midwxst Is Staying Grounded as His Career Reaches New Heights

Photo by Alex “GRIZZ” Loucas

You grew up on Nas, A Tribe Called Quest, and Kanye. Can you discuss what drew you to their work?
At the end of the day, the storytelling elements that they had in their music. Like, they were able to captivate you and keep you entertained. They would actually genuinely pull something from their heads and make fantasy feel like it’s real life. The way that Tribe did it, the way that “Bonita Applebum” and “Can I Kick It?” and all of those songs, they give you a certain kind of vibe, and you feel good off of it. Graduation by Kanye is like a feel-good album. You go ahead and listen to some of those cuts and hear them beats, get inspired. It lifts you up. 

They’re also creating an entirely new soundscape for you and an entirely new experience for you as a listener. A lot of people overlook a lot of the small things, but at the end of the day, my writing is rap style, rap-based. I rhyme the end of each sentence with one another. At the end of the day, I’m still writing, making music as if it was rap song. It’s just sometimes it turns out to not be rap.

I read that you have enough material for an R&B project. 
I can confidently say… Hold on, let me check what my SoundCloud says. I have over 400 unreleased songs.

Wow. Would you want to dabble in different genres? Maybe put out a jazz album or something?
Bro, a jazz album would be crazy! Jazz album would be crazy if I could bring Glenn Miller back from the dead. I would go crazy. I might just have one of my friends sample “American Patrol / Moonlight Serenade” and have him throw it over a drill beat or something. Just imagine 808s… mad distorted! That’s the best way though. Why you think I like Dougie B so much? People look at me, and they don’t expect me to listen to half the music I listen to. I be listening to Beethoven. I be listening to classical music to study. I listen to the soundtrack for Zelda, Akame ga Kill! All of that. I listen to a bunch of weird stuff.

Mental health is a big topic in your work, and I know you struggled with depression and ADHD meds. Why do you think it’s so important to address these issues?
With me, it’s like, I want people to understand and live in my shoes. I want you to really feel what I’m saying because it’s true. There are days where, “every day that I wake up / never feel like I’m enough.” There are days like that. There are days where I do get tired of trying, but I push through it and I persevere. I want to be the voice of kids who feel the same way I did, who don’t fit in at school, who may be a little shorter than their classmates, but still have the fuckin’ pride of a lion. I want to be able to save people.

I don’t want you to think that death is the only route that you can escape what you’re feeling. I don’t want you to think that the only way that you’re going to find peace is eternally. I don’t want anyone to ever have to think or go through those things because those are scary thoughts, and it can be very harming if you’re already in a very negative mood or in a bad social setting. If you’re around enablers of people, they’re not going to help you in your best interest. People have to understand that in life, you can’t take shit for granted. You don’t have that privilege. Tomorrow’s not guaranteed for any of us, yet so many people carry their life on like it is.

“Lock It Up” with Yeat and Matt Ox is one of your most popular tracks. Can you tell us how that record came about?
I’ll tell you how it came about. I pulled up to L.A. because I had a session with Whethan, so I pulled up to Whethan’s crib. While we’re chillin’, I tell him, “Yo, I want to make some triumphant shit. I want to make some crazy shit,” and then he pulled that beat out, and I was like, “Word! That’s how you feel?” I instantly started bopping my head to it. Matt Ox literally texted me two minutes before that, and he was like, “What you on?” I was like, “Yo, I’m at Whethan’s. You should pull up on me.” He said, “Aight, bet.”

So then, like an hour later, he pushed up on me. I had already gone in and done my verse, and I was just chillin’, so he pulls up. I met his mom, I met some random girls. That was the first time that we had linked because we hadn’t linked before… July 8th of 2021 is how long that song has been made. It’s just been coolin’. And then Whethan texts me one day, “Yo, I think we about to get another feature on your song.” I was like, “Word? Who is it?” He said, “I’ll let you know when we confirm.” I was like, “Aight, bet.” 

He texted me. He said, “It’s Yeat.” I was like, “I’m not mad at that. Hard.” Bro, me and my friends bump so much of that. It’s kinda bad. My DJ, Charlie Shuffler, when we on tour, I have to tell him, “Please no Yeat tonight,” ‘cause he plays it out so much sometimes, but it’s so funny. It’s so hard.

