Professional Documents
Culture Documents
01
Gluekit METAL BLADE ASAP Rocky FICE trinidad james BLACK SCALE
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WELCOME
This is the first issue of the Scion AV Journal, a new publication dedicated to creative culture. Inside youll find expert advice and tales from those living their dreams and making it work. Dig in and keep your brain open.
STARRING
TABLE OF CONTENTS
7 INDEX DRUMS
SCION AV INSTALLATION FEATURED DESIGNER
PRINCE PAUL
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9 LEVI MAESTRO
15 FICE
17 GLUEKIT
25 JFISH DESIGNS
27 MY FIRST YEAR
SAGE VAUGHN, EARACHE, HOT SUGAR, LEVI MAESTRO, TRINIDAD JAMES, BODEGA BAMZ & MORE
STAFF
Scion Project Manager: Jeri Yoshizu Editor: Eric Ducker Creative Direction: Scion Art Direction: BON Design: Jamie Story, nick ace, tony brown
CONTRIBUTORS
WRITERS: J. Bennett, Mr. Dead, Prince Paul, Evan Shamoon, Ashley Simpson Photographers: Kareem Black, GAVIN GUIDRY, Phil Knott, Ryan Lusteg
CONTACT
For additional information on Scion, email, write or call. Scion Customer Experience 19001 S. Western Avenue Mail Stop WC12 Torrance, CA 90501 Phone: 866.70.SCION Fax: 310.381.5932 Email: Email us through the Contact page located on scion.com Hours: M-F, 6am-5pm PST Online Chat: M-F, 6am-6pm PST The Scion AV JOURNAL is published by BON. For more information about BON, contact: info@bon-usa.com Company references, advertisements and/or websites listed in this publication are not affiliated with Scion, unless otherwise noted through disclosure. Scion does not warrant these companies and is not liable for their performances or the content on their advertisements and/or websites. 2013 Scion, a marque of Toyota Motor Sales U.S.A., Inc. All rights reserved. Scion and the Scion logo are trademarks of Toyota Motor Corporation. 00430-SJO
Tight-ply birch sides and ash faced drum has a naturally deep sound.
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A wooden subwoofer that is environmentally sound.
Index Drums are available for purchase at Scion AV Installation, 7667 Melrose Ave., Los Angeles, CA, 90036.
opportunity to create content for myself, to get myself popular and get new opportunities to come in that way, he says. When I stopped wanting to be something I wasnt and started being what I was, everything started working. Maestro Knows is his ongoing online video project, a series of documentary shorts that follow him on his selfactualized road trips and interviews. His early subjects were personal friends (Curt@!n$) and possessions (his Nike Air Yeezys), but quickly came to include established artists (Estevan Oriol) and musicians (Warren G, Lil Jon). Though his early videos were all made on strength, eventually those with money to spend started to take notice as well. Maestro now makes his living by working with brands and high profile individuals looking to help build content around whatever initiatives they have going on. Maestro says he prefers working with corporate clients to forcing people to watch ads in order to view his content, and therefore doesnt put his videos on YouTube and goes strictly Vimeo. Most of the opportunities people come at me with are pretty rad, he says, confident that part of his appeal is the fact that he makes the videos himself, without the baggage that normally comes along with such creative endeavors. [I do it] without having a crew, or even a concept. I Levi Maestro got started making his own videos through skateboarding at the age of 15. I was the only one I knew who was really interested in it, so I guess thats how I got good at it, he says of his early days, both behind and in front of the lens. In 2006, when he turned 19, Maestro decided to move to Los Angeles from San Diego (where he briefly lived after leaving his native Las Vegas) to pursue a career directing music videos. He interned for a director, but quickly realized that his attempt to break into the industry came at a time when the moneyand with it, the opportunitieswere quickly disappearing.
Levi Maestros Here I Am, There I Go art exhibit ran at the Scion AV Installation in Los Angeles this past February vimeo.com/maestroknows
[prefer] getting thrown into situations and documenting what happens, and then finding the story later. Naturally, he says prior experience came in clutch, At some point I realized I should use the style that I developed over time. Its very much like the skateboarding stuff Id been doingfast paced, high energy, real life looking imagery cut together to make a story out of it all.
With the Maestro Knows video series, Levi MAESTRO tells his stories his way.
Written by Evan Shamoon
Fortunately, this moment coincided with the explosion of home video production, bolstered by the release of affordable, high-quality cameras. So, like many of his generation, Levi Maestro started making videos and uploading them to the internet. I realized I had an
and March.
Listen to the soundtrack for Maestro Knows America, his Scion sponsored tour across the country, that you can find at scionav.com/mkusa
Nick Hook.
45 King.
When did you realize that what you were doing artistically through music was your career? 45 King: Theres really no career in art. Art is art if the person putting it out is liked. If they stay out of trouble and keep
their name good, then theyre going to be good. People like whoever is known. You have to really put out some garbage to lose your nameyou really have to do something bad or put out music thats so far away from youve done.
How tough was it to make a name for yourself and get people to hear your music? Nick Hook: It was definitely something that took a while, but I made a choice to make it organic and try not to skip any
steps. I always felt like doing what I wanted was more important than trying to get my name out there. Once I solidified myself, I felt like I was going to be here forever, rather than some guy who shows up for an hour and is gone.
