Fill in the blanks: Brevin Kim is most likely to______? Cal: Revolutionize. We’re blending a lot of genres and just making something that I feel not a lot of other people are making. We’re the most likely to pioneer a new sound.
What’s changed for you in the last year?
Cal: It’s tough to answer on the spot. But for me, right off the top, I would say I feel like we’re finally gaining some respect that we felt we deserved for being a part of pioneering certain sounds. I feel like this is the first year where all these years of work that sometimes feel pointless are finally starting to pay off. I see that people are recognizing us and that feels good.
What’s been the biggest lesson you’ve learned about yourself creatively in the last 12 months?
Cal:You gotta be patient. When we first signed a couple years ago, we had no idea what the music industry was like. You still gotta put the work in and can’t just expect things to happen. Above that, just be confident in your music. Because we’ve had times where we start to doubt ourselves. And when that happens, the listeners doubt too, because they can feel it. So if you don’t believe in it, nobody else is going to believe in it.
What’s been the biggest risk you’ve taken in the last year?
Bren: Always just sticking to what we do creatively. Sometimes the music we make can be a little too abrasive but I’d rather be different than just try to be regular mainstream artists that go by the numbers. So sticking to what we do, whether people need to catch up on our type of music or not.
What is it that you want to see in the world next year? Cal:Less mass shootings and people getting along. Less haters on the internet. Everything’s so negative lately. Everybody just hates each other. It’s getting exhausting.
What’s the biggest goal on your bucket list in the next year?
Cal: Continue gaining that respect.
Looking back, what was your favorite year ever and why?
Cal: 7th grade, back in ‘08. I think he it’s when you first start liking girls and you’re not doing drugs or drinking yet, but it’s a great time. I miss the days when we didn’t know what rent and taxes were. Anxiety didn’t exist.
What’s the biggest secret you’ve kept this year?
Bren: This project! It was so hard not to post a picture of us going to Mike Dean’s house or a video of us working with him. Now we finally can. That’s about the only secret I’ve kept this year.
Fill in the blank: Fana Hues is most likely to ______?
Star in a film. I want to go and expand on my hues and really get into my acting bag and fully dive into that part of storytelling. I really be out here acting. I’ve been doing it for years and years but I haven’t gotten my one film yet. So it’s only a matter of time.
What’s changed for you in the last year?
Access, I’ve had way more access this year to resources in order to execute my visions.
What’s been the biggest lesson you’ve learned about yourself creatively in the last 12 months?
I don’t know anything at all. I’m still learning.
What’s been the biggest risk you’ve taken in the last year?
Packing up my stuff and putting it in storage and just going on tour. Breaking my lease for the house, that was a goddamn risk. I was like, “Dang, am I really gonna figure this out while I’m on the road?” That was a risk.
What do you hope these next 12 months mean for you and your career?
I hope that next year, I continue to solidify my position in music in general. I want to experiment more. And I want to free myself of the box that I put myself in creatively sometimes. That’s what I’m hoping for next year, for sure.
What is it that you want to see in the world next year?
I would like to see people start treating others as human beings and not have everything be so transactional.
What’s the biggest goal on your bucket list in the next year?
This debut album. It sounds like, “Oh, of course.” But it really is. I’ve been planning this debut album, conceptualizing it for like six years now. So I am, I’m ready for that.
Looking back, what was your favorite year ever and why?
I would say 2012 was probably the best year for me. Growth-wise and it’s when I started really tapping into my voice. I was 16, you know? It absolutely still sticks with me. That summer particularly. Channel Orange had just come out.
What’s the biggest secret you’ve kept this year?
I’m really tryna think. What’s a secret that I kept this year? I don’t know, I have no secrets.
What’s the origin story of AdWorld?
I think some of the writing goes back to 2013. Conceptually, a lot of it started under a different project name, Freelancer. A friend and I were talking about how graphic designers are propaganda machines for different companies. You make a living creating these symbols and advertisements for others. In college, it felt like I was lost in this system just exporting really confused, lost people. One day, when I was working retail, Tyler [Mitchell] visited me and we started riffing on the name “AdWorld,” me making music and him doing all the visuals, him being one of the premier content machines in the world for global brands. Tyler wants to make art and he needs to make money. Even if the photograph is taken for a trillion-dollar company, he’s still managing to create worlds for people.
You can kid yourself and say you’re above commerce, but there are always economic parameters.
There’s a school of musicians, not quite the backpack era but immediately post that, like Kendrick Lamar, and they were the apex of, “I have something to say and this is my world view on this thing.” I think we’ve moved beyond that because it’s so apparent to everyone now. Even my own traditional American down-home family are now questioning things. Artists don’t need to be condescending anymore because we all know how fucked it is. Let’s get over the fact that we’re here.