Better Luck Next Time is the ultimate breakup project. Can you share the mindset you had while recording it?
I already knew that was finna to be a heartbreak album and it wasn’t even me truly tapped into the harshness. When I made that album, like the EP, a lot of the songs came from just moments of time and stints that I felt really bad that day. It’s hard breaking up. It’s hard detaching yourself from somebody, especially if you’ve spent a large amount of time with them. Not even just with them, but genuinely together. It’s really hard to detach yourself from a person like that, but with me, it’s just like, “Bro, put it in music. It’s not gonna hurt you.” So then after that, I just took it by storm. I just loved it.

“On My Mind” is such a great closer, and I heard some of your friends sang on the track. Do you have any more interesting behind-the-scenes stories while recording? 
“Riddle” and “Shame” were both off of an EP that I had scrapped, but they were both some of my favorite songs I’ve ever made, so I moved them over. Originally I had another album which was supposed to be more of a concept about ego death, and the fact that you are human. At the end of the day, we’re all mortal, we all have emotions, we all have feelings. Talking about getting off of your god plane level of thinking and coming down and being grounded. That’s how it was originally going to be. It was just me. I was deadass heartbroken. I cried to some of my friends. I was on the phone with my mom sniffling, all of that. The whole 10 yards because it hurt, especially at the start of college. It was mad weird adjusting to everything and getting my settings right, acclimated while I’m also in emotional distress. But one day I just sat down and I made “Misery.” And then after that, I was just like, “I need to go crazy.” 

You’re performing at the Life Is Beautiful Festival in September. How are you feeling about that? Especially with a stage and an audience that big, is there extra stress or do you feed off of that kind of energy?
To be honest, no. I love performing. The larger the crowd, the more it fuels my energy on stage. I don’t care how many people I perform for, I’m gonna give my all on that stage like there’s ten thousand people in the crowd when there’s only ten people there. 

Knowing that you’ve got eclectic taste, is there anyone else on that Life Is Beautiful lineup that you’re particularly excited about?
I’m excited to see Jungle, Young Nudy, and JPEGMafia. They all go hard.

What’s your personal experience with festivals? Did you go to any as a fan, and any favorite memories?
I had never went to a festival before Summer Smash last year. I was performing at the afterparty and went to the actual festival in the daytime. My favorite memory is performing on the main stage of Day N Vegas at the age of 18. That was really cool. 

Did college life live up to your expectations?
Go Bruins! I was getting turnt. Just know I have fun. Nashville is a fun ass town. They had some cool shit. They had house shows. They didn’t have house parties. They’d have bands performing at some cribs and shit. Sometimes you pull up, and it’d be like whole bands, rock bands, alt bands, indie bands. They had some bonfires. Bro, I was out there living my life. I had a cool ass friend group. I was untouchable. I was unmatched. 

You went to fashion camp and you’ve dropped merch that’s done really well. Are you planning on doing a clothing brand in the future?
I’m planning on doing a lot of things. I really want to do, like, a separate brand on some dolo shit. Focused on just making sure the quality is good, designs are good. I don’t want to copy anything from anybody ‘cause a lot of the way I dress I take a lot of inspo from early ‘90s, early 2000s back when Billionaire Boys Club was that… I’m a BAPE head. I got on Bapestas right now. Like, I love Bapestas. I love Undercover. Damn near anything Japanese. Ice Creams. Dawg, don’t get me started on the Ice Creams. The Running Dog jeans. Iconic… 

I have ideas for a lookbook, you know, a trailer, and the way I want to be and all of these things because the creative side of things is what I love. I love it. It was my idea for the “Trying” music video to even have a vibe switch midway through that would shift the entire atmosphere of the video to go from bright colors and pastels to blacks and darks. I just want to be able to create something that I know I’ll be proud of and something that’s gonna be fire, be straight-up just hard.  

What can you tell us about your collab with Pi’erre Bourne?
You got to talk to Pi’erre about that one. I’m cool and I’m chillin’ over here. I really want to, you know? It’s coming for sure. It definitely is. Like, I just be bullshittin.’ I’m not gonna lie. 

Wait, so there is actually a collab, right?
Nah, nah, nah. I’m deadass serious. There was a throwaway off of Back in Action that was supposed to be with Pi’erre, but it just didn’t get cleared in time, and then there was supposed to be me, Ken Carson, and Pi’erre, but I don’t know. You gotta tell me on that one. Me and Pi’erre just be working. We don’t even text about music. We just be texting each other like, “Hey, man. Hope you had a good day, man.” “You too, gang.” Straight back and forth.  

