Dumb Blonde - Monday Guest
Episode Date: April 21, 2025Watch Full Episodes & More:www.dumbblondeunrated.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info. ...
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Stop missing out. We have built a huge community over there, guys.
I'm talking about hundreds of thousands of people over there.
We even have live chats,
live chats that I actually am talking in every single night.
Last but not least, we give away gifts every freaking month.
I'm talking like signed stuff from JNI, lives.
You just never know what kind of surprise you're gonna get.
It's like a Cracker Jack box.
I love the community that we've built over there
at Patreon, if you are already a Patreon member,
I freaking love you dude, thank you so much.
You guys are my babies for life, my writers.
If I could, I would literally make out
with each and every one of you.
I love you guys so much, and that's a lot of kisses,
actually, gotta go bye.
Bunny XO, Bunny XO, Dun Blonde podcast,
and Bunny XO, Bunny XO, Miss Bunny.
Is this thing on?
What's up, you sexy motherfuckers?
Welcome to another episode of Dun Blonde.
Today, this man has built an empire,
pushed the boundaries of independent rap,
and outworked nearly everybody in the game.
Mr. Tech Nine is in the house.
Happy to be here, mama.
Dude, I'm so stoked you're here.
I had a bucket list and it was Dolly Parton,
Joyce Myers, and Tech Nine.
Whoa.
I've done Dolly, haven't done Joyce yet.
And then I finally got you here.
So I'm just so stoked.
I know.
You're a busy man.
Oh, yeah.
Got to keep it that way.
You know what I mean?
Time waits for no man.
Ever.
My dad always says, rolling stones gather no moss.
So I've always lived my life by that.
But I finally, and now that I've gotten a little bit older,
have learned how to kind of like slow it down a little bit.
Yeah, we were just talking about vacationing,
taking some time for yourself.
Yeah, I'm gonna go to Monaco and see the hairy bush ladies
that you were telling me about.
Yeah, they might not be alive now.
They were pretty old.
Tech was telling me he just went to Monaco
and I was like, or he told me he went to like Ibiza
or something, I was like, did they have any nude beaches?
And he's like, no, but we did go to one in Monaco.
Yeah, we went to one in Monaco
and it's always really old people on there that are free.
Yeah.
You know, it's not like on the movies,
you see it's all young people with perky.
Listen, the geezers have no shame. Right, right, right, right.
I think once you hit that age,
you're allowed to just let it,
you let your freak flag fly.
And the dudes are never ends.
We always see the dudes from the back, you know?
Yeah.
You know?
Oh man.
Just ass on the knees.
We don't just walk the nude beach.
It's like a place like right on the nude beach
where you can sit down and eat and drink, you know?
Oh my goodness. People are like walking by, you're like, what? Who the fuck is right on the nude beach where you can sit down and eat and drink, you know? And people are like walking by, you're like, what?
Who the fuck is eating on a nude beach?
Us.
You know what?
I can't even talk because I used to go to Swinger's clubs
in Vegas and eat the fucking buffet there, okay?
Well, let me tell you something about strip clubs,
you know, strip club food.
Yeah.
I used to eat strip club food.
You know, they have chefs in there making those steaks. Yeah, so I used to, I grew up in Vegas.
So I used to work in the strip clubs in Vegas
and some of them would have five star restaurants
where we would have to wear like gowns
to go sit with our guests in there.
Food was fucking fire, dude.
Of course, it's an establishment.
You know, they got to have the right food.
I just feel like a nude beach, you know,
with just all the bush flying around
would be a little weird.
That's exactly what you'll see, bush.
Bush.
Yeah, appetizers.
You'd see no young folks, no people in shape.
I'm talking about, this is my experience,
what I've seen over the years.
Yeah.
Cause I'm usually with people that say,
hey man, let's go to the new beach.
I'm like, you don't want to see the new beach.
Please, tech, come on, let's go to the new beach.
Okay, let's go. You know what I mean? Chuck's like, you know what, you don't gotta I'm like, you don't want to see the new beach. Please, come on, let's go to the new beach. Okay, let's go.
You know what I mean?
Chuck's like, you know what?
You don't gotta twist my arm.
You don't wanna do it.
It's not what they think.
The ones I've seen.
I've seen one, what's that place over there, Travis?
Was St. Thomas and it starts with an M.
St. Martin.
St. Martin, there you go. I've seen one in St. Martin. it starts with an M. St. Martin. St. Martin, there you go.
I seen one in St. Martin.
Oh, we're going.
We were actually gonna go there for my birthday.
See, we gotta go.
The nude beaches calling me.
They said they have one in St. Martin.
Yeah, we call it, I'm black, they call it St. Martin.
Okay, okay, oh, I don't know.
Is it Martin or Martin?
I don't know.
It's spelled like Martin.
Oh, okay, I see, I might be pronouncing it wrong.
We were in St. Martin, keep it in, you know what I mean? I'm not with the bougie shit, so I don't know. It's spelled like Martin. Oh, okay. I see. I might be pronouncing it wrong. We were in St. Martin, can you get it? You know what I mean? I'm not with the bougie shit, so I don't know. I've never been there, so it couldn't be St.
Martin, too.
That's all good. A lot of people call it St. Martin. We call it St. Martin. Sorry.
So did you go to the nude beach there? I'm curious.
We were at the place eating that's off the beach.
Okay. You're always eating at these nude beaches, Tech. I'm seeing a pattern here.
That's funny. I'm Scorpio, but it's not a nude beach.
I'm not a nude beach. I'm a Scorpio.
I'm a Scorpio.
I'm a Scorpio.
I'm a Scorpio.
I'm a Scorpio.
I'm a Scorpio.
I'm a Scorpio.
I'm a Scorpio.
I'm a Scorpio.
I'm a Scorpio.
I'm a Scorpio.
I'm a Scorpio.
I'm a Scorpio.
I'm a Scorpio. I'm a Scorpio. I'm a Scorpio. I'm a Scorpio. I'm a Scorpio. at the place eating that's off the beach. Okay. You're always eating at these nude beaches, Tech.
I'm seeing a pattern here.
That's funny.
I'm Scorpio, but it has nothing to do with that.
Usually people with me, I know it sounds like an excuse,
you know, as soon as it meets,
it's zeroing in on the nude beaches.
Nah, nah, nah.
People with me that I take on tour with me, you know,
they're like, hey, they got a nude beach.
I'm not just touching down like we're the nude beach.
Listen, I am. I'm that person. So it's okay. No shame.
But if you want to see it, you know what I'm saying? You go see it. It's not what you think.
Yeah. All right. Well.
From what I've seen, maybe somewhere in Dubai is different. I don't know.
Maybe.
You know, maybe in Africa is different. I don't know.
Have you been to Dubai yet?
Nope. Not yet.
I haven't either, but I heard the women out there are just to die for like just beautiful gorgeous
Yeah, I found mine in Puerto Rico. Yeah, there you go
How much you love your girl? Yeah, every chance you get you get to give her ten years
Yeah, that's how we got married in our tenth year. Oh my gosh
So you guys just recently got married? Yeah, Julyth year. Oh my gosh, I love that. So you guys just recently got married?
Yeah, July 20th.
Oh, congratulations.
Yeah, we're newlyweds, man.
I love that.
But I think a lot of people,
you know, the song said,
why do fools fall in love?
People just, only fools rush in and this, that, and other.