Where else do you see those cracks showing?
Questioning the security our government provides. Questioning the American ideal that being “blessed” is financial. It’s feeling stuck. The idea of “making it out” isn’t real. Those who do become these mythological folklore characters used to justify others’ shitty situations. And many people still say, “Fuck it, I’ll get my own bag,” and that’s where we’re at. I think people are thinking about themselves, their own family or their own race or their own things. “We’re all in this together” isn’t true.
YouTube recently served me an ad for the new Chance The Rapper song, and that sent me back to Acid Rap. I was investigating why I still gave him a pass, despite everything since that project, and ultimately I felt like it was brave of him to be happy. The content or context of the songs on Acid Rap were often sad, but it was happy, weird, kind of obnoxious music. At a time when everything was so cool and stonered out. He was like Nickelodeon. He supplied something no one else was able to at that time. I’ll always give him a chance because of that trust. Artist lives are long.
There’s an urge to hypothesize and debate about when people peak, when people fell off, and it sucks. I’ve done it too.
I’m convinced people who talk like that haven’t made music. Or haven’t lived. It’s possible to recognize someone is no longer an adolescent, but still has the talent to do something great. They may be in a weird stretch and express it in a way that doesn’t hit for you.
In AdWorld, everything is crumbling, or seems to be. You’re shredding sounds, screaming, mixing lyrics. We’ve watched different institutions co-opt or pay lip service to various solidarity movements to shut them down. How does the music connect to the world you see around you?
I think there’s two movements happening right now, perpendicular to each other: one post-Gamer Gate, where you get this crazy talk as a test of community belonging, and one post-Trayvon Martin—a liberal arts college awakening. The resistance that spawned from the latter allowed mostly middle class Black people and people of color to materialize their position in the world. Monetize it. And invert power dynamics in ways that I don’t think anyone at the time was thinking about for the long-term.
For context, when I was at Ithaca College, I was involved in protesting, on the bullhorn, organizing constantly, leading the charge against the campus police. At the time, it felt so real, until you realize months after that there’s photos taken of us and they show up on the school website, and then you remember why you signed up for the school, because of those photos on the website, and you start to realize that the rage was harnessed by a larger institution to profit off of and expand their audience and fan base or their constituency. Meanwhile, I’m paying to be there, even with scholarships. They’re still hitting me up for money.
On AdWorld, you have lines like “I feel like a cyborg, why lord,” and you have lines about sex and love. How did your relationships influence the album?
I have a big inferiority complex in a lot of ways when it comes to relationships. There’s a lack of confidence on my end, but a big part of that also comes down to not having money, not being able to eat, or having to work all the time. The loss of that time adds up in terms of not understanding how to navigate a certain situation, or simply not having as much time to build trust with someone. Being with someone of the same sex, thankfully for a lot of people, it’s okay now, but I still experienced a lot of homophobic shit and have a shame embedded in me because of the way I was raised in a super religious family. Not seeing long-standing relationships in my family, not seeing people get married, watching my dad go to prison or aunt and uncles being killed. All these ways a system ripples into our personal lives. It connects in that way.
You put everything you had to create AdWorld, both the album and the virtual experience, with shimmering pendants that unlock a character builder. You took world-building literally. When it sold out, what crossed your mind?
I’m afraid I’m going to lose the money. I went really neurotic and separated it all in different places, and budgeted everything out, calculating what I’d need for rent and food for the year and pulled that out so I wouldn’t touch the rest. I want to feel good and treat myself but there’s so much work to do. I haven’t had time to get a car, which would be nice now that I’m in LA, but the car market’s fucked, the housing market’s fucked.
I’ve never felt security before, since I was a child. Since my parents split up and my dad went to jail, I’ve basically lived paycheck to paycheck since then, whether it’s with my mom or by myself, and now that I have money saved, it feels good, but I know it can be easily lost.
I have friends who are struggling right now, whether it’s with gambling… A lot of my friends were struggling with their gambling. It’s scary, because there’s so many amazing ways for you to waste and lose everything extremely fast. The world is set up for me to fall into one of those holes, and I’m so afraid that while trying to dodge three of them, I’ll fall into another one backing up. My mom’s been helpful, but there’s no one in my family who I can really talk to about working with this kind of money.
What did it take to reach that point of being release-ready?
I was eating once a day. Borrowing money from friends, usually to pay back other friends I had borrowed money from. Couch surfing for months. Not being able to buy a flight back to New York from LA so just staying here. I just knew I had to see this through.