Two producers hash out how to make a career when you're making art.
Interview: Eric Ducker
stuff, I stopped getting work. You know what Im saying? And that goes for someone who nobody knows what he looks like.
45 King: When people started saying I had good stuff, I started getting work. When people stopped saying I has good
How long did it take for you to get good? 45 King: Thats a crazy question. Once you start to get attention, thats when you get good, I guess. But who says Im good? Nick Hook: I made music as a teenager for a very long time, but my first real experience in music was actually signing to
is a different process than most. No one ever liked what I did from age 14 to 24, then we got signed and I learned one
Warner Bros. [as part of the band Men, Women & Children]. The first record I actually put out was on Warner Bros., which aspect of the business, but then I learned that its hard to make money, so I started to diversify. I started DJing because I liked it, but then people started paying me money to do it. Then people started paying me money to do remixes. Having five careers going on at once was the best way for me. If one of them disappeared, Id have four to keep working on. If you keep it diverse, then people start to hear about you in different circles and they all start to correlate eventually. I feel like my career is kind of just starting.
45 King is a legendary hip-hop and breakbeat producer who is one of the founders of New Jerseys famed Flavor Unit and was the primary sonic architect of the crew. He is responsible for such classic tracks as Queen Latifahs Ladies First, Jay-Zs Hard Knock Life and his own The 900 Number. Nick Hook is a Brooklyn-based producer, DJ, engineer, bassist and go-to dude when dance music artists want to start messing with analog equipment. He has collaborated with Azealia Banks, L-Vis 1990, El-P and many more. We got these two on the phone to talk about figuring out the balance between the creative and the business sides of their chosen profession.
peoples eyes. In the business, the people who are signing the checks, they need to trust you. Its a stupid game that we need to play. The Azealia Banks thing or working with Hudson Mohawke or certain milestones in other peoples minds verifies you. Now I want to go beyond that, whether its cultivating artists that I meet in the clubs or mixing records for $2000 each or producing a big major label rap record. Someone isnt going to write a young producer a check for $100,000 and say, Make an album. They want to make sure thats a good investment on their part.
What is it about your career that makes you feel like its just starting now? Nick Hook: Im just now getting to do what I want to do. Before it was just groundwork. Now Im legitimate in other
When people ask you for advice, do you tell them not to go into music or do you tell them, This is what you need to know upfront? 45 King: I dont advise anybody to get into this. Art is not a concrete thing. Art can be anything. Art can be a rock. I would
tell people to get something concrete, because art is not something concrete. But I would never tell anybody not to do this. If you can do it without it hurting, then you should do it. Because a lot of it hurts. You meet a lot of people, you fall in love with a lot of people, and then you find out they are not around when you need them. And that hurts and thats called show business. I dont want anyone to think that Im bitter, that's just what happened to me.
Nick Hook: For real, I tell them not to be delusional. I always had a job until last year, which I relied on to pay my income,
map. The reason I think Im here is that I kept it true to what I wanted. I would never tell someone not to make music, but when I started doing music, it was as a hobby. When I was 13 I didnt start doing music to make money. Nobody liked me
then I could do my music and make it my music. A lot of these kids, theyre trying to make a banger that puts them on the
and girls didnt like me, and I was like, I might as well hang out with these other nerds and make music. Now that we got a little bit of money and a couple of girls like us, its cooler, but I still try to keep the ideals of why I started. I had to save up all summer to buy an MPC when I was 18. It was $1200. To get $1200 in St. Louis when youre 18, youve got to deliver mad pizzas. And I delivered those pizzas and I kept that sampler and I learned how to use it. Its not a flash in the pan. I see these kids, and once a genre starts getting popular, they can learn about the whole genre in a night. When I wanted to learn about hip-hop, I went to the record store and put my headphones on. And that knowledge sticks with me to this day.
With the larger availability of software and the possibility to download basically any song you want, its tough to tell a kid to go save up for an MPC. Nick Hook: I wish these tools would have existed when I was a kid in a way, but I think when we were DJing when were
young, wed go see 45 King because he had his crate and I had my crate and another dude played electro records. We were all unique. It was a different process. Now a guy like DJ Sega from Philly has a $100 PC and he can show his ideas through his brain. Were cutting out that thing where you have to be middle class to make music, and thats a beautiful thing. Things change.
45 King: Its not that I dont like kids, but I never thought about what the kids were going to learn from me when I do
things. I just try to be nice to everybody. So if they can learn that, theres not really much more they can learn from me. Treat people the way you want to be treated.
Nick Hook: There are a million people more talented than me, but the phone rings because I have fun when I work and
Im easy to work with. Giving someone the experience of a good time is more important than money. Ive seen artists who might be making their manager five million dollars, but if theyre miserable, you dont want to sit with them. The thing that changed my life the most, I did for free. I recorded 212 for Azealia Banks when she had 100 followers on Twitter and then she became a worldwide phenomenon. I did it because a friend asked me to. It wasnt about making money, it was about being dope. And because we had fun that day, there was an energy that was transmitted through the music and it resonated. That got me a million more jobs, the chance to travel the world with her and legitimate fees.