Yeah.
I think what I learned from being married before,
when I was 22 and I had those two babies at 22,
that we were talking about earlier.
Yep, and we're gonna get into all that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I think we got married, of course,
because we loved each other, but it was for our baby.
She's like, I wanna have a baby.
I don't wanna have a baby out of a wedlock type of thing.
You know what I'm saying?
We got married. But what I learned from want to have a baby out of a wet lock type of thing. You know what I'm saying? I got married.
But what I learned from then to now,
is I think that people don't take time with each other,
to date each other and then it takes time to move in.
Some people just jump right in
and you don't find out about each other,
you know what I'm saying?
In a short period of time like you should.
No, you did it right. You did it right. Different chemical levels and stuff, you know what I'm saying, in a short period of time like you should. No, you did it right, you did it right.
Different chemical levels and stuff, you know what I'm saying,
that happen.
Masks come off.
Not just with women either,
I'm just talking about with men as well,
you know what I mean?
You don't know if motherfuckers are crazy,
you don't know nothing, you don't know what happens
when she's PMSing, you don't know none of this shit,
you know what I'm saying, if you don't put time
and learn how to deal with it
and not fight negative with negative, you know what I mean? I didn you don't put time and learn how to deal with it and not fight negative with negative,
you know what I mean?
I didn't know that when I was younger.
Yeah, you have to learn your person.
Jay and I actually got married 30 days
after meeting each other.
And the first three years of our relationship,
I don't know how we made it.
Like I talk about it on the podcast all the time.
Like it was so toxic because it was two people who,
two fucking strangers who from two different backgrounds. I'm a Vegas girl
He's a Nashville boy trying to figure out life together
And you know if I could go back and do it again
I would wait to get married and just kind of you know learn each other because people don't do that anymore like it literally
People everything is like we're in the microwave era. Yeah it's like, everybody wants everything now, you know?
Right, right, right.
So you and your girl.
I heard somebody snoring and I saw the dog.
Oh, the dog, yeah.
He's right here.
In my mind, I was looking around like,
who the hell is asleep right now?
He's the co-host.
I didn't want to lose contact with you,
but you know, I'm like, in my mind,
I'm like, who the hell is snoring?
He's literally the co-host.
I know that ain't Travis.
No, it might be? He's literally the co-host. I know that ain't Travis. No, it might be.
He's literally grown up.
He's over there alone to throw your voice, fool your friends,
for their parties.
Yeah, he's literally grown up in this chair.
So he'll sit here the whole podcast.
But you'll hear him snoring every once in a while.
You'll see me shake him so that the snore doesn't come through.
He can snore.
It's his house.
So the snore doesn't come through.
And he's comfortable with your voice.
And you know, he's comfortable.
That's my baby.
So Tech, I have done for the past two days,
nothing but research you.
And you, he's like, okay.
He got nervous.
It's a lot.
No, it's, you know what?
Did you find the drugs and the liquor?
I found all of it.
And the women all over the world,
did you find all that?
Something I had to grow out of?
I'm telling you though, I think you have such a testimony
and it really makes me understand you more.
It makes me understand the music more.
And I just want to take all of my listeners
on that journey with you
because it's really a beautiful ride that you've been on.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like you have worked your ass off to be where you're at.
Totally.
And I mean, I think it's just so cool,
the shit that you've gone through
and that you've risen from.
When you know you have something special inside,
it don't matter how many obstacles are in your way.
Yeah.
Because you push them out of the way.
Yes.
And people that try to create the obstacles
because they don't understand,
you'll look back and they'll all be shaking your hand.
I didn't mean to make that rhyme, but.
No, it's just you're a poet and didn't know it.
No, it's so real.
So let's bring it back to growing up in Kansas City.
You grew up on the Missouri side, correct?
Yes, I did.
Born and raised in Kansas City, Missouri.
Take me on that journey with you and your family
and kind of like your upbringing and your background.
Yeah.
My family, Christians, hardcore Christians,
we live with my grandmother, my mother,
her brothers and sisters, lived in a house in the projects, 904 Michigan and
Wayne Minor projects, you know what I mean? And I couldn't really listen to rap music in that house.
It was all gospel. But I found rap next door at the Reese's house, next door, my uncle Ike and all them. I was crazy about hip-hop early on.
So at a young age you just knew that that was like instilled in your soul.
I was born in Wayne Minor from birth till 10 years old we moved away so from
birth to 10 I was there in Wayne Minor and I found so much music outside of my house.
But what really stuck with me was the hip hop
that was coming from next door.
Do you think that was because you weren't allowed
to listen to secular music growing up?
I never thought about it like that.
I just thought it was something
that really made my hips hop.
You know what I'm saying?
Hip hop is about dancing.
When you think about a hip hop, you're dancing.
And I was a dancer before I was writing rhymes.
So I always wanted to do Michael Jackson.
And this is way after Wayne Miner, though.
But I wanted to do whatever dances I saw outside
from the older people around me.
When did you get into dance?
Was that at a young age or was that after 10?
I remember fourth grade, my mom buying me break dance clothing,
you know, loose break dance clothing with white gloves and everything and shoes.
And me being in the talent show,
gloves and everything and shoes and me being in the talent show pop locking to a song called Scorpio by Grandmaster Flasher and the Furious Five. Scorpio because I was a Scorpio. I guess
I was aware. I really like the song Scorpio, mama I want to dance to Scorpio. I can't even
picture that right now being in fourth grade saying I want to dance to Sugarhill Gang Scorpio.
I love it though.
I was doing like a virgin at five, so it's okay.
Oh, like a virgin, damn.
Yeah, I got in trouble.
Listen, Madonna was huge in the eighties, okay?
And way minor, I was trying to kiss at five.
So I read about that.
And if you could take me on this journey.
So you grew up in this really religious household.
Your grandma was very religious and you know,
you had that spiritual influence on you
or religious influence.
But you had cousins that took you to a drive-in theater.
No, that was my uncle Ike.
Okay, uncle Ike is-
That was my uncle Ike.
Uncle Ike.
Oh, you talking about it?
Let's talk about uncle Ike.
Uncle Ike, my savior, I swear.
You know what I mean?
He's still here today.
Oh, awesome.
I love that.
He took me to the drive-in show
with him and his friends on a weekend.
And I was so young, I was five.
I was so young that they put me
on the ground under their feet
with like a rug or a towel
over me or something on the floorboard and they had their feet on my back to get me in.
They got me in.
I remember they let me up.
They say, Dantez, that's my middle name Dantez.
You know what I'm saying?
They call me Donnie for short.
They like Donnie, people gonna laugh.
They don't know my name is Donnie, you know.
But they say, Donnie, don't piss yourself now.
When you see what comes on the screen,
I'm like, what are you talking about?
And it was a triple X movie.
And I remember it being Tarzan and Jane.
And Jane just kept getting fucked by these gorillas.
But you're five.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
I mean, Uncle Ike, what the hell's going on?
He was young too.
Oh, okay. I get it.
Uncle Ike is like 62 now.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So he was young too.
Yeah.
So, you know, I remember.
To see that at five.
It was traumatizing.
Right.
Because I remember it starting off in everything.
I didn't know what was going on.
I'm talking about they're showing it going in and out
and everything.
I remember it like.
At the fucking drive-in movies?
Yeah, it's triple X.
I had Cinderella at mine.