What’s next? I heard you have a new single coming soon.
June 29th. It’s called “Broken.” Whethan actually helped produce on it with San Holo. It’s just kind of a full-circle moment for me ‘cause I used to listen to San Holo as a kid. Like, I don’t know if there’s anybody out there that knows, but he had that song, (singing) “I just wanna see / I just wanna see the light.” That shit had a chokehold around like 2018. So I have that song coming out, and then I’m excited to put something out afterwards too. There’s a lot to look forward to, especially for this year.

Photo by Zamar Velez

EKKSTACY: The ‘See You Next Year’ Interview

Photo by ONErpm Studios

What’s changed for you in the last year?
Everything has changed for me in the last year. I went from being a bum and working at Amazon to hanging out with models on tour counting money. I’m different now!!

What’s been the biggest lesson you’ve learned about yourself creatively in the last 12 months?
I still work best alone and with my friends. Studios aren’t for me. Although I did meet some producers in LA that I really like. 

What’s been the biggest risk you’ve taken in the last year?
I used to be really scared of performing but I toured for months and months anyways. I guess that was a risk?

What do you hope these next 12 months mean for you and your career?
I want to see my name everywhere. I want to see my face everywhere. That’s all I really care about anymore.

Photo by ONErpm Studios

What’s the biggest goal on your bucket list in the next year?
I don’t know. I don’t set goals but I’m tryna go platinum, though. I said I would love to move to Berlin in a few months, so that needs to happen.

Looking back, what was your favorite year ever and why?
2021 and 2022 have been my favorite years so far. I’m doing a lot of cool shit. It’s hard and it’s lonely and it’s a lot but it’s also a lot of fun. 

What’s the biggest secret you’ve kept this year?
I don’t really keep secrets. I tell my friends everything. I guess Misery has been finished forever. I haven’t told anybody that. 

Photo by ONErpm Studios

The Best New Music This Week: Pharrell, Kid Cudi, SZA, and More

Image via Complex Original

  • Kid Cudi, “Do What I Want” 


  • Pharrell f/ 21 Savage & Tyler The Creator, “Cash In Cash Out”


  • Fana Hues, “Drive” 


  • SZA, “Awkward”


  • Nardo Wick, “Riot”


  • 6LACK, “Umi Says”


  • Saucy Santana f/ Latto, “Booty” 


  • Rubi Rose, “Wifey”


  • Polo G, “Distraction”


  • Rae Sremmurd, “Denial”

Dua Saleh Talks Transmuting Dysphoria Into Spellbinding Music

Image via Dua Saleh
Image via Dua Saleh

Saleh On how making music relates to self-expression:

I feel like music has allowed me to tap into different ways to play with my voice. Oftentimes with dysphoria, I’ll sometimes go into the session and I’ll listen to my voice and I’ll be like, “I can’t do it today.” So I’ll lower my voice often when I’m singing, extremely, and it’s been weird. Or I’ll do it really high, I feel like I’ve been singing pretty high, it’s kinda funny. It does help with my dysphoria, which I still don’t understand why, [vocalizing] sounding like an alien like that does. Maybe it just reminds me of cartoons, and cartoons seem neutral to me.

On navigating the impact of hyper-visibility as a performing artist:

I wasn’t trying to get into any of these art worlds that I was thrust into. And gender is a very personal journey for each person, we definitely understand how it’s complex. I’m only speaking for myself, but also probably for a lot of other non-binary and trans people. It was complicated because I’m in constant communication with my gender and I’m constantly trying to expand my understanding of my gender. And so having a platform out there and coming out with my pronouns, they/them pronouns, and then coming out with neopronouns, which is a whole different thing, because people––even in the trans community––aren’t really as used to it or don’t know the history and don’t know how they were the first pronouns that a lot of non-binary people were using to refer to themselves in literature and academia.

So it felt vulnerable––and it still feels vulnerable––having people constantly question my gender or just getting a lot of transphobic hate, but also all of my other identities that are in flux with one another at all points of time, me being Black and queer and Muslim, obviously trans, somebody who uses neopronouns, it feels like I’m always in this raw state where people are always hyper-fixated on those aspects of my existence, which is cool. But I feel like there’s more depth to each human and there’s more humor and joy and light and anger and fear, and there are more things to a person outside of just their gender identity, and similarly to people’s art. 