45king.com
nickhook.tumblr.com
Check out 45 Kings Making the Beat on Scion Streaming Radio at scionav.com
Bulloughs original plan was to bring in nationally recognized artists, but as things got goingand in the midst of the
FICE taps into an unexpected community to build up their Salt Lake City base.
Story by Evan Shamoon
economic turbulence of the late part of last decadethis took some time. FICE has been hosting monthly art shows, ranging from the Spacecraft Saints to the graphic design work of Dan Christofferson. Infamous photographer Ricky Powell was brought in for a solo show during the 2011 Sundance Film Festival. Usually [we feature] local talents, which we seem to have an endless supply of, but a couple times a year we'll bring some heaters in, says Bullough, who points to work from Jacob Bannon, Sam Flores, Michael Sieben and RETNA as being among his personal favorites. FICEs approach to both the retail and art landscape is rather unique, in that its generally kept close to the vest. [We]
Five years ago, Corey Bullough and Laura Hadar opened the doors to FICE in downtown Salt Lake City, Utah. With its high ceilings and open floor plan, it was ideal as both a streetwear retail store and an art gallery. Bullough, who had been loosely involved in the snowboard industry, knew that Salt Lake City leaned conservative, but this fact only emboldened him to help build a creative hub for likeminded locals. Ive always been super into street art and sneakers. And I hate the mall, never been able to do it, he says. He returned from a trip to New York City feeling particularly inspired, and that night happened to run into Hadar, a professional snowboarder. The idea for FICE was born.
focus on the community, says Bullough. We're not trying to blow the web up with a bunch of hype, we just do awesome stuff in our neck of the woods.
ficegallery.tumblr.com
FICE is part of the Scion Partners Program. For more information go to scionav.com/partners
black & white photo installation that we did for Synthetic magazine, recalls Christopher. It dealt with the tension between two dimensional and three dimensional spacesshowing 2D objects in a 3D wayand played that tension out visually. These early, spatially experimental projects led to more commercial work for the husband and wife duo, including illustration
Kathleen and Christopher Sleboda have crossed mediums and dimensions to advance Gluekit's artistic approach.
As told to Ashley Simpson
When Kathleen and Christopher Sleboda started working together at Gluekit, the graphic design firm Christopher developed in 2003 as an extension of his Yale MFA thesis, they immediately bonded over a shared love of hardcore punk and vegan food. But perhaps most significantly, they shared an interest in the breakdown of traditional conceptual and aesthetic boundaries in illustration and graphic design. The first jobs were photographic projects for different art magazines, like the
commissions from publications including Rolling Stone, Esquire and New York magazine. Theyve also developed into projects in industrial design, apparel, and print work. Were really interested in trying to find ways to create brand new products that we havent seen around before, explains Christopher. Were very influenced by 1960s modernist design, 1970s punk (album art like the first Talking Heads LP), the neon colors of the 1980s, and the work of groups like General Ideapeople who just didnt allow themselves to have boundaries, who explored any medium they found interesting in the moment. Gluekit will have show at Scion AV Installation from March 16 to April 16. Here Christopher guides us through some of their previous work and offers a preview of what to expect from their show.
gluekit.com
"CLOUDS" - 2004
This was produced for the awesome arts magazine Faesthetic. Weve been in ten issues of Faesthetic over the years, and produced some of our very favorite work in the process. Faesthetic's open and later themed issues were a solid space for experimentation. We always worked in black and white, and built out ideas about spatial interaction and odd juxtapositions that continue to be found in our work. This bunny shirt was found at a local thrift store and inspired the entire photocomposition.
Pop Art was an art video we produced for the Scion Installation 7 art show. Concentrating on things that pop! in a variety of ways, our video highlights acts of presentation and interaction using a simplified vocabulary, repetition and bright colors. Aesthetically its somewhere between instructional video and infomercial. This work follows our interest in clichs by employing a range of popular video tricks. We were also interested creating a still life that moves, ever so slightly.
"PRINT" - 2008
We were commissioned by Print magazine to create a cover and six interior spreads for their 2008 Regional Design Annual. Basically the annual celebrates the best design across the county, broken up into regional groupings, so the six interior spreads spelled out the different geographical regions in the competition. It was a great opportunity for us to work with tactile elements and combine our love of color, typography, dimensionality and spatial illusion. And it was the first time we produced a photocomposition piece in color. We shot the pieces in a space at the Yale School of Art, which had an open second floor around an indoor court area, so that we could get the overhead perspective. We built all the type out of wood, felt, hula hoops, fabric, tape, staples and foam so the forms existed in real space, and we spent a lot of time working out angles so that the words would be legible.
very soft and comforting, but we would pair that with a pattern thats very hard and rigid. Were looking at ways to contrast different ideas about the form and function of the pieces. Were really big fans of so many different things that people do, and sometimes we wonder exactly where we fit in, in terms of what everyone else is doing. Were graphic designers and illustrators, but we love art and photography. The kind of illustration we do isnt really what traditional illustrators do, it has a little bit more of a graphic design component to the illustration. And our graphic design is a little bit more illustrative. And the art that we do is kind of graphic design. So were pooling components from all of these things, and we never quite fit or rest in any one of those worlds. We find that interesting, but also kind of awkward as well.
gluekit.com
Gluekit merchandise is available for purchase at Scion AV Installation, 7667 Melrose Ave., Los Angeles, CA, 90036. Scene from Pop Art.