At triple X.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like after. That's crazy.
After a certain time at night, they would show,
maybe it was Fairyland Drive-In, I don't know.
I forgot which one we went to because I was so young.
Yeah, what a different time of life, right?
Yeah, they showed triple X films after a certain time, right?
You don't know?
You had a drive-in?
Yes!
Even Travis...
You need to go to Fairyland Drive-In.
Oh, damn. Well, we're going to look into that.
Yeah.
I was there.
No, I believe you.
I'm talking about like at the drive-in, the big screen,
they snuck me in.
You know what I mean?
I know.
And I 100% believe you.
I just feel bad because at five,
that's gotta be a lot to take in.
They were creating a sexual monster.
Right.
Yeah, and I didn't know it.
Right.
You know what I'm saying?
Paired with the Humphrey Bogart pictures on TV, you know what I'm saying? Here's looking at you, kid, and
kissing and all that kind of thing. You know, I was trying that at five. Right. You know.
Well you're acting out what you were learning. You know, you didn't know. Nobody told you
like, hey, this is wrong or hey, you're not supposed to feel these things or. They influence from what I see, you know? Absolutely.
And that, I didn't piss on myself, like they said.
Right.
You know?
Sweet boy.
But I remember, I remember Tarzan being upset that Jane kept on wanting to go out into the
jungle and get fucked by the gorillas.
Right.
What a memory.
What a memory.
Do you feel like you took that with you through life though? Like kind of. How would I remember this? Gorillas. Right. What a memory. What a memory.
Do you feel like you took that with you through life though?
Like-
How would I remember this?
Like to apply that?
To tell it.
No, I would never want to be fucking in the jungle.
I don't know.
He's like, no, no, no.
But I mean like the possessiveness is what I mean.
Like, you know how like you said Tarzan was possessed.
Never, never have.
They said Scorpio's or jealous has never been me have, they said Scorpios are jealous.
That's never been me.
Really?
I've never been jealous.
In my time, before I hung my player jerseys up
like tapestry, I used to share women with my fellow friends.
Yes.
They're like, she was with me first.
But if, know cuz sometimes
People on tour they love the circus. Oh, I know. Yes
I've been on tour with all the boys and all the people in it. Mm-hmm
even the bus driver
Really?
No, I don't know bus drivers. I was like damn we gotta hook them up even the bus driver
What I No, I ain't telling on no bus driver. I'm sorry. I was like, damn, we gotta hook Elmo up. Just in general, even the bus driver, you know what I'm saying?
From what I witnessed, you know?
Gotcha, gotcha.
Nobody is left, you know, unsatisfied
unless they don't want to, you know what I mean?
Right, of course, of course, all consensual.
That's the only thing about podcasts, you know,
it turns into interrogation sometimes.
No, no, no, never, never, never.
No, no, no, not from you. It's just I'm long-winded, you know? So I get to talking. Oh, no, you know, it turns into interrogation. So I'm telling you. No, no, no, never, never, never. No, no, no, not from you.
Yeah.
I'm long-winded.
Oh, no.
So I get to talking.
You're totally fine.
I love it.
But I was saying, to finish what I was saying,
I would share back then, you know what I mean?
I was never a jealous Scorpio, you know,
when I'm dating a woman or whatever.
But it taught me later when I found my maturity,
mid 40s, it took a while.
Yeah.
I always say I met a morph.
I met a morph and that morph that I made
in my life was maturity.
And that's when I started feeling like
I didn't want to share that energy with everybody anymore.
It was a tour that I went on with JL and Joey and all these artists that we had on the label
that they saw me breaking up with all my women all over the world.
You know what I mean? Like I found somebody, I want to try something different.
I've never seen these women again. They were coming for just one thing and it wasn't for a Tech N9ne show. Right.
You know?
Yeah.
And it happened later on in my life, like I say at 45,
you know, respecting myself and feeling like
I didn't want to share that with everybody anymore.
Like this dick ain't, this dick ain't,
this dick ain't for free, you know, like Kendrick said,
you know?
And not that you can pay for it and get it.
I'm just saying.
I mean, if they could, it's all right.
No, no, no, no, no.
No, he said no, no, no.
So let's circle back to your childhood.
Your dad was absent in your life, but he was LAPD.
Yeah, Carlton Cook, Rest His Soul, LAPD.
What was your relationship like with him?
I seen him every 10 years throughout my life.
Cause my mom was 16 when she had me.
And I guess my dad had several women in town,
and she was one of them.
And I remember seeing him when I was like six.
I remember riding on his motorcycle with him
in the projects.
Then he moved to LA.
I hadn't seen him for some years.
I seen him again when I was 14.
He would have parties at his mom's house in the hood when he came home.
They would celebrate Cook coming back home.
And I would see him having different ethnicities of women on the couch waiting to meet him
upstairs while he's fucking with somebody upstairs.
One would come down and the other one would go up.
I watched it all night.
This is when I was 14.
Atomic Dog was out at the time.
Boom, boom, boom, boom.
I remember, you know,
sneaking in the kitchen and drinking some of the liquor
and stuff like that.
Bad kids, dude.
And I saw women crying, leaving crying.
You know what I mean?
But after that, I didn't see him for another long time.
I think I became Tech Nine within those,
that 10 year period.
I remember him saying something to me like on the phone.
He's like, hey man, another 10 years is coming up.
We got to see each other, you know?
That had to be hurtful as a child though, to like,
you know, I don't know how you handled
trauma or pain as a child, but you know, most people would be like, you know, kind of resentful
that their dad wasn't a part of their life. It wasn't my life. No, it wasn't my life because I
had my uncles, I had my aunties, I had my mom. Yeah. I never did, I never did feel a way about my dad because I felt like later on I understood
where my mom stood with him.
Doesn't make it okay.
Right.
You know, he never taught me how to drive or, you know, how to do things, the men, but
my uncles did, you know what I'm saying?
They taught, try to teach me a lot of things that they could, you know.
But I never felt the way about my dad at all. I don't know why.
It's just, I was always happy to see him.
Carlton Cook, he's always, he was a gangster to me.
He was always tough, you know?
And I had brothers that were older than me,
Pucci and Cortez a little bit younger than me,
Sister Marvella and El Rhys and all these kids
out in Cali that I didn't meet until 93, you know,
when I got my first deal with Jimmy Gem and Terry Lewis.
All this stuff is intertwined in my story, you know.
Yes, absolutely.
And we're going to get there.
We're still just focusing on baby tech right now. Yeah, baby tech. Well, I saw a lot of things, you know what I mean? But I
only saw my father in certain periods of my life, you know? So let's zero in on your mom
a little bit here because I know your mom's a huge influence in your music and in your
life. And, you know, growing up in a household with her wasn't easy
because she did have epilepsy and also was she diagnosed schizophrenic? That was
later on before she died yes okay later on in her life so early on she had her
first seizure when she was 18 waiting for my father to come pick her up for
prom he stood her up and she had her first seizure.
That's what my aunties told me.
Yeah.
So-
I think I do need water.
Go ahead, take a sip.
So growing up with a mom who, you know,
was going through, you know, having epilepsy
and then, you know, your father not being there
all the time, your mom did get into another relationship
that was somewhat abusive and you guys had to leave.
Can you take me on that journey
where you guys were moving around,
trying to get away from her ex at the time?
That's Charles Wade.