The album itself is like sprinting across collapsing asphalt in some moments just breakneck pacing—and drifting through an underworld during others. Sometimes you’ll jump from a slow jam to race car mode out of nowhere. Are there bits and pieces of AdWorld you can point to and think, “How the hell did we pull this off?”
Aside from the journalistic focus, sequencing was what I wanted to really get right. Everything I’ve done before had a uniform sound, but that’s not the same thing. It felt good to play an active role in the production. My first album, I didn’t produce anything, and the producer would say a line that meant the world to me sounded lame, and it wasn’t in my hands so it’d get scrapped. Sometimes you need to listen to that feedback. Sometimes you know you have something special, and if someone else doesn’t like it, it’s not for them.
I want to re-record some things. Making the album during peak COVID, without resources, there’s room to get cleaner takes, but you can’t over-edit yourself either. The circumstances are imprinted into that WAV file. “Through The Wire” wouldn’t be as good if Kanye’s jaw was intact. I’m also proud because I know my voice on this album is mine. Sometimes on songs from A Jaded Attempt at Something Iconic, I feel like I was cosplaying when I listen back to that, even though I still love so many of those songs. “Like Flies” from that album still stands out. I played that on the piano and sang it live, straight through.
The more you listen, the more these little details emerge. That goes a long way with sequencing. Even the singles.
[Co-producer] Quiet Luke and I buried so many sound bites in there. Probably 50 clips or samples or field elements we kept. Website chimes, notifications, sirens, World War II alarms, fashion show gaffes. I wanted it to sound like the end of the world, just cascading. We tried to think about different moments in history where people probably thought, “This is it.” We also just had fun messing with things. We deep-fried the drum beat on “Bliss.” The vocal sample there is from the Discord during the Wall Street Bets madness. It was like the digital equivalent of trading floor sounds. Frank calls it a demonic prison, the spirit of the internet is spooky. It was thousands of voices, screaming, saying slurs.
Working on Quiet Luke’s album, 21st Century Blue, you and him would spend long hours digging through archives, going to libraries, trying to assemble a language for that body of work. It seemed like an incredibly dedicated research process.
That’s really how we work. We’ll send each other countless screenshots of things and sort of build this reference library together in real time. But it isn’t a song or artwork, it’s a plastic cup on the side of the road that’s crumpled a certain way, or an American Express logo at an airport. Then you reverse engineer it and ask, “Okay, what is this airport branding referring to? What was their inspiration?” Alec [Quiet Luke] loves history and he’s helpful for grounding what we are doing today with what’s happened before. We’ll really invent our own vernacular during the album-making process. Like “neo-feudalism.” Sometimes we’ll see something and just say “feud,” and that bookmarks it into both of our brains.
How cynical are you about about “web3”? You executed an ambitious idea and used that sphere of the internet, and NFTs as a format, despite their divisiveness.
I think it’s important to be able to recognize what’s happening in the world and use it to communicate something. As I kept working on AdWorld the album and felt desperate, as I watched things fall apart along with everyone else, and saw people in my life go broke or gamble or have issues with drugs, it felt right to use a medium that for so many people represents desperation. There’s something so weirdly honest about the crypto thing, when so much of ‘normal’ creative capital is about masking the intention.
Everyone has their best intentions but also trying to get on this playlist or monetize that aspect of themselves. It’s refreshing to see something where people are like, “I’m struggling and need to pay rent,” or, “this is a scam,” or in some cases, “This is actually interesting.” I think the criticisms are also misguided in that they let us point at one thing and feel better for calling out its environmental impact while we continue to rely on and use and enjoy other things that are just as bad if not worse. And as an artist, I do want to have autonomy.
Do I believe it’s worse to release an album using Ethereum, rather than engage with an age-old institution that’s fucked so many people and created tons of plastic because they were all technology companies before they were record companies? I don’t know. At the end of the day I’m most excited to create a world that lives on its own.
Web3 is like a mirror for the world in a lot of ways. It’s lampooned, but it also exists because things were so bad. It’s almost like the Spiderman meme. Some days it feels like a horrible place, other times it feels beautiful, and the answer is it’s probably both. It’s letting people imagine different ways of doing things, and that yields the whole spectrum.
There’s no Luddite-style solution. There are people building things, everywhere, with no regard for the consequences. Then there are people building things, everywhere, who have the courage to look at what they’re doing and question it, to check themselves. Are you building with intent or are you not? And what moral compass is guiding that intent?
Where are you looking to reinvest the AdWorld money?
