Archives for : Rootbeer Report

In/Stability, “Home 2 U” & R&R Rate Rappers Episode 19

Releasing a new song every week was my way of building up to a grand finale: and by that I mean my birthday. I turn 31 today, and In/Stability: The Ultimate Ending is Rootbeer’s birthday gift to Adam Wells. Your gift to me can be listening to the album on the platform of your choice.

Spotify

YouTube

Bandcamp

The last song, “Home 2 U,” which is the only song that had not been released prior to today, also has a lyric video I made myself using a GoPro that was taped to five dog food cans stacked on one another.


sophisticated setup
I’m not kidding.

Also, if you haven’t checked it out yet, Emcee Graffiti and I wrangled a bunch of local 518 artists and dropped a remix for “These Things Happen” on Friday so go check that out too!

Finally, I’ve written up a long, heartfelt post about the album, with some extra focus on “Home 2 U.” If you hate reading, there is a near-verbatim recitation of it in Rootbeer & Rawhide Rate Rappers Episode 19, which has just been uploaded to Soundcloud. You can listen to that below, or scroll just slightly further down to read the commentary.

If you’ve been listening to the song releases every Friday, you’ll be familiar with the album by now, except for the last song, which this post is going to explain. First, let’s go way, way back to when I first started rapping. The most common question I was asked by my family and friends was: “why?” Why did I want to make music?

The answer I always gave was: “to have my message heard.” Truth be told, I wasn’t entirely sure what that message was for a very long time. I was figuring it out as I went along, and figuring myself out too. Hip-hop was therapy for me. I think back to songs like “Twisted Thoughts,” “Alone,” “Suicide Note,” “Esperanza,” “How Ya Feelin?,” “Loose Ends” and “Alone with Myself” and find that they detail the struggle of someone who hasn’t fully come to terms with his depression.

I suppose, then, that depression fueled me since before I was even conscious of it. Now think back through the songs on In/Stability. Name one instance where I mention depression. You can’t. Sure, there’s some self-deprecation, plenty of awareness of personal flaws, but even at the points of deepest scrutiny, there is always perseverance.

Every song on this album represents an element of my life falling apart:

  1. Place Beyond the Pines: environment
  2. These Things Happen: the music industry
  3. I Suck: self-esteem
  4. Old You Back: interpersonal relationships
  5. Girl of my Dreams: sense of reality
  6. Let Love Die: love
  7. I Can’t Tell: hip-hop
  8. S.W.A.T. II: society
  9. Dat Atdo: judgment

“Home 2 U” breaks the trend. 2013 was the worst year of my life. I had lost my will to live, but the small shred of sanity left within me – the “voice in the back of my head” if you will – challenged me to work on myself. This song is about that voice, the one and only indication that I was “in stability.” Suddenly that slash in the title makes sense. The song, and the album by proxy, are about being okay despite losing so much because I never lost my sense of self.

Thankfully, my struggles were not coupled with substance abuse. However, I recognized that mental health is a primary cause of alcoholism, so I thought back to when my mother stopped drinking. She was tasked with writing a list of things she liked about herself. I could not remember how many things were on the list, but I figured it was somewhere between 25 and 50, so I challenged myself to make a list of 40. The first 20 were surprisingly easy and I wrote them all down in one sitting. The next ten came slower, over the course of weeks. The final ten, and especially the final five, took months of personal reflection.

When I finished the list, I decided to turn it into a song. “Home 2 U” is that song.

Not only is “Home 2 U” a result of my mental health progress and the story that In/Stability has told over this three-month rollout, it’s the conclusion I had been unable to reach since I wrote my first rhymes on a hotel notepad in 1999 – twenty long and eventful years ago. Those songs I mentioned earlier, where I hadn’t yet come to terms with my depression…they are the first act.

Fear of Success, my most depressing album, particularly the songs “Lost in my Depression” (obviously), “Ghost of my Past,” “Perfect for Me” and “PTSD” details the struggle of someone who recognizes the depression but for whom it has become too heavy. That is the second act. Well, if you want to get technical I’d say being not-depressed for a while in college was like the second act and then Fear of Success was more of a climactic third act.

In/Stability: The Ultimate Ending, and the subtitle is important, is the final act. Making this album wasn’t therapy for me like the others were, it was a way to share the revelation of what really mattered. Once spoken, hip-hop was no longer needed as a vessel for the message, and I could move on. Therefore, I chose to make the song and the album end with the music cutting in and out, like a radio station losing its frequency the further you drive away from it.

As you may be able to guess by my use of the terms “final act” and “move on,” this is my final solo album.