That was during my third grade period.
Okay.
Third and fourth grade, I think.
I love how you, I wasn't laughing.
I just love how you just can remember everybody
like first and last day.
Like it's like.
Oh, I lived it.
Yeah.
And I had to hear them fighting in the next room.
And you know, my dad moved away
and we moved away from Wayne Miner when I was 10
in the 50s, 59th and School Parkway.
And that's when she met Abul Hasan Rasul Khalifa. It was a couple of boyfriends in between there,
guy named Nujee.
I remembered he had a, he was really,
he always had on really good cologne.
He had a George Washington Afro, you know, big back here. I remember Nougi.
They're probably like, how does he remember these things?
Because I would be in the car with them when we're going places.
She dated Nougi for a while and then I guess she met Hassan around that time.
She wasn't dating Nougi anymore.
And she married him when I was 12.
She married Abul Hass Hasan Rasul Khalifa. So my Christian mother, my devout Christian mother
had so much love for a man that she married a Muslim.
And Muslims and Christians have been having quarrels
since day one when in actuality both worship the same God.
One God.
Yeah, Allah. Yeah, it's just Allah is just an Arabic word for God.
It's just a different language.
Yes.
But the Christians at the time thought Allah was a man.
We won't get into that.
We can just talk about God being a man in the universe.
I don't want to piss anybody off.
No, you're fine.
I mean, we talk about everything on this podcast.
But so that he wasn't the abusive relationship
that she was in though.
No, he was not what Charles Wade was.
Charles Wade, when I was in third grade, yeah, man, he was.
So you had to witness that, you know,
amongst having your dad, you know, in and out of your life.
Yes.
You know, dealing with the sexual stuff and then having...
Charles Wade was a gangster.
He had gangster white walls on his Cadillac.
He had gold tooth.
I was real close with his son, Chuckie.
I talked to him every once in a while still.
I think he lives in Texas.
I love that you keep in contact with him.
He was a barber.
He was in jail. He was a barber as He was in jail, he was a barber as well.
I mean, he was a barber.
His father, Charles Wade, he's still alive.
He found me because I found Chucky on tour.
People was like, your brother,
I was in jail with your brother Chucky.
I'm like, ah, Charles Wade Jr.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
Me and Chucky were always cool though, because we were kids, you know.
But his dad was turnt up, you know, and.
Um, I'm veering off because
because I was talking to Chucky later on in my life,
his dad got my number and called me
and asked me for a pickup truck.
I hung up.
It's just crazy to me that you can traumatize a child
like that and hurt a woman like that
and then circle back years later and be like,
hey, can you get me something?
Yeah, he got his karma after beating my mama at her job.
He went up to a KPNL gas service where she worked,
downtown Kansas City, and got her outside and beat her up to where he busted her head
and all kind of things and put her in the hospital, you know.
Shortly after that, he robbed a bank and got 25 years.
So good. He did get his karma. And he got caught because they said he was on the scene of the crime. He drank a sun
kiss and dropped it, you know.
And left his DNA. What an idiot.
Talk about karma though.
That's the story I heard. I'm sure he's probably like, that ain't true.
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So you know, you and your mom finally get away from him and mom marries a Muslim.
Take me on this journey because how was that adjusting to having a new dad 24 seven?
And
It wasn't about having a new dad all of a sudden,
because I never really had one,
you know what I mean?
That was constant.
It was about coming from a Christian background and home
to a Muslim home
with no more bacon, no more sausage,
no more Christmas, no more nothing.
Oh, so they don't celebrate Christmas.
I didn't know that either.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, noan was nice to me, but I missed it as a youngster,
like we all do.
Him trying to make me a stronger kid and not a mama's boy, who
still had his mama ironing his clothes at 12,
you know what I mean?
Start making me do everything.
If I was washing the dishes after a get together or something we would have at our house,
if there was one, he would check the dishes
and if there was one speck on a bowl,
he'll dump all the dishes back in there
and make me do all of them again, you know, until late.
I thought that was mean.
He was trying to show me
And toughen me up, you know show me a different way being independent as a human being, you know, and
13 came
14 came I'm fucking up in school
I'm skipping school when new gangs come do gangs come into play with you? Say that again?
When do the gangs come into play with you?
Well, when she married Hassan, we moved on 58th and Forest.
That turned into a blood neighborhood in the 80s.
And these were all of my friends.
These are all the people I went to school with. These are people that I'm still connected to
in my later years.
My friends, my brothers,
had nothing to do with gangs back then.
It had everything to do with pop locking,
battling on the street.
And then in 85, it stopped and it turned
the 37th Street,
Fruit Town, brim from LA,
him and his brothers moved in our neighborhood.
Got you.
You know what I'm saying?
So that's where that happened.
But in those years, 13, 14, 15, 16,
I'm in school, fucking up, got in trouble, dating white girls at school, going
to skipping parties at the white girl's house I was dating at the time, you know.
Tech a womanizer?
No way.
When did the womanizing start?
At five, I was trying to kiss.
Yeah.
But I mean, like, when did it really start?
Like, at five, I think we all play house
and do stuff like that.
The first, okay, I'll get...
Let me see.
I can speak freely on here.
Of course, yes.
And we can always cut anything that you don't want.
You ain't gotta cut nothing.
Okay.
You know, I'm spontaneous.
I don't care what it is, whatever.
I love it, yeah. First. You know, I'm spontaneous, I don't care what it is. I love it, yeah.
First time I came, I was 12.
You know, on 59th and Swolle Parkway.
Yeah.
With a girl named Marlene, you know,
she was my age, of course, you know.
And it was the craziest feeling ever.
And I knew it was supposed to happen
because I saw it on the
drive-in movie. With Tarzan. You know what I happen because I saw it on the drive-in movie I saw you know you know that it's supposed to happen I remember
she's saying what is that I was like I don't know but it's supposed to happen
you know I remember saying that to her you know did anybody ever sit down and
have like the birds and the bees talk with you no no you know saying it was my
uncle Ikey was the closest thing right Cause he would tell me, Dante,
this one I'm fucking with now, you know,
I'm sticking it to her.
I'm like, really?
You know what I'm saying?
You're like, I don't know what that means yet.
At 12, I knew what the hell that was.
You know what I'm saying?
So can you, okay, let's pause right there.
So seventh grade, something happens in seventh grade
with the teacher.
Can we go on that journey?
Because that's about 12 years old too, right?
Well, I was going on 13.
As I said, I was fucking up 13, 14.
Yeah.
She, I won't say no names.
Yeah.
She was young, she was 21.
And whenever...
It all started when I showed her a picture of my father as a cop, you know what I'm saying?
I had a picture of him in his LAPD outfit.
And after that, after class, whenever everybody's leaving out, I'll be in there.
And she'd say, Aaron is so cute.
Because my first name is Aaron, of course. Erin Dantez Yates, Donnie.
Erin is so cute.
And she was beautiful, you know?
Yeah.
And I was like, oh, thank you.
But she used to do it every day.
Erin is so cute.
I'm like, okay.
You know, then I got to skipping lunch to go visit her
while she's by herself, you know,
and I'm just going to leave it at that,
you know, to be safe.
Right.
But I was in love.
Right.
Until she got married.
But you guys ended up,
and we can always cut this too if you want to,
but you guys ended up getting caught, right?
We got caught by a student walking by.