Jennifer Fisher creates elegantly strange ceramic pieces that get in touch with nature.
Written by Ashley Simpson
When Berkeley-based industrial designer Jennifer Fisher begins a new ceramics project for her jfish designs line, she has two things in mind. It has to be functional and it has to come from nature, from the things that I see in the world around me, says the New Jersey native. The synthesis of these two core values is something practical (for example a cup, planter
or an organizer), ecologically inspired (taking the shape of eggs or branches), and slightly, beautifully strange. Its a simple, ethereal aesthetic, rooted in a devotion to the great outdoors and a consciousness of the significance of touch that she developed as an engineering psychology student and product designer. I feel like what I do is industrial design, but the pieces are sculptural, says Fisher, who has been designing and producing her own ceramics full time for two years now. You can enjoy looking at them even if youre not actively using them. I hope they draw people to them.
JFish Designs are available for purchase at Scion AV Installation, 7667 Melrose Ave., Los Angeles, CA, 90036.
jfishdesigns.com
That first year there were a lot of growing pains. A lot of things went wrong. I had a lot of equipment issues. I didnt forsee that in the summer that the refridgeration was going to break. Also, my restaurant is considered to be one of the most hidden restaurants in the Valley in Phoenix. Its a beautiful little restaurant in a quaint setting thats off a little residential street, so marketing has always been in the forefront of things I had to do. I knew that was something I was really going to have to work on the first year. Summers here are brutal. People go out of townthey go to Los Angeles, to San Diego, to Las Vegasso a lot of restaurants go out of business. It used to be a thing here in the Valley that restaurants would go on hiatus in the summer. The people who owned Caf Del Sol before me, they went on a six-week hiatus the year before and it killed their business. I closed down for a week in 2009, I still think about what a mistake that was. You cant close. If people show up when youre closed, they might never come back. So if you know its going to be slow, you just staff low. Youve just got to figure it out and suck it up. When I give people advice, I tell them to make sure they dont go into debt. I say if youre going to open a restaurant, you should start small. Dont get a 4000 square foot space for your first venture. Ours was 800 square feet, the rent was really small and it was really manageable. We had six employees. It would have taken a lot for me to really screw it up. Even though I wasnt doing much in saleswe were doing $20,000 to $25,000 a month in sales in those first six monthsI was still able to squeak out a little bit in profit. If I had a big place, I would have been hosed. In a big restaurant you need cooks, bussers, servers, hostesses, managers and all that other stuff. If need be, myself and a cook could have run that restaurant. It never
Fuego Bistro's Signature Empanadas.
got to there, but it got close. Weve really grown. We started with seven tables, now we have 28 tables. Three years later we started opening more restaurants. We expanded it over time. Weve added three more restaurants. We also have a food truck, we have catering, weve got a lot going now. Over the past six years weve gotten really lucky.
fuegobistro.com
THE FIRST YEAR IS OFTEN THE HARDEST FOR A NEW BUSINESS. THE OWNER OF FUEGO BISTO EXPLAINS HOW HE SURVIVED.
As told to Eric Ducker
Jeff Ward is the owner of Fuego Bistro, a restaurant that he opened in Phoenix, Arizona, in 2006. The Fuego Bistro Group has expanded to now include four restaurants in the city: the original Fuego Bistro, Fuego Tacos, Fuego Cantina and Fuego Cityscape. Here Ward tells the story of how his restaurant made it through its first year. Im 39 and I have 22 years in the restaurant business. I was actually a waiter for many, many years before I delved into trying to do my own thing. I worked for many years in Las Vegas, then I moved to Scottsdale where I managed a steak house for five or six years where I honed my craft and learned everything about restaurants. In 2006 I scrambled together as much money as I could and I managed to get together $85,000, which really isnt that much to start your first thing. I found this little space that was a Cuban restaurant called Caf Del Sol. I talked to the owners and they were ready to get out. I took it over and I wanted to keep it Latin American, but I wanted to do something softer, I wanted to do some fusion, I wanted to do some spicier food, I wanted to do some Southwestern. I opened my doors in November of 2006. There were only seven tables inside, at that time it was really small. The first few weeks were really daunting. It was one of the coldest winters on record in Phoenix. It rained a whole bunch and it really hurt our business. I remember that first month really thinking, Maybe I made a big mistake here. Then the spring time came and we really got lucky. We got a couple of good reviews, that really helped our business. It gave us the springboard we needed.
Fuego Bistro is part of the Scion Partners program. Learn more at scionav.com/partners
Brian slagel explains how his dominant label finds new talent.
