my favorite rap ever. I'm not like a diehard Southern rap fan or anything like that, I was just very loyal to both of those labels. These are things I had on my bucket list forever, and my great partners and friends at Red Bull have helped me make these shows a reality. So a HUGE shout out to them for their support over the past five years.

RTC: In the preview piece for the show, we wrote that the celebration is much more than the website, but really the whole hip hop community. How do you want people to see this party and what you’re celebrating?

Andrew Barber: I really just want people to come and have a good time. We have some incredible special guests, which will somewhat serve as a walk down FSD memory lane. Yes, we have Big Tymers reuniting and Tee Grizzley, but the other stuff we have planned will be equally as exciting.


[RH Interview] Jeff Arenson Speaks on Life Lessons, Recording Talib Kweli, & More

Photo courtesy of Cooper Fox

Soundscape Studios has been a staple in the Chicago music scene for years. A who's who of artists have recorded there from Chance The Rapper to FKA Twigs to Chet Faker and so many more. But the work that goes into the music doesn't stop with the artist. Engineers are often very literally the unsung heroes in the music world. In our new series we will interview engineers from the one and only Soundscape Studios to show you who has the magic touch behind the boards. They are artists in their own right, any music fan should be at least somewhat familiar with the people who make the music sound radio ready. First up in our series: Jeff Arenson. 

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What do people call you?

Jeff, for the most part, Mike blessed me with the name “pimpglitter” which is just kinda from the fact that I often focus on effects when I work, Spacey vibes in the studio and whatnot. Mike tends to call it pimp glitter because everything has to be pimp something with him. So that was given to me whether I liked it or not so… that one is still up for debate.

When did you start working with Soundscape? How did that happen?

I interned in 2013 I think. It took about four semesters before Mike would answer one of my damn emails (laughs). I knew I wanted to intern here and eventually work here and so through Columbia I was able to intern (for class credits) once I could get an interview with Mike, which was a story of its own. So I got my foot in the door and was lucky enough to start working here once that ended.

Name some crazy dope artists you’ve gotten to work with?

The Chance & Lil B tape was probably the highlight of the last four years... just seeing that come together from two opposite sides of the spectrum of the rap world. Seeing everything come off the top of the head it was very organic, just two people you wouldn’t really expect to work together. FKA Twigs was the closest I’ve been to fanboying... I did not thankfully, but to see her work was awesome. Zayn Malik was a fun one he’s probably the biggest name thats came through in terms of Twitter followers and all that. He came in the same week his album was dropping which was strange timing but still, cool dude. Bubba Sparxx was a fun one (laughs). Some other amazing people that came through include: Vince Staples, Sonny Digital, Smokepurrp, D-Low, and Sicko Mobb.

What's a crazy story that stands out to you?

Talib Kweli, I remember I was working while I was in school and one day Mike was like “yo, I gotta get a haircut, you’re doing a Talib Kweli session in 10 minutes” and I was like “I got class”, at which point Mike just kinda looked at me and walked out the door. So that was my first big name, dudes been rapping longer than i’ve been alive. He’s worked with Young Guru and some really great engineers and that was my first experience recording a legend MC. And he was very (on point), he’d do a 16 or like a 32 and he’d be like “alright I need to pick up from there” and he’d say the word, so if I wasn’t on point he wasn’t gonna have it. I was like a 22 year old kid and like, he’d been rapping longer than fucking 22 years so he just had me on my toes. I didn’t think it went that well but then Mike came back and Talib gassed me up a little bit then came back like 5 days in a row. So just the way that came about, I had to blow off class and Mike just kinda put me in the hot seat so i’m grateful for that one.

What's something you’ve learned from working at Soundscape?

Client expectations, nobody teaches you that shit in Columbia. No offense to Columbia but if a motherfucker comes in and says they wanna get a mixtape done in 2 hours, you gotta know how to work with different sorts of people with different goals in a certain set timeframe. Time management, just real life shit that (Mike) Kolar has taught me that there’s no class about. It's not technical it's just the business aspect of managing someones expectations. Which I think is something that translates in all industries.

Give us 1 funny Kolar story:

He’s made me eat animals i’ve never even knew I could eat. He’s taken me to Chinatown and made me eat pork knuckles that I thought were orange chicken. That was a traumatizing experience. Here's a good one though: one day RTC was out of town for something, so me and Kolar substituted his music business class at Columbia. And so to lead off the class instead of introducing ourselves and explaining why we were here or that we were subs or that we even knew Alex, he just played 3 Chief Keef videos on a huge ass projector. He played "Faneto" and "Get Money" and a third one before even taking attendance, most of the class was very confused but I thought it was a great way to start a class.