She said she told my six hour teacher,
no, it wasn't my six hour teacher,
it was six hour upstairs,
Ms. Glenn's room was like courtroom class.
So whenever something happened in school,
they would have to come to court in her class
in front of her big student body, you know?
Right. So they called me up to court class one day,
not knowing what they want to talk to me about.
I've never been to court class, you know?
And Ms. Glenn, she's a black lady.
She didn't want no fuck shit.
You know what I'm saying? Right.
So she say, Erin, there's a student in here,
the student was sitting right there,
that says they walked by Ms. So-and-so's room
and saw both of you kissing and the whole crowd,
the whole student body said, ooh, you know?
I said, huh?
Why would I be kissing a grownup?
You know, I'm smart, you know what I'm saying?
She's like, I saw you, Erin, I saw you.
I said, you didn't see me.
I was in lunch.
No, you were in there kissing.
I said, it's her story against mine.
You know what I mean?
And they called us to the office
and called the teacher to the office too.
Yeah.
And I was sweating.
I bet.
And they say her name, this is alarming.
And she's like, I would never with a student,
I remember her like pleading her case
and being real serious.
And nothing happened. Pleading her case and being real serious, you know, and
Nothing happened
We didn't get in trouble cuz I didn't tell but you guys were having were you guys having sex
Yes in the classroom. No, okay after school. That's another story. You know I'm saying on school campuses No, no, no, no. Okay. Okay call home
See if you can help me after school.
Can I help my teacher after school?
And she'll bring me home, da, da, da, da, da,
go to her house.
It's so hard for me to wrap my brain around that,
because I know coming from a man's point of view,
it's like, oh, you got to bag the teacher, the older chick.
Like I said, I was in love.
Right.
But if we switched places, and it was a man doing that
to a little girl,
it's over.
You know, like it's hard for me to kind of wrap my head around that and not be mad at
her for what happened to you.
Yeah, yeah.
I appreciated it.
She got married in my eighth grade year and after that we didn't talk anymore.
You know what I'm saying? After, you know what after you know Sam because we did our thing before we got busted
You know what I mean? Right so we didn't talk anymore after being in the principal's office
You know saying out of like well because you guys are being watched. I'm sure like heavily so I
remember
the last day of school
school in eighth grade walking by her room, her classroom.
And I walked by, I could see her in my peripheral. She had been married already and everything,
changed her name.
When I passed the room, I heard a voice say,
hey, I'm gonna ask, she's like,
you're not gonna give me a hug,
I'm not gonna see you again,
you're going to the high school.
When I gave her a hug, never seen her again.
She never tried to reach out to you or anything after that?
No.
I ran away years after that, you know what I mean?
From home and on a quest to become Tecnina.
Let's dive into your love for horror.
That's a dark story.
I didn't realize how dark it was.
You know, so now it's dark to me.
No.
It's like the darkest fuck.
But you know what?
I think it is, this is why I say
you have such a beautiful testimony
because like you really are what you rap about.
And it's like a lot of people can't say that they are.
I've read my life, you know what I'm saying?
And I found that out early on.
Quincy Jones, he told me,
rap what you know and people will forever feel you.
And what I know better than anything is myself, you know?
Yes.
And I wrote about myself and my stories
and what people have in common
and they don't really know is emotion.
Right.
So I tapped into emotion.
That's how I got fans, you know?
All my stories are true.
Yes, absolutely they are.
You know what I'm saying?
Except when you get to Black in the Sun,
it turns into imagination, you know what I'm saying?
Nipples and noodles and all that kind of shit
trapped in the cycles body.
It has a bit of imagination in there, you know what I mean?
But it comes from a place.
I don't blame my teacher for anything that's happened to me in my life because I didn't
look at it as molesting because I was in love.
You know what I'm saying?
But true, it is.
She groomed you.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm sorry, but a 21-year- at a 13, 14 year old like that is predatory.
There's no, but I already came at 12 though,
with Marlene.
Right, no, and I get that.
And I love that you-
I was ready, you know what I'm saying?
But-
I love that you didn't internalize it
as being molested, you know?
But responsibly, I have to say, you know,
like if that was a man doing that to a little girl,
we would all fucking lose our minds, you know?
I heard stories later on that I wasn't the only one.
No.
See what I'm saying?
It's predatory.
It's very predatory.
I heard some of my homies say, you know, so-and-so hit too.
I'm like, huh?
Well, she was just getting it in.
Yeah, that's what I heard.
The fact that they even still let her work at the school
is just wild.
But like I said, she was 21.
Yeah.
Well, but what I'm saying is like,
after you guys got caught and them still letting her work
there, that would never fly this time.
Because it was written off like that student
was just talking some shit.
Right, yeah, absolutely.
And they didn't see that.
Yeah.
They seen me give her a hug or something.
Yeah, for sure.
You know what I mean?
I don't recall what we said, but-
Yeah, no, I get that. Whatever we said, it was hug or something. Yeah, for sure. You know what I mean? I don't call what we said, but whatever we said,
it was like, okay.
Yeah.
You know.
Well, let's switch gears to a lighter subject
and let's talk about-
No, it's cool.
We can go dark as much as you want to.
We're gonna go through phases.
So let's talk about your love for horror.
You got introduced to it by your mom.
My Christian mama.
How, that blew my mind whenever I read that fact.
She was so cool.
I miss her so much, man.
She was so cool.
Aw.
Maudi Sue Yates, before she became Maudi Sue Yates Khalifa.
You know?
Let me see.
I was born in 71.
She took me to go see Carrie in 76.
Yes.
You know, Halloween, Halloween premiered in Kansas City in 78.
I was there.
She took me.
Yes.
My Christian mama took me to, you know, Kansas City has 100 houses around late September, October, Halloween.
We have Main Street Morgue. We have Dr. Deadly's. We used to have Dr. Deadly's haunted hospital. The Edge of Hell.
We still got the Edge of Hell.
The Beast. All these haunted houses for, you know, attractions for people who like the darkness, you know.
She took me to all that when I was young
That's amazing to me because I grew up strict
Pentecostal and we were not allowed to listen to secular music anything that had to do with Halloween it could never
Partake in it like so that was really cool of her to let you be able to experience some sort of like I remember
Her dating my uncle Ike's friend, Daniel Whitney,
and him being the one taking us to this haunted house,
Main Street Morgue.
And I remember us walking in, I was young, young, man.
You know what I'm saying?
I keep on going back to five.
A lot of shit happened when I was five, dude.
You know what I'm saying?
It was really early on.
I remember walking into Main Street Morgue,
and when you come in, you turn right, and you go up some stairs, they had a black light. I didn't know what Street, Morgan, when you come in, you turn right and you go up some stairs.
They had a black light. I didn't know what a black light was.
I was young and I looked at their faces and their eyes were glowing and their
face looked crazy and it kind of scared me,
but I appreciated it because I was already going to the movies and stuff like
that. You know what I mean? On the scary tip,
my mom showed me all the things
that scared me as a kid, like clowns
at the Ringling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Circus
or the Ararat Shrine Circus.
She took me to all that.
I had a fear for clowns when I was younger.
Do you think that's why you wore face paint
later on in life?
Cause it was like embracing a fear. Yeah think that's why you wore face paint? Yeah. Later on in life? Yeah.
Cause it was like embracing a fear?
Yeah, that's exactly what it was.
Yeah.