Story by J. Bennett
In 1982, suburban L.A. metal fanatic and record store employee Brian Slagel bankrolled studio sessions for his favorite local bands and released the Metal Massacre compilation. One of those bands was a group of young headbangers who called themselves Metallica. Just like that, Metal Blade Records was born. Metal Massacre III surfaced in 1983, featuring a little band called Slayer. Metal Blade soon went on to become one of the biggest independent metal labels in the world, releasing albums from underground superstars like Cannibal Corpse, GWAR and King Diamond. Today, they boast a roster that includes such international heavyweights as Behemoth, Amon Amarth and Pentagram. You know, its funny, say Slagel, the way we find bands now probably hasnt changed a whole lot over the course of the years. People we knowfriends, record store owners, promoterssee bands and they recommend them to us. A lot of times our own bands will recommend other bands that theyve played with on tour. Predominantly thats how we hear about bands, and thats going all the way back to the early days. Back then, youd have to wait for somebody to send a demo tape in the mail. Now everything is a lot easier and quicker. You hear about a band and you can instantly check out a song online. But the way we find them is the same. Like most record labels, Metal Blade is inundated with demos from aspiring acts. We do listen to everything that people send us, but its somewhat rare that we find stuff that way, Slagel explains. Word of mouth goes a long way, though. I always tell bands that they should get involved in their local scene, because thats probably gonna help them get signed more than anything else. But if youre a band sending out demos, you dont need to put together a flashy package. If anything, the slicker it looks, the less appealing it is. And make sure you put your best song first. Well sometimes get demos with like two-minute intros. Dont do that. Put your best foot forward and get to the point. With music salesespecially those of CDsdown precipitously over the last few years, Slagel says that Metal Blade has had to become more discerning when signing new bands. Its becoming really difficult to break a new act these days because you just cannot get the CDs in the shops, he says. With the bigger bands, stores will bring them in, but with new bands its difficult and over the last few years its gotten harder and harder to do that. In that sense, yes, we definitely have to be really careful when were signing new bands. They have to understand that they have to go out and work; they have to tour, and they have to make sure they use social media to their advantage. Slagel must be doing something right. Despite ubiquitous cries about the death of the music industry, Metal Blade is stronger than ever. Its interesting because in all the pessimism and dark talk, the last four or five years have been some of the best years weve ever had, he says. So while CDs are down overall, theyre not down for us as much as you would think. And of course I have to thank the metal kids for that. They understand that they have to support this music. In the following pages Brian Slagel discusses three recent Metal Blade signees and why the label got involved with them.
metalbladerecords.com
Battlecross is interesting because we did what we call a development deal with them. Thats when the band has a piece of product already finished, and well pick it up and distribute it for them. It works well for us because theres not a whole lot of upfront costs. It means we can spend a little more time and effort in promoting the band. We loved the way Battlecross soundedits a very melodic sound, even with the heavier vocals, which is kind of an interesting subgenre thing thats happening. And theyre a case study as far as a band that has used social media perfectly to get where theyre getting now. Twitter, Facebook, YouTubethey really use them well and theyre really active on those sites. That led them in part to getting on that Five Finger Death Punch tour, and now theyre doing a bunch of other big stuff. Theyve done a phenomenal job in [the social media] department.
The lead singer of this band we have called Primordial is named Alan [Averill], and we have kind of an A&R thing going with him. Hes over in Europe and theres so many good bands coming out of Europe these days, so he helps us find bands. But whats funny is that he actually found Pilgrim in the US. They were really undergroundI think he actually sent us a cassette that they had doneand they play this kind of doomy stoner rock. Theyre hugely influenced by that late 1970s/early 1980s metal stuffit really comes through in some of the riffs. Theyre so good, and the whole staff was really into it. We initially put it out through Alans label [Poison Tongue], but were working on having them graduate to Metal Blade proper.
We asked some of the artists that Scion works with to tell us the best decision and worst mistake they made early in their careers. Heres what they came back with.
STATIC REVENGER My Best Decision
To get out of the culture of major label deals. I had been making a good living being a major label artist, but I wasnt making a good career. The music wasnt getting released and I didnt own the rights. It was a deliberate decision on my part to no longer be signed to a major label, so nine years ago I became an electronic artist named Static Revenger who made his own music and owned all the rights.
My Worst Mistake
The worst mistake was something that I actually had no control over. It happened 12 years ago. It was my first record deal and I did what I thought was the right thing and hired a fancy lawyer to make sure the deal was done right. Then the following year I signed to a major label. There was one word that was supposed to be in the contract that my lawyer had accidentally forgottenthe word not was supposed to be in a clause, but it wasnt. That mistake cost me $200,000. I never really understood the lesson in that. I guess I should haven taken the time to empower myself to know exactly what every part of what I was signing meant. After that mistake, what I should have done was sue the lawyer, but I wasnt savvy enough to do that. Needless to say I didnt work with him again.
staticrevenger.com Hear Static Revengers Music in Motion, his free EP on Scion AV, scionav.com/staticrevenger
Early on I decided to invest in decent equipment. When you get to a more pro level, everybody has it, but theres a reason everybody has it. When you get to the level of touring and releasing albums, you dont really see a lot of people on beater gear. People play vintage stuff, which is ridiculously expensive, but you dont see people on bad gear because it doesnt sound good. It doesnt have to be a $6000 guitar, but it has to be quality equipment. If youre a local band or doing covers in bars, its fine, but when you start putting it under the microscope of recording, it just doesnt stand up. Its not bad equipment, its just cheap. A carpenter doesnt use the tools youd find at a drug store. He doesnt have a $4 hammer, he has a $50 to $60 fine finishing hammer because he uses it every day because he wants quality results.