Image via Dua Saleh

On visual expression:

I’ve definitely been playing a lot more, with hair as well. But I feel like I have been trying to tap into expressions of self that are more rooted in creating friction within my own understanding of what my aesthetic ought to be, based off what people project or what people expect out of me. When they hear “non-binary,” I feel like people have a very white supremacist understanding of what that would be or like a diluted understanding of what that means for people who are Black and brown or not from the Western world. So it’s like me being like, “No, forget that. I can do whatever I want.”

On defying queer visual stereotypes:

Sometimes people have this kind of expectation of a non-binary person. I think for a lot of Black folks, having specific styles of hair, it’s very sacred and it’s tied to a lot of ritualistic kind of upkeep that’s also tied in with a lot of trauma from how people commoditize our hair and our understandings of our expression.

I feel like people expect me to have short hair and have green hair and for me to be super small, petite, or dressed in a very specific way. Granted, I still fit into a Western understanding of beauty standards in terms of body and I don’t deal with fatphobia, which is also tied in with anti-Blackness and a lot of respective cultures or respective understandings of bodies within the West.

But in relation to hair, in relation to adornment, rituals and in relation to the spectacality of transness and the spectacle of Blackness, I think there are a lot of expectations that I have to fit into, like a very specific mold of understanding of what that means. 

I just don’t like people telling me what to do or expecting me to be a certain way ever. 

Image via Dua Saleh

On their love of neopronouns:

I just have a deep-seated love for trans and queer history overall. I love reading about it. I love hearing about it. The letters of my neopronouns are used to write a love letter to the trans community, just to be like “I love y’all.” Because our history is sacred, our history is important and a lot of people don’t have access to certain knowledge about transness, so I think it’s also cool just to be public about it.

I think also I just like the neopronouns, I feel like they fit me better, not all the time, but they’re just fitting. There’s an element where I’m just like, “Oh, this sounds really nice.” Or it sounds nice coming out of my mouth or hearing other people saying it.

On what they hope people get from their work:

One thing is honesty. I feel like that’s something that just kind of spills out of me with music because I guess it’s the most instinctive thing for me in terms of art making. Oftentimes with poetry, I’m a little bit more meticulous or thoughtful when I’m in the beginning process, when it’s coming into fruition. And I think with music, oftentimes I will start by freestyling with the melodies, which is just feelings, letting things sit in the body, the diaphragm, chest, et cetera. And then the words will come later.

Listening to Neptunes Hits With Chad Hugo

Photo by Wynne Hendry @wynneleila
Photo by Wynne Hendry @wynneleila

Chad Hugo’s discography is certainly one of legends. The Neptunes erupted on the scene in the ’90s, producing songs for some of the biggest and most important rising stars in the game. In the new millennium, their starpower gained national attention with the success of songs like Jay-Z’s “I Just Wanna Love U (Give It To Me)” and Mystikal’s “Shake Ya Ass.” And over the next 20 years, the Neptunes were the masterminds behind major pop and hip-hop classics, ranging from Britney Spears’ “I’m a Slave 4 U” to Snoop Doog’s “Drop It Like It’s Hot,” as well as music with their band N.E.R.D. He along with Williams captured the zeitgeist of the early 2000s and today, and now those same records are inspiring a new generation of young creators. 

“There are artists that have sampled Neptunes beats, and it’s an honor that sampling’s taking place of our music from previous years,” Hugo says. “We were always trying to get people together in a positive way, and it’s always great to see the people of all walks of life, races, creeds, color, nationalities, ethnicities, and classes knowing a tune that we’re involved with. They may not all know where it came from, but they can say, yeah, I heard that before.”

Once The Neptunes hit a peak, Hugo seemingly took a step back from music, but he assures me that he’s never stopped creating or studying music. Chad reveals he’s spent the last three years studying jazz music, and he’s been analyzing the work of the greats like John Coltrane and jazz pianist Barry Harris as well as discovering new artists on YouTube. 

“I don’t think I‘ll ever retire from music, or stop making music and learning about music.”

He’s also spent quality time with his family. He offered his favorite dad joke during our conversation. “How do the Ewoks communicate on Endor?” he asks. After a brief pause and chuckle, he happily adds: “E-walkie talkies.”

After a hiatus, The Neptunes reunited in early 2020, producing several hits for artists like Megan Thee Stallion, SZA, and Buju Banton. The more recent production credits held on to the same  high-energy, party aesthetic that defined their early work, but they also explored ethereal sounds on songs like SZA’s “Hit Different” or Summer Walker’s “Dat Right There.” Whether The Neptunes will continue to produce similar songs in the future, Chad is not so forthcoming. “It’s been great, the Neptunes are great,” he insists, before hinting that he’ll be focusing on solo material and side projects: “I’m concentrating on different works and some new productions and new sounds. 