I felt so good about this decision…and yet as I sit here typing this post my face is getting tighter and my fingers don’t want to touch the keys. Please don’t mistake this for retirement. I am committed to making Whiteout! 3. Any time Rawhide needs a guest verse from me, I will do it and I’ll be really excited about it. If Emcee Graffiti tells me he needs an opener for a show he’s booking, I’ll be there on stage. If, down the line, a whole song comes to mind and it’s not meant to be a collaboration, I’ll record it, but I’ll put it out right away.

I feel, at present, freer than I have felt in quite some time. Fear of Success and In/Stability were in the works, concurrently, since 2012. Even since 2002, there hasn’t been a period of more than a few months where I wasn’t working on an album.

If you’ve known me personally, you may have seen me walking with my head down, oblivious to your presence even if you call out to me. That’s because I’ve always had a beat in my head. Literally, I feel like I’ve lived “to the beat of my own drum.” With that ever-changing beat in my head I was always constructing songs, verses, hooks. But the music stopped a while ago and I don’t miss it. I feel so very content with the body of work I’ve developed over the past 20 years and the personal struggles it has allowed me to overcome. It will always be here to provide support for anyone who is going through the same mental health journey. For me, though, I’ve gone from “Twisted Thoughts” to thoughts of starting a family. So thank you, hip-hop, for bringing me “Home 2 U.” To Adam, that is.

And thank every last one of you who has read this post. I hope you enjoyed the album, though I didn’t really make it for you.

New Song & Rootbeer Report – “Dat Atdo”

Chances are, if you clicked on this post you’re trying to figure out what “Dat Atdo” means. The title is just “That Ass, Though” slurred. Now that you have your answer, I hope you stay and read the rest of this post. Either way, thank you for listening to the song.

Stream “Dat Atdo”
Spotify
YouTube

This song was originally intended for Whiteout! 2. The beat was in the original pack of instrumentals Rawhide sent me for that album and I had written what ended up becoming the second verse and half of the third verse for “Dat Atdo.” At that time, however, the working title was “Unhealthy Life Choices.” Whiteout! 2 became halted after I wrote my parts for five tracks so both Rawhide and I could finish up solo projects. The problem is, I continued to make said unhealthy life choices and gave myself enough fuel to complete the song on my own. I remember telling Rawhide that I was jacking the instrumental for selfish reasons but he was totally cool with it. Always is, actually. He just loves that his work gets used. He also loves it when I throw him around, sit on his stomach and hold him down.

What was I talking about? Oh yeah.

So the song is all about making bad decisions and, thus, the element of my life falling apart here is judgment.

I remember having all three verses written and being uncertain about what to do for the chorus. I remember writing the chorus some time later while I was picking Andrea up from work, waiting in the car. What I don’t remember is when or why I decided that slurring “that ass, though” would give the song more personality. I mean, it definitely does and it was definitely my idea. I even tried a few different spellings before settling on “Dat Atdo,” and, honestly, the only reason I went with that spelling is because…

Callbacks to Alternate Ending

While the two songs are nothing alike conceptually, the title is a callback to “Dat Duzit” off Alternate Ending.

Rawhide Report

So this is a pretty deep track. I can hear the self-loathing dripping off of every verse you deliver in this song; it’s very intense. And since I’ve been privy to the real-life events you’re rapping about, I know that that self-loathing was real and not just some act or a character you were putting on just for the sake of the song. From a lyrical standpoint these are my favorite verses on the album. Your verses have that confessional intensity to them like “Cold Turkey” does, but as a listener I also feel like maybe I’m really not supposed to be hearing about what you’re talking about; which I think is accentuated by your delivery for this track. At times it almost feels like I’m eavesdropping on a conversation you’re having with yourself, and I feel a bit guilty about what I’m hearing. Way to really create a hell of an atmosphere.

Now let’s talk about that end part. Firstly I’ve been listening to the demo version of this song for quite a while now and I’m not in that version, so now try to picture me jumping in the seat of my car while driving because I just had the shit scared out of me hearing my own voice coming through my speakers and I wasn’t ready for it haha. I don’t ever remember recording that, when did we do that? Anywho, not only does this end part feel like the climax of the song but I feel like it also serves as the climax of the whole album. I really like how you deliver your acapella verse to the sound of cars rushing by in the background, I think it serves as a nice allegory to the life you could have had passing you by. A very wise man once told me something along the lines of “if that was intentional then good call, and if it wasn’t intentional pretend like it was,” so I would like to impart that guidance back onto you. One final comment I want to make is that, in listening to this song, the end part especially, I get a little uneasy. I know the ending acapella signifies your self-realization and is basically supposed to be the start of your redemption but when I listen I just get kind of a slightly sinister vibe bubbling right below the surface.