My Worst Mistake
Not advancing shows on tour. Advancing means calling the promoter to reconfirm everything thats already contracted. If youre doing ten shows, you need to make ten phone calls two weeks out. Keep calling until you get an actual person on the phone. Let them know youre coming. Let them know you really meant that you wanted food. Run over the technical specs and run over that rider. Otherwise you might find yourself in the middle of nowhere with a promoter hardly honoring anything they promised you. I hate to attack promoters, but there are some people out there who I dont understand how they stay in business. When we first started, I figured that if I had it written on a contract and they signed it, then all of sudden, that was what was going to happen. I dont know if that was a mistake or if it was just ignorance, but if someone says to advance the show and you dont do it, thats a big mistake. If youre doing a self-booked thing playing a bunch of basement shows, you probably are going to have a great time, but that has a whole different ethos than working with a promoter who is expecting to make some sort of profit.
slumberingsouls.com Hear The Gates of Slumbers Stormcrow, the bands free EP on Scion AV, scionav.com/gatesofslumber Static Revenger.
As told to J. Bennett
Born and raised in Houston and Austin, Texas, Jermaine Rogers has produced iconic rock posters for about two decades. Hes done work for everyone from the Foo Fighters and Tool to Radiohead and Led Zeppelin. He also creates beautiful and bizarre portraits of his artistic heroes Frida Kahlo, Andy Warhol and Vincent Van Gogh. It really started when I was in high school in Houston in the late 1980s, he says. I had friends that were in little bands, and Id do flyers for their shows. At some point, I was in a record store and I ran across a Frank Kozik flyer, and it just blew me away. It was kinda like what I was doing, but for real, you know? It wasnt for my friends garage band. It was some dude doing the same style of stuff but for the Flaming Lips and the Melvins. Within a few years, Rogers quit his job at Houstons Museum of Natural Science to start making art fulltime. I sold my brand new car and moved into a little studio apartment, he recalls. It was a total starving artist kind of life for three or four years. I started doing stuff for new bands like Built To Spill, the Deftones and Radioheadall bands that were pretty small at the time. But as that music started to grow, my art came along with it. Rogers will have a solo exhibit at the Scion AV Installation space in Los Angeles from April 13 to May 4, 2013. Here he discusses some choice pieces from the span of his career.
jermainerogers.com
Frida Kahlo and Vincent Van Gogh are two of my heroes. They have obvious similarities in their maverick approach to art. Frida got a little more visibility during her lifetime, but originally she was just Diego Riveras wife. Both her and Van Gogh used the self-portrait better than any other artist, if you ask me. They used self-portraiture to document climactic events in their lives. In Van Goghs self-portraits, hes hiding from youyou can see it in his eyes. But in Fridas, shes exposing herself to you. I figured if they ever did meet, it might be like this. Right after the incident where he cuts his ear off, he goes to see Frida. And of course she would be there to comfort him, probably without a word. No romantic stuff, none of that. But she understands. I wanted to depict her protection of him. If you look at it, her arm comes between you and him. Youre not getting close to him.
By this time, I had a little bit of a following but it was kind of a scattered cult following. This Tool poster was a perfect storm for me. Im thankful to whatever made the image come out of me that way, because I think the image was iconic. As far as the color theory, this is when I kind of started to develop my own palette. But all thats the minor stuff. The major thing is that this came out right when Tool became this really powerful thing in music. When youre doing rock posters, its not all about the art, its about the band. If that same image had been used for a smaller band, the poster wouldnt be as well known. Then there was an interview done in Circus magazine, I think, where one of the guys in Tool said that the poster was a "quintessential Tool poster." That helped.
I had done a poster for Neil before that was really more atmospheric. When this one came up, I wanted to attempt to make the Neil Young poster. By this time, Id been working for about ten years, and I had a following. When you get to that point in rock poster art, you cant slack. With every poster, people are expecting the next level. And that was really depressing because I couldnt come up with any ideas for a long time. So I just drew him holding up the peace sign. And then it hit me: I could make it cross generational boundaries if I could make it psychedelic. For me personally, the biggest thing that came out of this poster is that I got a compliment from Wes Wilson. You could argue that he really perfected the psychedelic text in the 1960s with his Fillmore posters. So when I got an email from him, it was a big deal for me.
"MUDHONEY" - 1997
I was living in Seattle at the time, about a block from the Crocodile Caf. I worked out a deal with one of the dudes there where I would do flyers for some of the shows in exchange for meal vouchers. I loved Mudhoney, and Im also kind of a Lennon and McCartney freakIm just fascinated by the whole cult of personality that surrounded the Beatles, because that was the first time in the history of popular music where every member of the band was a star. So I had this idea to draw the Beatles as a grunge band. At that point, I needed every dollar I could get just to pay the rent, so Id sell off the originals, but I actually got this piece back about five years ago. The guy who had it emailed me and we worked out a trade for some Radiohead prints that he wanted.