I became everything that Maudi Souye's Khalifa showed me.
Her having epilepsy.
You know, when she married Hassan,
when she started having seizures,
he put her in a psychiatric ward
and my Christian family hated him for it because we've dealt with it since she was 18 and she never had to go
to a psychiatric ward.
So he thought that was the best thing for her because after you have a grandma seizure,
the after effects is you talking out of your mind.
You know what I'm saying?
So I used to have to come visit her there at Western Missouri when Menorah had one off 63rd,
research psychiatric center, all of them in Kansas City,
I went to go visit my mom.
Wow.
And when they see me wearing hospital scrubs on stage,
you know what I mean?
All that, the clown, the hospital scrubs, the darkness,
all that. The nuthouse.
The lyrically Michael Myers and all that kind of shit
is from Marty Suyez-Khalifa.
It created Tech Nine.
Thank you, mama.
You know what I'm saying?
Cause it saved my life.
Everything I built from her and her pain,
I internalized that shit and turned it into Tech Nine.
You know what I mean?
And when people come to my house now
and they see my clown shrine with all the Michael Myers
stuff and all the, you know, I have Reagan,
like a life-size Reagan from the extras is right there.
It says, sorry, we dead on her hand.
She's holding a sign that says, sorry, we dead.
I have this in my house and people like,
what's up with all this devil shit?
I said, it ain't devil shit.
My mom taught me early on when I was younger
that these toys, these dark toys that you see,
don't think of them any other kind of way
than you think of your G.I. Joe toys
or your Star Wars toys.
Or when you see Barbie and Ken, it's plastic and you can't give it any energy at all.
And people believe that you can,
that you'll have dark energy in your house.
And when you look at my shrine,
that's Maudie Souye's Khalifa right there.
And it reminds me, her birthday is October 26th.
She's in that kind of fall kind of feel.
So when the fall comes and Halloween, Halloween is just a reminder of my mom.
I became the clown, painted my face early on in 94.
I painted my face for the first time.
You know what I mean?
I got my face painted, that is.
And now when you see the clown with the red nose on a stage,
you know, the mask I use now, you know,
is just what that clown, what that paint
and that clown in my head has transformed into.
And it gets worse and worse over the years,
you know what I mean?
Not within me though.
I just know what that darkness feels like
of my mom being in a psychiatric ward
and having the seizures and
seeing her busting her head wide open from falling out on the floor and hitting her head on the
bathroom, I mean the bathtub, you know what I mean? I've seen the puddles of blood, her laying in them,
getting beat up, all that stuff. I can, I know what that darkness is. Yeah. So I make the clown look like something hideous like that.
You know what I mean?
You turned your trauma into triumph.
Yes I did.
Is pretty much what you did.
I did the same thing, but in a different way,
not with the clowns and stuff like that.
But it's like you, you alchemized your pain
and that's so beautiful that you, you know,
were able to have that
consciousness to do that instead of letting it consume you.
Drive me crazy.
Right.
You know what I mean?
Did you ever fear that you would end up
in a place like your mom if you let it consume you?
I never felt like I would end up in a psychiatric ward
because I've always been super cerebral.
You know what I'm saying?
Like a thinker.
You know, I've always been so...
Logical.
Thoughts and stuff like that,
that I always feared having an aneurysm or something.
You know?
Because it never stops.
Right.
Sometimes I have to do mantras to go to sleep to make it stop.
You know?
But I never thought I would end up in a psychiatric ward.
I wanted to be a psychiatrist.
To figure people out.
Yeah, I wanted to understand a lot of things.
I studied serial killers early on in school.
I bought books, Manson and Ted Bundy and you know, Sam the 44 caliber killer, you know what I'm saying?
It's all these things I studied because my mom said
I was her angel sitting down to help people, you know?
So I wanted to find out about my opposition,
which would be evil because I am angel,
you know what I'm saying?
What I got right there, you know?
And I never thought I would lose my mind.
And I never lost my mind.
I don't think I lost my mind.
Travels would know if I lost my mind.
Not intentionally, maybe on a party night.
Maybe some things I do in life,
you're like, what's going on in his brain,
but I ain't never lost my mind.
Right, right, gotcha.
So can we talk about, I read somewhere
that you have an obsession with the number nine and the birth of Tech Nine.
Did that come from that?
When I got my name in 88 from the gangster named Black Walt,
I didn't have a name when I wrote my first three verse rhyme,
you know what I'm saying?
The new breed, my first rhyme,
I was just going with my middle name, D-O-N-T-E-Z-Z.
I didn't have nothing, you know, so
He was in a group called Black Mafia. He had Mac 10 not Mac 10 ice cube. This is
This is a Mac 10 early on in Kansas City, you know before Mac 10 came out, you know, the og
Yeah, you know, we started calling him shorty Mac, you know saying later on in life, you know, before Mac 10 came out, you know. The OG. Yeah, we started calling them Shorty Mac,
you know what I'm saying, later on in life,
you know what I'm saying.
Gotcha.
But when they heard me do New Breed,
my three verse rhyme, my first three verse rhyme,
they were like, man, we got to find you a name, bro.
Black Mafia, man, we already got one gun,
let me look in the Guns and Elmo book
and try to find you another one, you know.
And they looked at Uzi, you know what I'm saying?
He's like, nah, now you got a little Uzi Vert, you know?
12 gauge.
But because you spit like an Uzi though, huh?
Because like so fast.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, you know, they're trying to find something.
12 gauge, I'm like, nah, then 12 gauge is loaded gun
and I'm done by now, so shake that donkey butt
and them big old legs, I ain't too hard to beat.
People got that too, you know what I'm saying?
We went AK-47, nah, nah, nah, nah.
We went through the whole book and there was no,
nothing in there, we didn't find anything,
but it was a picture of a Tech-9 on the back.
He's like, Tech-9?
He said, because the way you spit,
that, that, that, that, that, that, you know,
I'm like, okay, he said, that's going to be your name
till we find something else.
But the way we spelled it, T-E-C-H,
was short for technique.
And after
I started studying numerology, I found out that nine was the number of completion, nine
months completes a pregnancy. They said, I have nine lives after nine, there's nothing
else like it, it's double and triple or whatever. You know what I'm saying? I became the complete
technique of rhyme, technique number nine, you know what I'm saying? Everything to be able to...
I'm rooted in rap, but be able to adjust to any musical situation. Mm-hmm.
You know what I mean?
And what your fan base shows that.
Yes.
Your fan base, you have metal fans, you have Juggalo fans,
you have hip hop heads, like I mean...
I got gangsters, I got all of it.
You've got it all.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It covers every...
That's how I wanted it to be.
I wanted to make Tech N9ne
the MC that can do anything.
When you first started rapping, was it always so fast or did you have to develop that style?
Because your brain has got to fire at a different frequency.
That's from years of practice doing it. But when I first started,
frequency. That's from years of practice doing it but when I first started my uh
one of my first rhymes so that's why they said I was like so that's why they said I don't like what I say so that's why they said I was like it was like going like but that that that that that
that that that that that that that that that that that that you know I'm saying? And I attribute that to listening to Slick Rick.
People like Slick Rick didn't rap like that,
but he'd be like,
around this part of town with diamonds in your girl and fraud.
I'm trying to enter in this rap time,
because she having stuff.
But about that time, but about that time.
It's like he would do a little Jamaican like toasting.