New Song & Rootbeer Report: “S.W.A.T. II”

Stream “S.W.A.T. II”
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YouTube

If any song I’ve ever written will cost me fans, it’ll be this one. While every song on the album represents an element of my life falling apart, this one is a bit broader. It represents the collapse of society.

This is going to be the most difficult Rootbeer Report to write, except maybe for the last song on the album but we’ll see once I get there. The reason this one is so tricky is because the lyrics themselves were written with precision in mind and I wanted every line to be taken at face value. Any “analysis” that I could do would simply be turning poem to prose so if you clicked on this post looking for justification for anything I say in this song, you’re not going to find it here.

I will, however, discuss the impetus and consult both the timestamps on my files and Wikipedia when I misremember specific dates and details.

Let’s Get Political!

If you count all of the projects I’ve mixed myself, I’ve released 6 solo albums (In/Stability is the 7th), 3 collaboration albums, 3 EPs and 1 mixtape. The only songs that exist partially in the realm of political rap are “S.W.A.T.” on Alternate Ending (there’s your callback) and “They Need Us” on Whiteout! 2. I’ve avoided making political rap because all too often it comes across as corny, especially from white rappers. I made that decision a long time ago after becoming an Immortal Technique fan. I learned a lot about history from Tech’s music, and I also learned how little I truly understand about the world. For me to tackle political topics based on gut feeling would be irresponsible.

That doesn’t mean, however, that I am out-of-touch. A very specific series of events inspired me to write the first verse of this song:

  1. On July 5, 2016, Alton Sterling was shot and killed on camera by two Baton Rouge Police officers.
  2. A DAY LATER Philando Castile was murdered by a police officer on camera in Minnesota
  3. ANOTHER DAY LATER, a terrorist opened fire on police officers at a Black Lives Matter protest, which the news quickly spun to a false narrative undermining Black Lives Matter.

After this hellish series of events, I was enraged and wrote a verse, which ended up becoming the first verse of “S.W.A.T. II.” On July 12, 2016 I recorded that verse over Cypress Hill’s “Cock the Hammer” beat and sent it to a few people looking for honest feedback, namely: “does this come across as corny or disingenuous in any way?”

To my surprise, the response was overwhelmingly positive.

Still, I felt like I shouldn’t release the track, not because I didn’t stand by the lyrics or because I feared a negative response, but because a 16 bar freestyle over a then-23-year-old beat (albeit one of my favorite instrumentals of all time) detached from any sort of project was unlikely to make any sort of impact. If I’m going to use my platform of privilege to speak on issues, I don’t want it falling on deaf ears.

So I sat with the song for a while and that’s when my memory gets a little hazy. Chris Prythm posted a beat called “Crush,” and I thought I got it specifically for this song. However, the file was saved to my computer on December 21, 2015 – seven months BEFORE that first verse was written. What likely happened was I grabbed the beat because I liked it but didn’t have a plan for it, then rediscovered it in my files later on and found that it had the right energy to compliment the lyrics. So I suppose my foresight is stronger than my creativity.

Once I decided the “Crush” beat would become “S.W.A.T. II,” I got to work on some other verses. The first covered police brutality, so I chose two other topics for which I have strong opinions: racism and religion. With that, I’ll let the song speak for itself.

Rawhide Report

“Jesus Christ, another song that is in the running for my favorite of the album and another hard ass song. I’d certainly say that this is a worthy successor to the original, in fact it’s my favorite of the two. I hope when people listen to this song they really listen to the lyrics and give themselves some time to digest what you’re saying and what you’re trying to accomplish with this song because I think this is one of the most important songs in your discography. This song works because it’ll make people think and make them question their beliefs and belief systems when they might not normally do so.”

New Song & Rootbeer Report: “I Can’t Tell”

Stream “I Can’t Tell”
Spotify
YouTube

Role in the Album Concept

Every song on the album represents an element of my life falling apart. “I Can’t Tell” represents hip-hop, and I don’t mean that in the sense of music quality but rather the intent of its creators. It’s become increasingly difficult to determine everyone’s motives. To a degree, it seemed as though everyone wanted to impact the genre to some degree, but now it seems like many artists are content with fifteen minutes of fame as long as the paycheck is substantial enough. The goal of this song was not to hate on the newer generation but to question, in a sarcastic tone, if enough is being done to advance the culture.

Writing: Thank Cudi

This was actually the first song I started writing for In/Stability and it dates back as far as 2013! I discussed this on Episode 17 of Rootbeer & Rawhide Rate Rappers, by the way, without giving the song’s name. It was this one.