Refining the album a bit before the release, which will hopefully be in the middle of summer. We’re going to do some really fun installations, bringing our world into the physical world. Like buying Dance Dance Revolution machines, loading them with AdWorld songs and friends’ songs, bringing in dancers for that. I was doing research on how to get that done and it’s pretty easy. There’s a strong Dance Dance Revolution community for programming them.
How do you see the community that has an interest beyond just the financial value of what they’ve purchased to be a part of it?
You’re basically living in the AdWorld movie as long as you have your character, which you unlocked by buying a Samskara pendant. So we have a narrative planned out that anyone who owns this card, almost like a Sims key, can shape the outcome. The goal is to take this sort of community-run script to create the AdWorld short film and take it to Sundance. We’re very influenced by Summer Wars, an animated film that came out at the start of the social media boom, where socials in this place called Oz are intertwined with the world government. You clock into your jobs through your Oz account. Agricultural systems run on it. The AdWorld video game is a priority, too.
You really used the release as an interactive crowdfund. I think back to the public Google Doc you made for A Jaded Attempt At Something Iconic, where you encouraged people to participate in the direction of the rollout. This was six years ago, before it was cool to do things like that. Now you have this sort of open narrative. What draws you to that method of executing ideas?
I think of it as a two-step thing. My writing, my music, that’s me as an artist. It’s me figuring out my life and how I want it to change, working through that. Then there’s me thinking about distributing those findings or those situations. Opening that up acknowledges the truth, or what I see as the truth, which is that from that point forward it isn’t in my hands, and to pretend otherwise isn’t in line with what actually happens to released art.
It’s like that movie Symbiopsychotaxiplasm, where this filmmaker hires actors to be in a film, then he hires a camera crew to shoot them. Normal. Then he hires another camera crew to shoot the original crew, and doesn’t tell the original crew. Then he hires a third crew and so on. New stories emerge as a result.
I also think open source is important because people need to see the process, how things happen, so it’s not so magical. You do a disservice to people trying to make everything clean and hide the wires because then people think you got on a playlist because your music is great, but it’s really because your manager went to high school with so and so.
Do you have any parting words for people who hire freelancers?
Pay people on time, if not early. And give people space to be themselves creatively, otherwise why are you hiring them. Let them work. You get genuinely new work if you let people just create, uninhibited.
Santangelo’s ‘AdWorld’ album is expected this summer.
2Pac and The Notorious B.I.G. spit a legendary freestyle together at a 1993 Madison Square Garden concert.
Years before they succumbed to the infamous East Coast/West Coast rivalry, Tupac Shakur was often heard playing The Notorious B.I.G.’s early single “Party and Bullshit” on the set of Poetic Justice. Now both etched into pop culture, the fallen rappers not only shared a mutual respect for each other, but also surprisingly shared the MSG stage with R&B veteran Patti LaBelle and Fat Joe.
Big Daddy Kane cohort DJ Mister Cee reminisced about the historic night with MTV. “It was a concert me and Kane did back in 1993 at Madison Square Garden,” he stated. “We were the only rap group on the show. I think Patti LaBelle was on the show, Tony! Toni! Toné!.
Hyping up the crowd over thundering bass, Biggie Smalls delivered his classic “Where Brooklyn at?” freestyle before Pac followed with an equally razor-sharp verse. “[The freestyle] just came about backstage. ‘Pac, Big, the Rugged Child Shyheim. We just brought all of them onstage, and the magic happened,” Cee continued.
In an interview with HipHopDX, the DJ also revealed that he made it a priority to capture the momentous occasion on a 120-minute cassette, though it did take some coaxing. “I always had a habit of recording me and Kane’s live performances, especially when I knew different rappers were gonna come on,” he said. “The sound guy, I begged and pleaded with him to let me record. He was like, ‘Nah, it’s a union thing,’ but he finally let me record.”
Mister Cee went on to divulge a list of other MCs who rocked the crowd within a brief period of time. “The funny thing about that day is that when you hear the performance, you hear Biggie, you hear 2pac, but we also brought out Fat Joe that night,” he continued. “Positive K came out. Shyheim came out—that’s when he had ‘On and On’ out. We only had 10 minutes. So we brought all those rappers out, got them on and off and was able to do our hits within a 10-minute time frame.”
The freestyle was eventually transferred to vinyl and continues to be heralded as one of the greatest nights in hip-hop history. Shyheim still fondly remembers the once-in-a-lifetime performance by the rap demigods.
“They say that’s the greatest freestyle ever. It was really just having fun. Just out there having fun, having a good time,” he stated. “We always had ciphers and rapped with each other, so it was very natural. Rest in peace to 2pac, rest in peace to Biggie.”