Like, don't worry about a thing,
because Rick and Rick is bringing home the goods.
I'm like, that's dope.
So I turn that, don't worry about a thing. Don't worry about a thing. because Rick and Rick is bringing home the goods. I'm like, that's dope. So I turned that, don't worry about a thing.
Don't worry about a thing.
I was like, it's like Jamaican.
Don't worry about a thing.
Don't worry about a thing.
Don't worry about a thing. But a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit a bit da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da It's like the double time is like how they do it in gibberish, correct or no?
I don't really know.
I think they call it bebop. Skibabababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababababab What is it, is it Pig Latin or gibberish that I'm thinking of where they double up the words? Do you guys know what I'm talking about?
Pig Latin, okay.
Usually gibberish mean you can't hear it.
Oh, gotcha, okay.
I thought, well, I thought it was called gibberish,
but maybe it's like another word for Pig Latin.
It's gibberish though.
But so Pig Latin where they like double up the words
is what I'm saying.
Either way, it's fascinating how you fucking do it
because it's like, I just,
I don't know how somebody's brain can just fire
on all cylinders like that.
That signal from your brain to your tongue takes work.
It's hard.
No, it's insane.
It's hard.
When I'm writing, you know,
I have to put it on a dictaphone recorder
to see if it works,
to see if the words work off of each other,
you know what I mean?
When I'm writing that style,
because that ain't the only style I do,
but that's one of the ones that people know me from,
from a song that I did in 98 called Questions
on the Gang Related Soundtrack.
And everybody, why do I want to stick them
with another hit up out of a bitch?
They want to know who that guy is.
So since then, since 98,
everybody that wants to,
mostly everybody that wants a song from Tech N9ne
wants the chopping.
I'm so tired of racing motherfuckers.
No.
So I can race the best of them, you know what I'm saying?
I've done songs with Eminem and Kendrick and everybody,
you know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
You know, I'll...
But you're, I just say, I feel like you're at a point
where you don't even need to prove yourself
to anybody anymore. I don't, I don't, I don't even need to prove yourself to anybody anymore.
I don't.
I don't.
I don't.
You are a Tech 9.
People, the younger generation, want to race me because they grew up listening to me.
They want a song with Tech 9.
Yeah.
So, you know, when I did a song with NF, much love to NF, You know, his fans, when we did Trust,
I'm dancing all over that bitch too.
You know, it's in that track, you know.
You know, tech, nina, next king up,
everybody knowin' I'm a death brain guy,
that lingua, back thing, yeah,
leaving the rebel in the rock, you know,
I'm talking some shit.
This is what I give it such an incredible,
wicked, rustic, vivid, gusset, I'm really going, you know.
As you should.
And his fans, they was like,
NF really stood up with Tech 9, you know what I'm saying?
That's something, that's a thing.
He can hold his own with Tech 9, you know what I'm saying?
So I think a lot of guys coming up really want to race me
at a time where I've raced my whole career. Yeah.
I'm tired of racing motherfuckers.
Yeah.
I can do it.
You know what I'm saying?
Token's...
No, I can't.
I can't give it away.
You know what I'm saying?
Token...
Well, I'll say it.
Token sent me one and we're racing.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
So you're going to let him race you even though you're tired of it?
Or is it just because...
Yeah, I still race motherfuckers.
Yeah. But I mean, you're tired of it. of course i'm tired, but I still go when I'm if it's if it's if it's
It's worth it going. Yeah, you know saying like me and jelly got songs. We didn't have I didn't have to race
Yeah, you know we could just do music. They're very melodic and yeah, I can sing creature was amazing
Yeah, man, it's like platinum and shit. FU2 was amazing.
Which you guys did that in a hospital.
Right.
The video was in a hospital.
Right, yeah, yeah, easier for you.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
You know, we can do, you know,
do you know somebody in pain?
I know somebody.
You know what I'm saying?
We got to sing and play, you know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
Do you prefer that over having to rap fast?
I love writing songs that people can say.
Now, when it comes to the technicians,
they can say all my shit.
Okay, I don't see how, because it's hard for me.
Like a song, like, so dope,
when I sip a sip of Sika, seductive Sina-See,
something so Sina-Sinasee,
cause Sika's something like a Sinopee.
It's like, I try to make it to where nobody can do it,
the mother f***** can do it, dude.
But I like to make it to where nobody can do it. The mother fuckers can do it, dude. But I like to do music where I don't have to race everybody.
Ronnie Ratky, for instance.
Good old Ronaldo.
Ronnie Ratky, I love him to death, man.
Oh, I do a song, I do the song, the big song we got,
called Ronald. It was a, oh, I do a song, I do the song, the big song we got, you know.
Called Ronald. And...
Which you did phenomenal in that.
Yeah. Yeah.
But I sent him something before that
when I'm just doing my singing.
Dun-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da- I'm singing, you know? And he was like, this is dope, man, it's so dope. You know, the first four bars I was singing, so dope.
But then some weeks went by, he's like,
hey man, can I talk to you for a minute?
I'm like, yeah.
He's like, you're singing at the top of yours
and then when yours is over, I come in singing.
This like, to me is too much singing, you know?
And I said, okay, so I'll go in the studio the next day
and I'll just rap.
He said, yeah, let's try that. You know what I'm saying? But before, like,
when I, after I hung up, like 10 minutes later, he said, he texted me, he said, how about you just
scrap that and just come in shredding? I'm like, ugh.
Well, because Ronnie is still, and this is no disrespect to you Ronnie,
he's one of our friends also,
he still has something to prove when it comes to rapping.
Yeah, but-
He doesn't have the longevity that you do.
But I'm gonna tell you,
that's how I found that motherfucker
because I was looking for metal choppers
and I watched the world burn, I was like, fuck yeah.
He got it already already he knows how to
fucking do it you know saying so when he said that I called x-rated one of our artists I said man he
want me to change my first four bars he said it's too much singing he's like man the motherfuckers
man they just stare at you man you know like nah I don't think it's that I just think it's too much
singing right so he changed it you know he had me change it and just come in chopping.
You know what I'm saying?
What is up in your mind?
Are you thinking the devil is making the crime
of the people are evil and never know demon
is on the opposite of a divine?
No, yes.
You know what I'm saying?
He was right, but he wanted me to race
because that's what he knows from Tech Nine,
from worldwide choppers.
We put our worldwide choppers some years ago and that motherfucker went platinum
with like 12 people on it, you know what I'm saying?
It was Busta Rhymes on it, it was Twista,
it was Yellow Wolf, it was Usos, JL,
it was people from Istanbul on it, you know what I'm saying?
It was like, jay-zai, you know, so many people on it.
If you could do another worldwide choppers with other people on it, whatesus, you know, so many people on it. If you could do another World Wide Choppers
with other people on it, what artists would you bring on it?
Okay, here's the story.
Nimi, can you hit the heat?
I ain't never said this around Travis,
but I gotta tell, you know what I mean?
Travis is in the corner watching.
So, I did another World Wide Choppers, too.
Okay.
My idea was to get Eminem on it.
He did it.
Wow.
When he sent the verse in, you know,
Chris Calico got it before Eminem.
We love Chris Calico.
I didn't want to listen to Chris Calico verse
cause I didn't want to be influenced by it.
So I never listened to it.
I did my verse without listening to nobody.