Basically, I was traveling upstate to Potsdam where Rawhide and I were doing a show together. On those trips I always burned several CDs (no AUX port or USB in my old car) to check out new music while driving. On this particular adventure I was listening to Kid Cudi’s Indicud for the first time. The intro, “The Resurrection of Scott Mescudi,” seemed to open some floodgate in my mind because I just started thinking of lines. I dug through my center console for any piece of paper I could find, which ended up being some car insurance paperwork. I drove with one hand on the wheel, trying to press the piece of paper in the center so I could write down everything that came to mind.

As the song transitioned into “Unfuckwittable” and then “Just What I Am,” I found myself pausing the music repeatedly to jot down more lyrics.

There was one problem with these lyrics, however. They did not feel like family with the other songs I had been writing. See, by this point Fear of Success was mostly written. I considered splitting the album into two parts and calling the project Short Shifts, Long Lunches, but that Lunches disc started becoming more of a junk drawer. So some of the songs moved back to Fear of Success, others showed up on Rootbeer Ruins Everything and the rest just never got finished. But “I Can’t Tell” was a song I had bigger plans for. Some time later, Chris Prythm published a beat in June 2014 called “Never Break” which I immediately knew would fit with the song I had written that day.

Recording: Thank Rawhide

I tried recording the song more times than I can count over the course of about 5 years. On three separate occasions I was satisfied with what I had put together, but when I went back to listen later on I changed my mind. As a result, “I Can’t Tell” was actually the second-to-last song I recorded the final vocals for on In/Stability, despite it being the first song written by a considerable amount of time.

Still, even with vocals I was happy with, the beat still felt like it overpowered me at times. One day while Rawhide was visiting I played the song for him in the car, giving him a stripped-down explanation of what I thought the problem was, but not going into too much detail so he could form his own opinion. At this time, the synths that kick in during the last bar of each verse were actually going all through the song except for the first half of the second verse. Rawhide suggested taking that part of the second verse and looping it for all of the verses. That ended up saving the song. He addresses that in his review below.

Rawhide Report

Oh man, I know I’ve heard this song before now, when I was last at your place. Now that I have an actual copy of it to listen to whenever I want, I gotta say that this shit slaps. Just like with “These Things Happen.” The beat, lyrics, delivery, and attitude all come together to produce something that gets me hype. I’m glad you decided to redo the structure of the verses in the beat after we talked about it, the song just flows so perfectly. This song is in some pretty stiff competition with “These Things Happen” as my favorite of the album so far. The acapella at the end of this track might be my favorite acapella verse of yours on the album. Not only does it set up [REDACTED] perfectly, but the religious indignation that you portray gets my atheist blood pumping.

New Song & Rootbeer Report: “Let Love Die”

Stream “Let Love Die”
Spotify
YouTube

Callbacks to Alternate Ending

“The Best Nightmare” always got great feedback from people, whether they heard the studio version or if they saw me perform it live.

It’s one of my favorite songs too because it has so many conflicting emotions. For that reason I made a sequel to it in 2010 called “Recurring Nightmare” which I’m also very proud of.

I never intended to make a trilogy, but it felt like a disservice to ignore the best Alternate Ending track for a sequel album.

In a production sense, this song is actually a continuation of TWO Alternate Ending tracks. I “produced” the beat with the same program I used to make the first two “Nightmare” songs. I chose a guitar riff that sounded like those songs, but I also used ambient noises that were similar to the ones used in “Smart Girls” (also off Alternate Ending) and, more obviously, the same “ooo” and “yeah” female vocals as that song (though I flipped the order).

Origins & Role in the Album Concept

This song actually started out as two songs: “Let Love Die” and “The Basics of Love” and neither was intended to be a continuation of the “Nightmare” saga. A main theme of those “Nightmare” songs is fearing the end of one relationship in pursuit of another. In retrospect, I believe that each of my relationships prepared me for the next in some way, such as not jumping in too deep, or not blaming myself when I’m not be the priority. Likewise, these relationships made me a better person, such as teaching me greater self-sufficiency on both professional and emotional levels. I’ve made a number of songs about the hurt, which is often the emotion that overpowers the others. For a change, I wanted to celebrate the positives of being in three “failed” relationships, writing one verse about each of them. No surprise here: the element of my life falling apart in this song is love.

Rawhide Report

First off I have to acknowledge the obvious connections to “The Best Nightmare” and “Recurring Nightmare” both lyrically and in terms of the production. This was one of the first songs for this project that you sent me, so I’ve been listening to this one for quite a while; so long in fact that I always forget that you haven’t even released it yet. I’m not sure if this is one of the other songs you’re going to give the “single” treatment to but I feel like it could definitely be a strong contender. Much like its aforementioned sister wives, I think “Let Love Die” is a relatable and accessible song. A lot of people are going to be able to identify with content of this song. I can also tell that you put a lot of time and care into constructing this song to make sure that it tied into the other two thematically.

