[Video] Vic Mensa Freestyling on 106 & Park

It's been a good week for Save Money, following Chance The Rapper's appearance with "Bow" on 106 & Park earlier this week, Vic Mensa slid through to spit a freestyle on the 106th & Park Rap Genius Backroom. Vic goes off for a solid two and a half minutes with bars for days and Stefan Ponce holds things down in the booth. Save Money is on, and hosting a big Halloween party tomorrow night (details below). Check Vic out below.

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[Video] Marrow: "Two" (Behind The Scenes)

It's not where you start, but where you finish. The age-old fallacy is one everyone can live by, but likely  rings a bit more true for the members of Marrow. Six months ago band members Liam Cunningham, Macie Stewart and Lane Beckstrom made up the core of Chicago genre-fusion band Kids These Days. Having reached a good deal of success (playing on Conan & at Lollapalooza 2011), the band split up in May after two albums and a host of shows across the country. Vic Mensa left to pursue a solo rap career, Nico Segal and J.P. Floyd went on tour with Frank Ocean and Chance The Rapper, and Liam, Macie and Lane retreated to Lane's basement to work on their reformed band, Marrow. Having spent the summer writing a library's-worth of songs and recording a demo, the former KTD members, along with newbie Matt Carroll on drums, have developed a new sound that merges the careful songwriting of Cunningham and Stewart with the inspired musicianship of Beckstrom, all accented by a different tone on drums with Carroll. While working on their upcoming (and appropriately titled) EP, Two, due out the same day as their show at Schuba's on December 19, the group had cameras rolling to catch all the action. Tap into the young musician's creative process as they put the project together with the video below, and keep an eye out for an Austin Vesely-directed joint due out in late November.

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[RH Exclusive] Day 1 of Chance The Rapper's Social Experiment Tour

Chance The Rapper opened his debut headlining Social Experiment tour two and a half hours south of his hometown of Chicago on Friday October 25. Photographer/videographer Bryan Lamb and myself made the trip and were on hand for all the festivities as Chance and crew kicked things off at the University of Illinois. A majority of Save Money made the trip south,  joining Chano onstage was none other than Vic Mensa who himself is currently between tours with J. Cole and Disclosure.

The set was the culmination of weeks worth of rehearsals and practice for Chance, Music Director Peter CottonTale and the rest of the backing band and sound crew including Greg Landfair, Nico Segal and Jake Lipp who rented out both the Metro and Reggie's to get a go-around of the stage set-up, lights and combination of both a solo part of the set, as well as one with the band. What the U of I crowd got was one hell of a show that went off as smooth as one could expect given the circumstances and which upped the bar for the remainder of the shows on the tour. Both CottonTale and Lipp, working behind the scenes, were pleased with the show and the fact that there were no major hiccups. Bryan (FragDFilms) did his thing and captured the first stop of the tour in the photos and video below, check it out and stay hooked to RH for continuing Social Experiment coverage.

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Sunday Coffee Sipper: The Week in Music

A lot went down in the music world since I last sat down to write a Coffee Sipper piece a week ago. Instead of trying to choose one event to focus on for an entire piece, I decided to dig deeper into several of the goings-on that came to light since last Sunday.

Chance The Rapper begins Tour: Chicago's own Chance The Rapper kicked off a tour of his own Friday night in Champaign, Illinois, just outside the campus of the University of Illinois. Setting out on his first solo headlining tour, dubbed the "Social Experiment Tour" Chance, music director Peter CottonTale and backing band Greg Landfair and Nico Segal rehearsed for a week with stage hands and sound to make sure there were no surprises the day of. Renting out the Metro and Reggie's on different occasions throughout the week, the team had everything down before heading south where Chance's two part show (one half solo, the other half with a band) went off without a hitch. Vic Mensa joined him onstage for an encore of "Cocoa Butter Kisses" and seemingly all of Save Money made the two hour trip to send Chano off to Pittsburgh appropriately. Stay tuned to RH for updates as the tour moves across the country.

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Vic Mensa

[Video] Closed Sessions: 'The Making of Innanetape'

Vic Mensa has been getting press for days since releasing his re-debut to the world as a solo artist, Innanetape, released at the beginning of the month. Since then, he's traveled around the country touring with J. Cole and Wale, went out to New York for CMJs and popped up everywhere there was a camera and a mic, and is gracing the banner and headlines of most every hip-hop site. Before all that, though, he was lounged back in a desk chair at SoundScape Studios with Mike Kolar, DJ RTC and the crew, working on his latest masterpiece. Check out the short doc Closed Sessions put together from their time helping put together Innanetape, shot by Andrew Zeiter.

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[Video] Vic Mensa freestyles, talks with Sway

Chicago's own Vic Mensa is riding the wave he has created since releasing his latest solo project, Innanetape, at the end of September. Out in New York for CMJs, Mensa linked up with the legendary Sway, who has had quite a bit of Chicago flavor on his shows recently. Vic chops it up with Sway about the making of Innanetape, his musical influences and even took some time out of a busy schedule out east to kick a freestyle for the former MTV VJ. Check it all out below.