The “retirement” word has been thrown around here and there lately, and Hugo recently told GQ, “I feel like this is the last round of… of making music.” But when I ask him to elaborate on that thought, he sings a slightly different tune. “I don’t think I’ll ever retire from music, or stop making music and learning about music,” he says.

With his decorated resume, you might assume Chad would have an air of celebrity arrogance to him, but he’s cool and humble, graciously rejecting compliments about his work. Over the course of one hour, I play a handful of his classic hits with the hopes of jogging memories from years past. At times, I catch him marveling at his own work and recounting stories from those studio sessions. “Yeah, that’s a banger,” he says when I play Jay-Z’s 2000 single “I Just Wanna Love You (Give It 2 Me)”. We start with this year, and go backwards. 

Photo by Wynne Hendry @wynneleila

Pusha-T, ‘It’s Almost Dry’ (2022)
Chad Hugo: There were a lot of inspirations from Miami Vice and Joker. It wasn’t the blueprint, but just as far as vibe-wise. We recorded in the U.S. at the Boathouse Studio in Miami. Pusha wanted to shout out what was happening in Virginia locally, and I think that’s really cool. It’s good to be a part of the product and making the sound.

We aimed to [make] his rhyme scheme be cohesive with the beat and the rhythms. You can hear the way he’s rhyming with the drum. That was really important to Pusha, Pharrell, and myself, because a lot of the rhymes back in the day, we’d write on a piece of paper. But this was more in the pocket, as far as the unison of the rhythm. It was really important to get people moving in that regard. We were just really trying to stab with it and get real with it. I think it’s a communal experience when you vibe with the rhythms, and it’s a dance you do both mentally and verbally. 

The weather was really nice. I remember Pharrell took us out on his friend’s yacht and we were playing tunes. I didn’t understand some of the stuff, like the one with Pharrell on the FedEx truck until later. I’ll be honest, I was getting really nauseous, like something’s really uneasy with this. It felt like I’m in one of those delirium movies where things are just blurry. But as Push was laying down his verse at this studio home, I saw the vision of what we were trying to convey. 

You know, this is entertainment and you have to approach things like when you read a book or a novel or a murder mystery or watch a film that’s just supposed to make you feel a certain way or have a good commentary afterwards. Some people back in the day would say, “That’s not music. People get shot to the music,” and they just don’t know how to separate themselves from the message that was an after effect. What we need to do is inspire people to understand this is entertainment and it’s fiction. 

Push mentioned that this album was like a Verzuz battle between The Neptunes and Kanye West. Did you feel that competitive spirit while working on it? 
Not me. I love Kanye’s work, too. Back in this studio in Virginia, Virginia’s Recording Arts, he played a tune and I was really into it, with much respect. Over the years it’s always been about competition with people, but my approach has been: let’s be a community so that we can rock back to back and do our thing. It’s always good to find that common ground between the music. Over the years, people have said, “I’m just watching you on the drums and being individualistic.” I’m like, “No, let’s find a common ground. Let’s find a good rhythm so the DJ could rock and we could party.” To each his own. 

Photo by Wynne Hendry @wynneleila

Omar Apollo, “Tamagotchi” (2022)
We recorded in Miami, and Omar is a great singer and a talented guy. He’s really good at melodies, and he’s always coming up with those. Yeah, no hablo Espanol, pero yo entiendo poco. I try, and I’m continuing to learn. Those kinds of chords have a sad connotation. It reminds me of a tune that I once learned. I cannot access it through my cerebral cortex, but it’s about something, like, I’m just out of luck and shit is sad right now, but let’s still do this and smile and keep it moving. 

SZA, “Hit Different” (2020)
SZA is a genius and she has this spiritual vibe. I remember her being in the studio and setting crystals and I was like, “Holy smoke, are we going to get our palms read, too? With the tarot cards and our fortunes told?” She had a positive vibe, and she’s singing some notes that are… I don’t want to put her in a jazz realm because some people will be like, “Oh, she’s not jazzy,” but yeah. 

Peeling down those chords, I was like, “Yeah, let’s go with that.” Sometimes I’m just there in the back like, “Yeah.” Or sometimes I’ll play, and they’ll be like, “Try something  different.” Then sometimes I will just tune something behind the scenes. I won’t say anything. I’ll just put a little seasoning or whatever. But there’s a jazz song [Eddie Jefferson’s “There I Go, There I Go Again”] that’s like, “There I go, there I go, there I go.” It just wanders off, which is beautiful. 