New Song & Rootbeer Report: “I Suck”

Stream “I Suck”
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YouTube

Role in the Album Concept

Every song on the album represents an element of my world falling apart. This one should be no surprise: it’s self esteem.

Production

9 of the 10 songs on Alternate Ending were “produced” by me. I put “produced” in quotes because my form of production is mixing and matching loops. Since this album is a sequel, I wanted to create a few songs in the same manner. Since I had pretty much tapped out Hip-Hop eJay 2, 5 & 6, I visited their website to see if they had any new products. The owners of the eJay brand have changed since I last used their software, but some of the programs were available as part of a legacy collection, including Hip Hop eJay 4. I downloaded it, struggled to get it installed on a modern computer, but eventually worked my way in. I went through all the pre-made loops and set anything aside that I thought I could make a song with. The beat for “I Suck” ended up being the first one I put together. The concept for the song was already in my head and when I heard the didgeridoo (yes, I had to use spell check on that), it fit the tone perfectly.

To Guests or Not to Guests

A decision that I had to make with this project was whether or not to include any guests at all. Alternate Ending remains my only album without a single guest feature. I chose to let the songs decide. I don’t write a couple of verses and then think “oh, so and so would sound good on this too.” I know when a concept hits me that another voice will be needed to enhance it. This song was no exception to that statement. So I reached deep in my Rolodex of dream collaborators and contacted The Rawhide Kid, who was surprisingly willing to work with me! Originally I had the song as three 16 bar verses, but Rawhide said he would rather have a 32 bar verse, so I combined mine and put it at the front of the song. Then he said he wanted the first verse, so I moved mine, because Rawhide is the guest and I am a good host.

Callbacks to Alternate Ending

“Hopeless, still cold and coatless” is a reference to a line from the Alternate Ending song “I Love When.” The lyric in that song is “It’s cold, I’m coatless, I smell like goat piss.” Very poetic, I know. Also the last line of my verse “Upgraded the hoopty but still lost in my depression” is a reference to the Alternate Ending song “Hoopty” and the Fear of Success song “Lost in my Depression.”

Some other lyrics of note

“Pokémon I caught all 807 but when I take a step back that’s hella fuckin’ pathetic”
The original line here was “Pokémon I caught all 719 but 200 Yo Kai is a fuckin’ pipe dream” but then this song took so long to come out they released a whole new generation of Pokémon. Actually, the song is now inaccurate again because they just added a bunch more for Generation 8 two weeks ago. But whatever, I’m not redoing the song again because I suck.

“Can it be the reason my damn mother abandoned me?”
I mentioned this on a few songs, most notably “PTSD.” When I was 11, I went and stayed with my aunt for a week and when I came home no one knew where my mother was. She had gone (further) upstate to get clean. For the record, she and I have made progress with our relationship and are under speaking terms.

“Grandmother is scared of me with severity”
This is a heavily exaggerated line. Like every grandmother, I got the “you could call more often” speech. When I said “you could call me too” I got “I don’t want to bother you.” Honestly, there is nothing more to this line.

Rawhide Report

This is the type of humor I’m here for. I feel like our fans will find this song hilarious, and people who don’t get our dark, hyper self-deprecating type humor will find this song to be either stupid, mopey, or uncomfortable; which makes it all the more funny to me. So fuck everyone who doesn’t think this is funny. I always feel weird reviewing songs that I’m featured on so I’ll keep this one short. It felt really fun to be rapping over a Rootbeer beat again and I really enjoyed the throwback mentality of it. This has that classic R & R mentality and energy to it and I think it could have easily fit right in on Whiteout! 2.

New Song & Rootbeer Report: “Place Beyond the Pines”

Stream “Place Beyond the Pines”
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YouTube

Role in the Album Concept

Track 2 on In/Stability, and the first with vocals, is “Place Beyond the Pines.” As I mentioned in my last post – each track on this album represents a certain element of my world falling apart. “Place Beyond the Pines” represents my environment. I’ve lived in Schenectady County most of my life and spent 2012 – 2017 living in the City of Schenectady itself. “Place Beyond the Pines” takes you on a tour of that city; not to different landmarks, but to the different experiences of its residents.

The story spends the most time with the man “sippin’ whiskey, soaking chin and goatee,” the pregnant teenager contemplating suicide and the crack addict under the care of her religious brother, believing only God can save them. These are fictional tales but inspired by real stories and observations. Schenectady truly is a “rabid rehab capital,” with many residents having been “shipped upstate” to get clean. Of course, the system fails many of these individuals, and they resume their old lifestyle in a new setting.