I actually started using this bunny in my art around the late 90s because my wife and I had a bunny. It was a lop-eared bunny, so that bunny is him. I was doing posters for a Foo Fighters tour, and the idea was to do the bunny as the star of legendary rock & roll album covers. For the Austin City Limits show that Foo Fighters did, it was a rip-off of the Clashs London Calling albumits the bunny smashing a guitar. This one was of course a rip-off of David Bowies Aladdin Sane album cover. I also released this as an art print, and I decided to call it "A Lep Insane," because the scientific genus for a rabbit is Lepus, and Bowies title was a play on wordsa lad insane. Bowie looks very stoic on that album cover. His eyes are closed, and I tried to depict that same emotion in the bunny. People seem to love this image. Its probably one of the best-known things Ive done.
It was fun. You look at her on camera and you know that she must be goofy all day. But to actually meet her in person and realize that shes definitely really goofy on and off camera is just terrific. And shes sexy, too. I think Kathy Griffins sexy.
I heard you were at a fashion show and you walked the runway. Tell me about that.
Hood By Air is one of my favorite brands. Ive been supporting [them] since 2008. Shayne [Oliver], the designer, he kinda took
HARLEM'S NEW HERO GIVES PRACTICAL ADVICE ON EVERYTHING FROM WALKING THE RUNWAY TO SHARING A STAGE.
Interview by Mr. Dead / Photography by Phil Knott
New Yorks young fresh prince A$AP Rocky has differentiated from other rappers with his unexpected taste in both music and fashion. And his individuality has paid off: His major label debut Long Live A$AP was one of the most anticipated releases an interview with Mr. Dead for Scion AVs All Purpose Show web video series. Heres a preview of their conversation. of 2013 and he has found himself covered in increasingly high profile style outlets. Rocky recently sat down for some pizza and
some time offhis boy [that he did the line with] split to do his own thing and get inspired again. I just used to hit [Shayne] and tell him, Yo, you gotta get back to it, youre better than a lot of these brands out here. And I was so supportive of his brand that he asked me to do the honors and walk it.
Nah man, I aint no fashion model. And besides, I aint tall enough anyway.
A lot of MCs dont care about how they look, but I noticed that you give it a lot of consideration. Give me a little insight into your fashion sense of consciousness.
I dont really direct all my energy into it. I just got a lot of taste, and I showcase it with my fashion.
Older MCs have been coming at you sideways in terms of your executive decisions in hip-hop. How do you feel about it?
I dont care what anybody else has got to say. I do what I want. Thats it. Not to play the tough guy role, but if anybodys got a problem with it, see me when they see me how they see me. Other than that, why should their concern be what I choose to do with my craft or my art?
Who have been your inspirations to motivate you and inspire you to get to where you are now?
I come up off everything, everybody who did it before me. The other day I was listening to a lot of Kool G. Rap, before that I was listening to a lot of Three 6 Mafia. A couple of weeks ago I remember playing a lot of old school stuff, rhythm and blues, stuff like that.
Right, you got a quirky taste for music. Youre sort of a weirdo, as am I.
My mood changes and I can adapt and appreciate different types of music. I mean, thats what its there for.
People automatically associate the fact that because you do hip-hop, thats all you listen to.
Nah. I mean, as far as rock goes, like Nine Inch Nails, I could probably tell you about one or two songs that I really, really love, and I might know a little bit about other stuff, but I cant name all of their albums. People are scared to say that they listen to certain things or like certain songs because they dont want to be labeled as a poser.
Usually when you do your show, you have a lot of people on stage. Give us a little insight into that.
I try to know everybody thats on stage. You dont wanna be spittin and somebody thats not with you goes and jumps into the crowd and hurts somebody and then you get blamed for it. We dont let strangers onstage, you can never be too careful. Its just us.
Id like for you to break down the difference between a well-dressed man and a not well-dressed man.
Its self-explanatory. I dont know, Im not a stylist. I know what looks good on me.
What the difference between a dude looking good and a dude not looking good, thinking hes looking good?
Thats most of the rappers in the game right now.
Before you got into the rap game, did you always have this sense of style and swag, or were you one of the less fortunate dressers?
Ive always been jiggy. I came out my grandma jiggy.
The only way you can be a cozy boy is if youre very, very, very cozy. You gotta have some cozy boy slippers, some very rare cozy boy velour sweatsuits, some very rare A$AP Yams cozy boy headbands, an R. Kelly T-shirt... Last but not least, the only way you can be an official cozy boy is if you have a cozy boy robe.