Photo by Wynne Hendry @wynneleila

Jay-Z f/ Pharrell, “Blue Magic” (2007)
I think that was a Rakim flow he was paying homage to. I don’t know. I’m just probably picking up on it right now. The Frankenstein sample where he said, “It’s alive! It’s alive!” and the thunder. I remember being in for the mix and doing whatever. He released it right after I recorded it. It’s a great track and Jay-Z killed it… I need to go recap on American Gangster.

You haven’t seen American Gangster with Denzel Washington? 
I have not. But I will. I’m going to try to do that tonight.

That’s funny, because the album was inspired by the movie. So what was your understanding of the themes while producing it? 
I remember that Blue Magic was a form of the drugs or the narcotics or something, but that’s about it. 

Jay-Z f/ Pharrell, “I Know” (2007)
That must have been Pharrell’s bucket era. There were some samples where he was playing buckets to contribute to the street musicians, and recording some sounds in the studio. It reminds me of that era where we sampled. It’s a good track. I like when he did those chords, the high arpeggio stuff.

Photo by Wynne Hendry @wynneleila

Gwen Stefani, “Hollaback Girl” (2005)
I used to build up sound libraries and stuff. They didn’t know how to do the 808 sounds, so it was like, woo. I just wanted something that would make the crowd hype and take people out of their element. She’s from the West Coast, and we recorded it here on the East Coast. I think it was at his factory. Pharrell and I were on fire with the hip-hop records and the bounce, and the boom bap aspect of things. “Ain’t no holler back girl,” I wasn’t sure where that came from, but it was like, when a guy says, “Hey, holla at me.” And a girl says, “I’m not your holler back girl.” We wanted something like pep rally vibes for schools, colleges, and teams to sing it any way they want, or interpolate it for their personal school or whatever.

Snoop Dogg, “Drop It Like It’s Hot” (2004)
“Drop It Like It’s Hot” was an experience. [We recorded in] Record Plant Studios, California. Snoop Dogg, Bishop Don Juan, Pharrell, me, friends, and a mist of smoke. We were vibing out. I won’t say I snuck in there, but it was just crazy. Pharrell put on the drum beat and Snoop laid the rhyme and we thought it was done. Then I played the keys. 

Snoop is a genius. Pharrell is a genius. I thank them for laying the groundwork for a song like that. There’s a lot of influences that went into that song that set a vibe. Even like the “woo” and the clicking noises. They dropped the 808 and added the spray in and the ticking clock, and the rhymes and the drum patterns, and man, there was a lot to it. It’s always good when you see the music being played and just witness how the crowd reacts to it, and where it resonates with people. That’s what I look forward to. It’s been a great moment overall. It’s all been fantastic.

You were in the music video, too. How was that experience? 
Yeah. I was just with a keyboard, but I would redo it. I wish. I did some weird expression. I was like, “Oh, cringe.” But I think they used it in the movie Pets.

Photo by Wynne Hendry @wynneleila

Kelis, “Milkshake” (2003)
I had no idea that song was going to be big. I just knew it was going to be a banger, something to jam to and groove to. That’s sick.

Clipse, “Grindin’” (2002)
We did our job. It was inspired by the guys having a moment, rhyming. There was a keyboard that had those sounds. We just wanted to inspire people, and it’s great. 

Britney Spears, “I’m a Slave 4 U” (2001)
The rhythm on that track was the authority from the very beginning, and our production work was led accordingly by way of the dance. Through the use of the Lexicon effects, it really did become a nod to the great producers of Minneapolis, like Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis.

Jay-Z, “I Just Wanna Love U (Give It 2 Me)” (2000)
I flew into New York from Virginia and walked into a banger that P was working on with Jay.  There was this energy, though. It was just Duro, a few people, and me. It was like, yo! So after a few fader slides and EQ rotations administered by Duro, I did my drops. If you ask me, we killed it on the SSL J9000. I’m proud to have been a part of that, and breaking down the record. I’ll take responsibility of breaking the beat where it happens. But again, genius work by Pharrell and Jay-Z. I tuned the sound. It’s been great.  I remember Jay-Z when he started out at Future Records. I happened to play the sax on it, but I won’t forget he was there, and he’s also been a blessing to everybody.