Etymology

“Schenectady” is the Mohawk word for “beyond the pines,” which is where both this song and the movie of the same name got its title. Ryan Gosling was originally going to provide featured vocals, but I just kept showing him the scene from Training Day with his wife’s bare ass and grunting until he got annoyed and quit mid session.

Production

The beat was produced by The Rawhide Kid. If memory serves, it was among the beats he sent me when I was looking to record “Cold Turkey.” His filename was “surreal thoughts.” However, I slowed the original tempo by 5%. It was important to me that this song maintains a very specific pace and the original tempo was just a little too rushed. It is perhaps my most monotoned delivery ever as I intended to serve the role of the narrator and nothing more.

Call Back to Alternate Ending

As I mentioned in the In/Stability post, many of the songs call back to my album Alternate Ending in some way. This one does not directly do so, however the general concept is actually how I planned to start that album. I had written a song called “Dirty Water” which followed a similar concept but in a rural setting. It did not come across with the intensity that I wanted so I never recorded it. Once I came up with “S.W.A.T.” I scrapped the “Dirty Water” concept entirely. So while the song does not reference Alternate Ending, writing it did put me in a similar mind-state.

I never do this….but here are some of the lyrics from “Dirty Water” written in 2007. A huge notable difference is that “Dirty Water” is first-person while “Place Beyond the Pines” narrates the struggle of others.

Now that I've got my cap and gown
I'm ready to pack my crap and hop town
You know I think it's great but it just ain't fun
Let me describe what I'm getting away from
It's true that the water barely costs shit
Because you can't drink it right out of the faucet
If you've got a white sink, watch it swirl down
It's got a tint and the color is brown

It's durty durty like the deep south
If you don't want E Coli, keep out
When the Poland Spring bottles and my cash is depleted
I can't quench my thirst even if I need it
I can't cool off so I do my job shirtless
Every block got about one house where water's dirtless
Only because of a device they purchased
Without it paying water bills seems to be worthless
This town is a circus, local government's laughin'
Our medical bills are the sideshow attraction

Rawhide Report

I sent The Rawhide Kid the full album and he stroked my ego a whole bunch because that’s where my male g-spot is. Part of his feedback was his track-by-track reactions. I’ll be including them in each Rootbeer Report because they made me feel good and because you could all stand to see what encouragement from a good friend, partner and lover looks like.

I always really loved the concept of this song, ever since you told me about it a while ago; I feel like it was back in 2014 or so. Has it really been that long that this song has been gestating? I really think your lyricism is on point here, and the imagery those lyrics create is very vivid. I like how your verses are like an anthology in that they tell different parts of the same story. I also like how dark this song is in a real-world way. I also wanted to make special note of the fact that the end verse flows seamlessly into [REDACTED] which I know is intentional but it’s still impressive to me.

Rootbeer Report #14: “Midnight Snack”

Wow, we made it. Fourteen song synopses. What am I going to do with all the extra time I used to spend writing blogs? Probably catching Doduos in the park.

For Promotional Use Only?

I know I said “PTSD” was the first song written for Fear of Success but that’s not entirely true. It was the first song written that was specifically intended for the album. Actually, all three verses of “Midnight Snack” were written before Whiteout! was released. They were three completely disparate verses I didn’t know what to do with so I was going to make a promotional track rhyming over the “Beamer, Benz or Bentley” beat – hence the reference to that song in the third verse – but we ended up having to scramble to finish Whiteout!. We didn’t finish it until the night before the album release party at Hurley’s in Potsdam so needless to say there wasn’t an opportunity to create promotional tracks beforehand.

As I was gathering concepts for Fear of Success I stumbled on the lyrics which were, and are still, in a file called “Cynical critics can sit on a dick and pivot.” They’re very good technical verses and, although they don’t really have an overarching topic, they’re a lot of fun. Basically, they’re the stereotypical white rapper verses. I knew “PTSD” was too heavy to be anywhere on the album but the very end. It represents the part of the day where you’re trying to fall asleep but your brain takes the opportunity to recall every trauma all at once. Yes, I’ve ended many nights that way, but throughout the Fear of Success creation process, it became less common. I didn’t want the last thing the listener hears to be “That’s me in the corner” and it wasn’t fair of me to leave everyone bummed out before the CD loops back around so I added a final chapter: those verses.