Prince performs at one of the largest deaf universities in the country during his Purple Rain tour.
Like Oscar-winning films The Sound of Metal and CODA, late legend Prince also proved the transcendent power of music. As he soared among the pop stratosphere with Purple Rain boasting nearly $70 million at the box office and a chart-topping soundtrack, the unparalleled artist made a 1984 tour stop at one of the largest deaf institutions in the country, Gallaudet University.
“It was just one quiet afternoon in November,” Hlibrok told WUSA9 via an interpreter. “All the sudden everybody started chattering and saying ‘Go! Go to the field house! There’s going to be a concert there.’ I had no idea who was performing. I just thought, ‘You know – I should go.’”
When Hlibrok arrived, he was shocked to find a large stage draped in black along with giant, towering speakers. Playing a surprise, free show for 2,500 deaf and special needs students in the D.C. area, Prince electrified the building with renditions of his less racy material including “When Doves Cry,” “Little Red Corvette,” and “1999.” Blind students delighted in the aural experience while interpreters translated his lyrics for the deaf atop podiums.
“I had a lot of fun. I felt his music,” audience member Angela Maxey, 18, told The Washington Post. “I couldn’t hear the words, but I could feel the vibrations. Deaf people really appreciate and love loud music.”
According to interpreter and attendee Joyce Doblmier, “some deaf students have dim hearing ability“ when music permeates their eardrums. “They can’t feel the notes, but they can feel the rhythms.” The crowd expressed their gratitude with “I love you” gestures in sign language and presented him with gifts before he returned to the stage for a heartfelt encore of “Purple Rain.”
“I never seen so many hardcore road [crew] guys start crying,” renowned concert promoter Darryll Brooks shared in a retrospective interview. “I think even Prince broke a tear. It was one of those moments that those kids would never forget. And Prince wrote the check for the whole thing.”
Just two days prior to the unforgettable concert, Prince was also a featured guest at a fundraising reception for nonprofit mentorship organization Big Brothers of America. “He started doing more philanthropic things. We started playing at schools or doing food drives,” his guitarist Lisa Coleman told Rolling Stone.
Before his untimely demise, His Royal Badness went on to play several other shows for special needs children including a concert for disabled L.A. students that he didn’t want covered by the press.
Flying Lotus reveals his identity as mysterious rapper Captain Murphy while performing with Earl Sweatshirt at The Low End Theory.
Rapping behind a cartoon image and a distorted voice, Murphy dropped a 35-minute album and accompanying visual entitled Duality later that fall. Backed by quirky and kaleidoscopic NSFW imagery, the vintage piece had social media platforms abuzz. With beats crafted by first-rate producers Madlib, Flying Lotus, Just Blaze, and TNGHT, fans theorized Captain Murphy to be either Earl, Tyler, The Creator, Flying Lotus or a combination of the three.
When the enigmatic lyricist announced a show at Los Angeles’ long-running music series The Low End Theory (where Odd Future made their performance debut), anticipation ran so high that concertgoers lined up outside The Airliner earlier that day. Crammed into the small venue filled with regulars and curious newcomers, host Nocando and DJ King Henry warmed up the crowd before the mystery man of the hour appeared. Donned in a ski mask and sequined gold cape, Captain Murphy grabbed the mic and proceeded to perform Duality.
The crowd erupted when Earl Sweatshirt stepped out on to the stage to perform alongside Murphy. After a performance of “The Prisoner,” the moment of truth finally arrived. “Just between us,” Murphy said, before he revealed himself to be genre-bending producer Flying Lotus. Met with fervent cheers, FlyLo basked in glory before L.A. rap crew Pac Div closed out the night.
In 2013, Flying Lotus told XXL why he created the alter ego. “I just wanted to pay dues in the way that I feel rappers should. Earn that shit. That was really the only reason why I was going with the mystery thing and trying to not tell people who I was out of the gate. I wanted people to take me seriously,” he explained.
“None of this is planned, man. I’m still kind of freaked out,” he said. “Then my buddy at Adult Swim heard the track. And this guy is one of my good friends. He really supported a lot of it. He was like, ‘You gotta put it out.’ So I put it out and at the same time I leaked this ‘Mighty Morphin’ Foreskin’ song.”
Years later, Flying Lotus shared that his work helped formulate Kendrick Lamar’s revolutionary To Pimp a Butterfly LP during an encounter on The Yeezus Tour. “I played him a folder of beats that I was keeping close for my next Captain Murphy project. Gave him all the beats …Later that night he told me he had the concept for the album,” he wrote on Twitter.