Name some people you’re currently working with here that we should look out for:

Tatiana Hazel. She is a very talented (vocalist), she doesn’t really have a genre, she’s like a more Alternative/Punk version of... I don’t wanna offend her (laughs), but Lana Del Ray or FKA Twigs. She’s just in her own lane and I think she’s going to be a real name in this city within a year or two. D. Graves is always working, he’s got a better work ethic than anyone I know. Also Jebiga, I don't know how he’s not famous yet it drives me absolutely insane, he’s as talented as 90% of the musicians in this city. He has a video with Cody LaPlant which is insane, he went to Egypt to shoot a music video, his music just… I hope that the numbers catch up to his talent in a reasonable time frame because it just drives me nuts that such garbage can get so many plays and posts and then some kid can work his ass off and his music is just so much better and he just can't get that personal push yet. AND the motherfucker used to be Russell Westbrooks' personal dresser, along with Jamie Foxx.

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Who were some engineers you looked up to and wanted to emulate coming up?

Dave Pensado is kinda like the golden boy engineer of this era as far as his Youtube series where he interviews engineers, producers, mixers, etc. No one did that shit or cared what engineers had to say by any means when I was growing up, until he made it cool. He kinda opened the door, then MixedByAli had his whole engineers thing, in between him and Alex Tumay engineers have a Twitter presence now. Which is wild that they get verified with thousands of followers and people actually care who engineers shit now. Those are the modern guys I look up to i’d say.

What albums do you reference when you're mixing?
Carter 3 is the all time GOAT of my generation as far as referencing for rap music; Fabian Marasciullo is that guy.  For something more Pop, Rihanna S&M is my go to; stole that one from Kolar. For more live instrumentation/alternative music: Daft Punk RAM, that album is flawless from top to bottom. And when I apply pimpglitter Radiohead Kid A, which is my personal favorite album ever.

[RH Interview] Femdot On How He Started Rapping, His First Headliner & More

Chicago emcee/student Femi Adigun aka Femdot has seen a lot in his life. Through balancing the perspectives of the south and north sides of  Chicago that he has inhabited, he's garnered an unusual perspective that many cannot fully grasp. He has rapped since he was a young child and has developed the skill ever since his older brother nudged him in the right direction by putting him onto the early works of greats like Nas and The Notorious B.I.G..

This week, with the support of his friends and family he announced a new partnership with Closed Sessions, and released a new song, "happyoctober." via Billboard News. In the days leading up to this announcement Fem was nice enough to sit down with us at rubyhornet to discuss the moments in his life and career that have culminated into this milestone. 

Where are you from in Chicago? Where did you go to High school?

I was born on the West end of Evanston. Then from there I moved to the south burbs in a town called Glenwood, I split my time between there and up north in Uptown and Rogers Park. Really a constant balance between North and South. I went to Homewood-Flossmoor High School in the south suburbs.

When did you start learning to rap?

I been rapping. I wrote my first song when I was 6 years old. When I recorded myself for the first time I started selling my mixtapes in 6th grade. My oldest brother taught me how to rap and he was super mega hot fire and he used to rap. So thats kinda where it started, he introduced Hip-Hop to me and my whole family. Me and him were like 12 years apart. Now he’s married with a wonderful wife and kids, he’s a model son you know, (laughs) he’s like what everyone wants what their son to be.

How did you come up with the name Femdot?

People be asking me and I swear ill be wishing I had a super cool ass story. Really my siblings just call me Femdot at the crib because Reebok was doing the S. Carter joints and we were a Roc-A-Fella household. So they took my name (Femi) and called me Femdot and it stuck. The homies would always come by the crib and call me that and i’d be calling myself it too in the raps and shit. Then one day my friend in the hallway was like “Ay Dot!” so from there Femdot became a thing. I wish I could say it was an acronym or it’s a coded message, morse code, whatever, really its just… me.

What year did you start making rap official and taking it seriously? Why?

I mean I was selling mixtapes in high school, but I’d say like when I was 15-16 years old. 1. I just thought I was getting kinda good, I was in my high school, I went to school with Martin Sky and Ohana Bam. We were all kinda known for rapping and I was always known for doing way too much (laughs), but mainly rapping. 2. I decided to start going to YCA and YOUmedia. Its funny because I got there at the end, I only performed at YOUmedia like twice. Thats how I met Ric Wilson in 2012 which is funny because I still have the DM from that. Also I dropped a mixtape and it was trending on Twitter, I was in North Dakota at the time while it was trending in Chicago. So from that moment it was over with. It was like "I think I can really do this Rap stuff".