“Beamer, Benz or Bentley” being a couple years old by that point, and six years old by the time the album was released, the verses needed a new beat. The Will Spitwell produced one I went with had the perfect vibe to it. I recorded the verses over it but their presence in the Fear of Success album concept needed justification. When Rawhide came to visit and we recorded “Battle Rap” and “Standing Around,” I also had him do the skits between the verses to tie everything together. This is how I pictured it: As I was laying in bed overthinking everything, Rawhide calls me, says he’s outside and we’re going joyriding. By this point I’m exhausted, but like he convinced me to go to the club just a couple songs earlier, I get in the car and he gets me to start freestyling.

It’s because of all of you…

The album ended on a high note and my life was in a better place than it was when I started. That being considered, it felt appropriate to thank some people at the end. I certainly didn’t want to pull a J. Cole at the end of 2014 Forest Hills Drive. Hearing nine minutes of appreciation one time is more than enough so you’re likely to pop out the disc instead of letting it play through, and I wanted to release a project you could keep in your car for months. I told myself I’d thank as many people as I could in the time remaining with the beat at its current length. The guests and Dan were obvious choices, the rest helped me more than they may know.

The bad thoughts block out the counting sheep

There were times the thoughts in my head were so agonizing to me that I’d rather die than think any more. To a lot of people that might sound idiotic, and to an extent it is. You can never fully empathize with someone who is depressed unless you suffer from it yourself. Maybe you don’t understand and maybe a handful of the people I thanked don’t understand either; but they supported me. They answered my text messages at 3 o’clock in the morning and took my plight seriously. Whether they helped guide my mind back to a place of stability or they just helped me think about something else until I stopped crying, they all had a hand in making sure this album got released because I’m not sure it, nor I, would be here today without them.

Thank you, I love you all.

Alternate Ending

There was a short time I considered having a completely different ending to Fear of Success but I didn’t have the resources to make it happen. Since then I’ve actually written an entire album around that concept so prepare yourself for my next full-length project In/Stability: The Ultimate Ending.

Rootbeer Report #13: “PTSD”

“PTSD” takes struggles in my life, addresses them and then challenges my inability to cope with them. The first verse being my parents, the second being my romantic dependencies and the third being my depression.

Pre-Traumatic Song Development

When I left college I wasn’t sure if I wanted to keep rapping. I’ve never been an eggs-in-the-same basket type of guy. I’m confident in my writing, but I’ve always been afraid to succeed. I release a project and as soon as Interscope Records doesn’t magically find a copy and sign me, I get discouraged and start working on another. I wasn’t sure how to break the cycle, so I decided to see where I could go professionally. Within a month of graduation I got a job in my field, a month after that I bought a car and about seven months after that I moved out of my parents house. It was the most I’d ever grown up in the shortest amount of time and with growth comes reflection.

I was in my at-the-time girlfriend’s kitchen in late 2011, early 2012 and what became the first verse of “PTSD” just came to me. They were the first hip hop lyrics I had written since college and they were some of the heaviest I had ever put to paper. I had never written about the part of my childhood before because I never let myself feel the impact of my parents’ drug use and subsequent destruction of one another.

Preparing the Sonic Demands

Reading the verse over to myself again and again inspired me to write even more and eventually arrive at the 9 – 5 concept Fear of Success is based around. Then-girlfriend A/K/A “Perfect for Me” told me on Christmas 2011 she’d lease me three beats from Ill-iteracy so a few months later, after I got my beat pack from Rawhide and decided which concepts still needed the right beat, I chose the ones that would become “Rush Hour,” “Midnight Snack” and “PTSD.”

A couple of years later, once the lyrics were finished and I finally recorded the first verse, I actually broke down into tears during the first take. That’s still on my hard drive somewhere.

Plus those Stupid Dependencies

The second verse is about a girl who had a role in the “Perfect for Me” relationship ending. I did not cheat, but I baled the straw (do you bale straw?) that broke the camel’s back. For the slow, the camel in this case was the already strained relationship. Once said relationship failed, I transitioned a lot of emotion to this other girl. I was very sick. I had been in a relationship so long, I had forgotten what it was like to come home to an empty house. I still had not learned to follow my own path to happiness and instead dedicated myself to living for a woman, hoping desperately, and incorrectly, that would in-turn give me purpose. The verse was written as I came to terms with that so while it is about her, I am more critical of myself. “I can’t end this shit, I am pathetic.”

Commentary

I was never broken up over a broken home

I never wanted sympathy for this. Quite frankly, I was happier with my parents separating than I would have been with them trying to force a relationship and allowing it to remain abusive.

But you don’t know about that Easter
When I woke up early, ran to the stairs and heard you beat her
You was accusin’ her of lyin’ I don’t know fuckin’ why
But the truest excuse was that you were drunk and high

I’m not even sure my parents know I was awake the Easter morning I heard my father beat my mother, though I’ve given both of them physical copies of the album so they probably know now.