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[Video] Vic Mensa in the Morning Riot Afterparty

Vic Mensa was back in town yesterday for a quick stop in while on the road with J. Cole and Wale on the "What Dreams May Come" tour. Before hosting a pop up shop at 657 W. Lake in Chicago's Loop, Mensa stopped by WGCI's Morning Riot After show to to kick it with Tony Sco and Leon Rogers and chop it up over the release of INNANETAPE, touring with J. Cole and how careful he is when crafting a song. It is certainly Mensa's time right now and he seems to be enjoying his turn in the limelight, check out the interview below.

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[RH Review] Vic Mensa: "Innanetape"

RH Rating: rh_tumblr_2rh_tumblr_2rh_tumblr_2rh_tumblr_2 4/5

The thing that has always attracted me to Vic Mensa and his music has been his penchant for being different, his eagerness to push forward and his unwavering ability to make a stand for what he believes in. Those qualities and more manifested themselves fully on his latest project, INNANETAPE, released September 30.

Talking to co-Executive Producer Peter CottonTale about the project, he calls it a "transformative" album that has rap at it's base, infusing it with a multitude of different genre-bending sounds that make the album hard to pin to one genre. Vic has interest in a wide musical landscape and it was the job of CottonTale and Cam Osteen of J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League to craft a sound that embodied all of them while sounding like none of them.

Since it's on most Chicagoans minds, yes Vic is somewhat like fellow SaveMoney artist Chance The Rapper, but only the way one might have a similar taste in clothing as an old friend. The comparison musically isn't fair. While Vic may have a similar aesthetic to his lyrical content and message, he has managed to create a wholly different, almost more mature sound for himself. The interesting thing is that many of the parts that came together for Acid Rap are present here, without sounding overly familiar or at all played out. It is a testament to the steady production process that Vic, Cam and Peter went through over most of 2013.

Innanetape is creative, it's interesting, it doesn't allow listeners to passively tune in. Bottom line; it's powerful, and you need to pay attention.

Perhaps the most interesting thing about Innanetape is the development of Mensa since his days with Kids These Days. Always a lyrical artist, the Hyde Park native shows tremendous growth in his delivery, mixing in and playing with a variety of cadences and rhyme schemes that come together to create a collage of styles that is all his own.

On "Tweakin" Vic goes in like never before, vehemently rhyming: "I don't want to fight/I just want a quiet life and a nice little suburban place to cry at night/And an eye dropper filled to the top with cyanide/So my psychiatrist dies soon as she tries the Sprite." It's a rhyme scheme and content matter right out of Eminem's lexicon but with Vic's own playfulness layered to it. On top of that, "Tweakin" also has Vic's voice chopped and screwed, adding yet another element to a song bursting with them.

On "Orange Soda" and "Lovely Day" Vic gives listeners a chance to "breath, breath, it's all in your head," relax, before diving back into the mayhem and hairpin turns that is the rest of the project. Both were recorded in Los Angeles and bear the easy going West Coast stereotype which makes sense for a kid born in Chicago who takes regular excursions to the left side of the country for an escape. If anything, it's obvious that Vic is able to absorb what's around him and present it in a succinctly thoughtful manner.

Continuing to spread his wings with the project, Mensa also sings and dabbles in production. Drake, he is not, but his careful eye for crafty melodies adds another layer to the overall aesthetic that he has created. "Diditb4" was the first track Mensa produced on his own, put together while on the road in the back of the large white van with Kids These Days. Vic proves with Innanetape that he's not just a rapper, he's a artist.

When CottonTale talks about transformations on this album, he mentions Vic's openness to try different things. "Run" was one of the first tracks they put together and has the feeling of an 80s dance track rather than a hip-hop song out of Chicago. More than any other track on the album, it may be the most polarizing for listeners. The shrieking school bell sound, the muted hook and the sudden whirlwind into what CottonTale calls "pop juke" is a certain breath of fresh air, if not at first hard to decipher.

"I was looking at hip-hop and beats as becoming monotonous when I was out west. When I came out here I met rappers who had such an unorthodox style and delivery and Vic is a perfect example of that," said Las Vegas native Cam Osteen. "It's something that is very different and honestly something that rap needs right now. In Chicago you see a lot of these guys for the unconventional to steal the show, and that's what sets this project apart."

Innanetape is a long time coming. Work started at Soundscape studios soon after the announcement of KTD as the first draft of the tracks began to take shape. To have been able to sit in on some of the sessions throughout the process, it has been fun to watch the paths many of the songs took to get on the final project. About a year or so ago, the country took notice of Chicago for the antics of Chief Keef and the often cluttered thought of drill music which became the city's calling card. Heading into 2014, Chicago has  regained it's stature as a soulful, creative, open place from which music emanates and that is owed much to Vic and the generation he represents in the Second City. Never one to satisfy himself with anything, it will be exciting to see where Mensa takes things from here.