What was your first show you remember performing?

I did talent shows when I was younger. I used to sing, but my voice dropped young. (laughs) I guess my first rap performance I remember I did this one thing randomly these dudes like bought me clothes, I cashed out on a whole outfit. (laughs) It was so empty but they couldn’t get their money back you know so i just ended up performing for an empty room. I’ve done that a lot, you know i’ve had so many shows where it would be me and the person who threw the show.

Your Song “Gold” produced by DJ CHI was written up on Ruby Hornet in 2013, reading through it seems the track was off your Hella Harolds Project. Tell me about Hella Harolds.

It was a 7 song EP based on a conversation you would have while you were waiting on your Harolds. So theres skits and stuff in between and they’re all based on people talking back and forth about nothing, you know what I’m saying? Because when you’re waiting on chicken thats all you’re doing. I dropped it on that Valentines Day in 2013 and it was Louder Than A Bomb that day and I remember it specifically because at the time Kevin Coval said “hey I heard your Hella Harolds EP”, now he’s just Kevin since we know each other, but back then it was like wow thats Kevin Coval saying that. Maybe i’ll re-release it one day in 7 years for my fans if I get famous.

What was life like post Hella Harolds (Feb 2013) and Pre King Dilla (December 2014)? Why the relatively long hiatus? 

I started going to school, I went to Penn State for my Freshman year of college and I was still rapping, I was still writing everyday but I couldn't drop music you know, I was at a state college I was 5 hours away from Philly. Thats where I was man, I was gone, literally gone. And its not like I was on some “oh I flunked out” stuff like really I just needed to get home for the music. Like if I had stayed at Penn State I would be a scientist, If I had stayed at Penn State right now I would be working for the CDC.

Whats Your Major?

So Im in Health Science with a Biological Science concentration and I have a minor in Peace, Conflict, & Social Justice. I’ve always loved science, like if I wasn’t rapping I would be a scientist no question. Back at Penn State I was studying to be an epidemiologist, someone who studies how diseases happen and how to prevent them. So yeah when I came back here I changed my major to health sciences but just not as focused as it was (at Penn). I always liked science and when it came to the peace, conflict and social justice aspect i’ve always been involved. I’m not an activist, I mean I am, but you know like Ric Wilson, Malcolm London, they really do this shit. So really those are the people I’m looking up to and where that social justice minor fell into place.

When did you start going to Depaul? How did it affect your music output? 

Right after I left Penn State I just transferred to Depaul, I needed to be back in the city. I came back home with the mindset like: "i’ve already done that college life now I’m here to do what I wanna do" and I made that my priority. So yeah it helped a lot it, it allowed me to focus as much on the music as I can.

What was your favorite event or show of 2016?

Oh man, Red Bull Sound Select brought me out to Denver to open for Soulja Boy. It was super fun, that was the first big show I did out of town for a sold out large venue with a giant capacity crowd while getting paid for my music. The energy I got back from that crowd was dope, I remember performing the King Dilla Freestyle acapella and they were rocking with me. Also my brother came out and it was the first time he saw me perform out in a major show setting like that so that was huge. Its crazy too because I’m not realizing how crazy it was until like, right now (laughs).

You had your first headliner show this 2017 What was that like?

First of all we was prepping for like, I said we were gonna throw this event a year before we did. So we set it up with the homies, so much planning went in to that. The day of it was Ramadan, so I had been fasting all day I was being holy. By the time sound check came around all the will calls were getting bought up so we had like 10 tickets left. Then just as I finish sound check one of my best friends walks in after flying from DC and surprises me like... I almost uppercutted her (laughs). So that was dope and there was a lot of people, a lot of love there. So I go outside and I see theres a line, past the bar (in Schubas), so I’m like “Okay…Okay”. Then by the time the show gets going for doors to open there was a line around the block. I had people hitting me up telling me they couldn’t get into the show and I’m like “I told you to buy tickets ahead of time”. It was super humbling man like it was the first time I performed up on the stage and I would say my lyrics and then everyone in the audience would know them too. It was crazy because also the next day I had to be up because I had a final, that Monday I couldn’t like soak it up too much. It was surreal, I couldn't remember it in the moment so after it looking back the show comes back in flashes and there was this girl in the front row and I was like, "I have never seen you in my life but you’re here to see me....And thats crazy".

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