Me and Steve, at least you never beat us

Despite the above, my parents were never physically abusive toward my brother, nor toward me.

But I’d be crushed the week I would leave from Aunt Tita’s
Mom was gone with no word day after day
Then I learned she’s in rehab and may have to stay

I would visit my Aunt Tita for a week every summer because she has a really big house in Westchester County. When I was 11, my mother and I were living with my grandmother because we had been evicted from our apartment (I would later find out this was because my mother was spending all her money on booze). That summer I went to Aunt Tita’s like I always do and when I came home, no one knew where my mother was. I went to live with my father, a situation that ended up becoming permanent. A month went by before I heard from my mother, who had gone upstate (well, further upstate) to get clean. This confused me because she had been attending AA for some time and had gotten her one year coin. The truth was she had been drinking the whole time, though you probably could have guessed that since I said we had gotten evicted because of her drinking.

And I’m proud of her now that the past has been shrouded in clouds
But I cower the day the haze lets the sour things out

And that day came before I wrote “Cold Turkey”

On that bridge in ’07 seventy feet from the ground
Police drove by before the would-be messy show
Convinced the hospital psychiatrist to let me go

This was one of the last parts of the song I finished writing. I kept tweaking it but it was impossible to relay in three bars, let alone an entire verse. It’s a true story. In high school – actually the same night I saw that abomination of a movie Spiderman 3 – I ended up threatening suicide. I walked to a bridge and just stood at the edge of it, leaning on the guard rail. The featured image for this post is a picture of that bridge. I never intended to jump, but in previous relationships I had threatened my own life as a very unhealthy way to win a drug I was addicted to: sympathy. The girl I was with at the time, who would go on to be the subject of “Perfect for Me,” was not too keen on the immaturity of that behavior. Eventually the police drove by and refused to leave until I agreed to go with them to the hospital and get a psych eval. The hospital psychiatrist, who they woke from a sound sleep, was ready to commit me as soon as she put on her shoes. After I explained where my head was at and the situation that night really opened my eyes to how unhealthy it was, she cleared me. I stopped threatening myself after that night.

I might have had a place in the playpen
But all I’ve had is rap since age ten

Hip hop has been an outlet for me since 1999. When I hear Joe Budden talk to his depression for six minutes on “Whatever it Takes,” I see it as an invitation to do the same. Some may not see it that way, but his place at the top of XXL’s Greatest Mixtape Series list gives some clout to that flavor of self-expression. It’s sort of like how Nyquil is supposed to help with cold symptoms, but it also helps you sleep. Maybe I didn’t prescribe to hip hop to fight against social injustice, but I found my way into the focus group and it helped my symptoms. This song, I guess, is describing my metaphorical cancer to justify chemotherapy. Please understand I’m not trying to appropriate anything; I’m just taking the drug that works for me.

Rootbeer Report #12: “Perfect for Me”

I kind of Rootbeer Reported this song already when the video was released so if you want to learn more you can read that post. To summarize:

It’s my favorite song I’ve ever written. My opinion hasn’t changed in the…oh wow exactly three months since I said so. Every line in the second and third verses rhyme. I fully intended it to be a love song but I wrote it at such an emotionally heavy time that it gets more and more delusional with each verse. By the end, it’s almost as if I’m trying to convince myself that she’s perfect for me. Coincidentally(?) the day I finished writing it was also the day that relationship ended. I used a beat Rawhide made called “Stars,” and here we are.


Can you spot the cameo from my piece of shit cat?

Commentary

You address me like an enemy so I stress eat
And then you resent me further cuz I’m hefty like red meat

I’m starting to realize I mention food a lot on this album. Hell, the very first song starts with me going to the refrigerator. Then there’s doughnuts. Now this?

Yes I’m a dead beat but you’re a pain in the ass when you call
During a match of Smash Bros. Brawl

A lot of love songs, especially in hip-hop, are very generic. This is done for relateability; so a maximum number of female listeners can identify themselves as the subject of the lyrics. I’ve done that before, but with this song I wanted to instead get very specific with the details. I don’t want anyone else thinking it’s about them. These were the experiences shared between one specific person and myself. The song gives you a window to that, like something Eve 6 would do. Side Note/Fun Fact: Even though I’m a super hardcore rapper, Eve 6 is one of my favorite bands.

Put that finger in the center of a ring just like a circus

Only super hardcore rappers quote Britney Spears.

You chose my ass over a polite, lustfully buff guy

What’s manlier than a lustfully buff guy? This is hip-hop.

Our love is like an open wound but what when the blood dries?

In all seriousness, though, I’m particularly proud of this line.