asapmob.com
Mr. Dead is the Co-Host of Scion AVs All Purpose Show, hosted by Prince Paul, on scionav.com
Streetwear brand Black Scale is the brainchild of founders Michael Mega Yabut and Alfred De Tagle. When they started their company in 2008 they had a clear vision of what they wanted to accomplish. We wanted to do a brand that not only represented our style of fashion, but also [one] that represented the way we think, says Yabut. We dont believe in the obvious or being predictable; as we learn and grow, we want our collections to grow with us. In its five years of existence, Black Scale has opened stores in San Francisco, New York and Los Angeles, as well as a Los Angeles warehouse for wholesale distribution. The approach for all of this has been timing, says Yabut. We try to let these opportunities grow organically. This does not mean sitting back and waiting for things to happenwe have had to be aggressive with these opportunities in order for us to grow. The company started with streetwear fundamentals of T-shirts and hats, but has since branched out into outerwear and accessories. Over the last five years Black Scale has also released collaborations with artists including Jun Cha, other brands like Amongst Friends, as well as a recent, high-profile collections with A$AP Rocky and Fools Gold. Black Scale comes from us learning to balance our darker side, Yabut says of the brands name. He explains that the word black conjures images of the mysterious, providing a sense of potential and possibility, while scale helps regulate and set the brands way of thinking. Balance is key to our aesthetic. Without balance, our vision is irrelevant and meaningless. As the business continues to grow and new opportunities reveal themselves, Yabut remains aware of the challenges, not just externally but internally as well. The toughest part about running Black Scale has to be the hiring process of the company, he says. Weve been very fortunate to have a solid team, but with the growth the team will have to get larger. You need strong people to work with each other and trust each other. Yabut says that the ultimate goal for Black Scale is to evoke emotions, and to create topics of discussion through its designs. Asked to pick a favorite moment from his five years developing the brand, he points to the building of the brick and mortar spaces, which enable this form of dialogue. As he says, We can tell the complete story of Black Scale with our stores.
black-scale.com
Trinidad James rose out of Atlanta's ultra-competitive hip-hop scene semmingly out of nowhere. He signed with industry powerhouse Def Jam on the strength of his Dont Be S.A.F.E. mixtape and his All Gold Everything single. Now the rap world is waiting to find out what the unpredictable MC will do next. James recently sat down for an interview with legendary producer Prince Paul for Scion AVs All Purpose Show. Heres a preview of their conversation.
You got it together quickly in terms of the way your deal came about. Youre making moves.
now as we speak, it doesnt happen like that very often.
Lifes moved really fast for the last six months. Putting together my tape, putting out my tape, and then where Im at right
I listened to the new mix CD. Gold on My MacBook, I love that song.
My music, man, to be honest with you, is real life. Its reality, its my life. And when I hear a beat, the way that I lay down the music to it changes every time, thats why every song on the tape is different. I feel like Im cool with everybody. Ive never been a racist person, as far as I have friends from every different race. So I had to make music that could catch a little bit of everybody. [With] my complete project, not every song on there is for everybody, but every song on there is for somebody.
How did you learn to record like that? The voices, the adlibs, the hooksto me, thats something thats usually a craft that takes awhile. You kinda got it down on the f irst go-around.
To be honest with you, it just takes practice and understanding music. I love music, period. Hip-hop, all genres, and I listen have to do to be your own artist is figure out how to do your own thing. Somebody has to do a karaoke of you. I found an original way to be myself and it really worked out. to a lot of music. Anybody can do musicpeople do karaoke all the time, and they do great impersonations of people. All you
Who inspired you? Was there a specif ic type of music you grew up listening to?
Im really weird when it comes to music. I went through a lot of different phases with music. I used to be really big on up north rap. It originally started off with me liking your down south rappers like Goodie Mob, but I remember distinctly loving up north rap. I deal with genres, thats what I listen to. I never really got caught up with artists. There are artists that I like, but I feel like everybody brought something to the game that I liked. Ive always been the one to like that person for thatwhether its their voice, their lyrical pattern, whether its how good they dress and they cant rap.
Landscaping in Atlanta. Cleaning, cutting grass on the side of the highways and stuff.
People always talk about your style, your fashion sense. Is that something that was always in you to be that way?
I started off as one of those kids who definitely was not a good dresser, definitely did not have any good shoes or none of that stuff growing up. So when I got a chance to make my own money, I said Im never not gonna be fresh ever again.
People build you up. How big of an artist that you are is not on you, its on the people that listen to your music. And they build you up so high that for you as an artist, youre scared to fall because youre so high. And for them, they want to knock you down. Im a regular person that does good music, in my opinion.
Im a bit older than you. For people in my generation, it was about the album, front to back, and you caught the whole vibe of the artist. Do think nowadays, because of iTunes and the way kids are geared, its flip-flip-flip?
Thats why youve got more girlfriends than wives now. Back in the day, people went back through the steps to get married. These days you have 30 girlfriends. Times are changing. We found a way to skip steps, and we skipped them.
In five years Id like to see myself musically respected, and have two businesses that have nothing to do with music. [One would] definitely be my own clothing boutique, and I was thinking about a hotelnot in the States, but in the Caribbean. I was born in Trinidad. Its a very great place to vacation.
You and me are gonna get a company together and rule the world.
but the man in the mirror.
trinidadjamesgg.com
Theres no limits on life. You can do whatever you want to do. A lot of times we hold ourselves back and its nobody elses fault
Check out The Scion AV All Purpose Show, hosted by Prince Paul, on scionav.com
Sage Vaughn at the opening for his Life exhibit at the Scion AV Installation space in Los Angeles.
Guests at the Life opening at the Scion AV Installation space in Los Angeles.
Guests at the Life opening at the Scion AV Installation space in Los Angeles.
Kenton Parker and Mr. Brainwash at the Life opening at the Scion AV Installation space in Los Angeles.