I always started off and I send my stuff to people
so it can be a greater song.
A lot of artists won't do that
because they don't want to be outdone.
I feel like Eminem say,
my spot is forever reserved.
I don't give a fuck.
If you do better than me, motherfucker,
it makes for a better song.
That's what I think.
So when we got the Eminem verse,
I already had people putting fillers out
to get Daddy Yankee on it.
I was scared to ask Wayne about Nicki Minaj,
but I wanted her on it.
And I had people on it that never been heard before,
like Gabby Gab from Atlanta, Georgia,
a female rapper with Nicki.
You know what I'm saying?
I was gonna put females on it.
You know what I'm saying?
Who else did I?
Oh, I was going for Kool-Aid over in Germany.
Trav and them said, man, with Eminem,
you can't put all those no-name motherfuckers on there.
You know what I'm saying?
Which I do understand.
I do too.
From a business point of view, I do understand that.
I do too.
But if we did though,
I think it would turned out just like worldwide choppers,
platinum, speed on with Eminem ain't even platinum.
I didn't even go with all them think.
You know what I'm saying?
Because people love it,
but they said, this is not worldwide choppers.
And I had to lie and say, come up with some shit like,
we're the dopest rappers worldwide motherfuckers.
You know what I'm saying?
We're the dopest choppers worldwide.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like, okay, we get it.
Now they fuck with it.
I don't know what the numbers are with the choppers,
but you know what I'm saying?
It ain't worldwide choppers.
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Yeah, so you guys never dropped the one with Eminem?
Or you-
Oh, you did drop it.
I've never heard that one.
We got some numbers on it.
Wow.
Like it's, like, let me see.
What did I see last?
On YouTube, the views was like 28 million or something.
Like, I don't fucking know.
I mean, that's nothing to scoff at.
Or 48 million.
It was one of them.
Yeah.
Just on the, just on the, just on the audio, you know?
So it only ended up just being just you and Eminem
on the track or a couple other people?
It was me, Eminem and my brother, Chris Calico.
Okay, gotcha.
So like I said, I never listened to Chris Calico's verse
until after I finished my verse and I had my engineer,
Ben, we called him Benjeneer.
Yeah.
Let me hear Calico's verse in the studio.
I was like, holy fuck, yes.
I love Chris and his wife.
I think my label wanted it to just be me and Eminem
and I get that, you know what I'm saying?
But Chris was my brother, you know what I'm saying?
I'm like, okay, if you fucking do something dope,
and Eminem even said his verse was fucking dope,
you know what I'm saying?
So when you listen to Speed Em now,
and we dedicated it to Richie Haven's Rest of Soul,
you know, his estate said yes to use freedom.
We called it Speed'em, you know,
and I don't even know why we was talking about that.
But.
No, I love that.
So we were talking about how you actually became Tech N9ne
where you got your name from.
The choppers, we were talking about the choppers.
And then how your flow.
And how everybody wants me to fucking chop
and I'm tired.
That's what we're talking about.
I'm tired of fucking racing.
I love you, Tech.
He said, I'm now I'm fucking tired. I'm tired of fucking racing. I love you, Tek. He said, I'm now fucking tired.
I'm tired of fucking racing, but I will take on it.
Do you guys hear this man loud and clear?
He stopped racing.
They're not going to stop.
No.
No, JID just sent me one a few months ago.
JID just sent me one a few months ago
that I still ain't done yet because I got so busy,
but I'm still going to do it for him.
JID sent me one.
He's raising me.
Yeah.
I'm like, fucking shit.
Well, it's not gonna stop because you're the greatest.
And it's like, and do you,
and this is, you know, could be a long-winded question,
but it's not gonna stop until you pretty much retire.
And do you think you're ever going to retire from music?
Do I think I'm going to retire from music? Do I think I'm ever going to retire from music?
I still was that a fart or still snoring? It's him, it's him, it's snoring.
Tack! I would not be over here lighting it up.
I'm just saying it's your house. I'm like, damn, what'd you eat before you came here, buddy?
You know what I'm saying?
Listen, I have been with my husband 10 years
and he's only heard me fluff one time.
I would never be over here just ripping it up, right?
I heard that farting in the workplace
is considered sexual harassment.
Are you kidding me?
Stop it.
But it never made any sense to me because I like,
how is that sexual harassment?
Like, is that like an invitation where you want to fuck me?
In my ass?
Somebody's like asking a question with a flush.
It's like, Murr?
Why would that be sexual harassment at work,
at the getting coffee?
Because people, because we are,
we're literally in an era where everybody gets a trophy.
So people will make up shit to be mad about it.
I swear to God.
Yeah, I don't know if it's really indeed, you know,
sexual harassment. We'll have to give that a go and see if it is.
At the workplace and I suppose before.
Yeah.
Tell that to your dog.
Chachi, stop fluffing over here.
He has the silent but deadly ones.
This guy right here.
Trust me, you won't hear it.
You'll smell it.
Yeah, but yeah, they still want to race me.
The younger generation are still contacting me.
Want to race.
Yeah, for sure.
But like I said, they're gonna wanna race you
until you retire.
So do you think you would ever retire from music?
Or would you?
That's what I'm saying, that's what I'm saying.
Yeah, yeah.
Sorry, I'm so sporadic.
You're okay, baby, don't worry.
I still get excited when I hear dope beats and melodies.
Yeah.
I still get excited.
Yeah.
Because I love music.
I used to be a dancer, pop locker, break dancer,
all that when I was younger.
You know what I'm saying?
I still-
Can you still do it?
Can you still?
Yeah, I can still do it.
You know what I'm saying?
On one of those tours, on that E40 tour we went on,
I was doing this break dancing song I did called
Don't Nobody Want None, you know?
And I was break dancing every night
and I hate myself for it
because my knees were dead after that tour.
I didn't have any knee pads or nothing,
just going rogue on the fucking stage.
You know?
So, but to answer your question,
I don't know because I still get excited
when I hear good songs.
Like that one, I just saw Jelly Do with his other guys,
like, hallelujah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That fucking swing.
They should do a remix and put tech on it.
That's, I heard that shit and I heard him,
I heard him do it live at the Superbowl
at the show with him and Shabuzy.
I heard him do it, I said, that's the one I heard lately. I'm gonna put it in his ear. I'll put it in live at the Super Bowl. That would be fire. At the show with him and Shaboozy. Yeah. I heard him do it, I said,
that's the one I heard lately.
I'm going to put it in his ear.
Oh.
I'll put it in his ear. Fucking dope.
That would be fire to have all three of you guys
on the track.
Now you got to do my song first that I sent him already.
Okay.
I'll get on.
Listen, I barely even get to see my damn husband.
So I don't know what's going on,
but I'll talk to him about that too.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You got to do Sacrifice first,
then we'll talk about Hallelujah.
Gotcha.
I got your back tech Tek, I promise.
Yeah, and I'm not racing on sacrifice either.
Yeah, good.
So instead of retiring,
do you think that you would ever step into
maybe a mentor position of like,
kind of like what Jay-Z has done?
I always said that maybe
when we get to the point
of wanna sell strange music or something, I will do
stuff to help my artists, you know what I'm saying?
You know, and do verses here and there, I don't fucking know.
But I can't, I don't see that because I'm getting better with my pen.
Right.
You know?
Because you're getting wiser too and you just have so much life experience.
Just trying to keep from saying shit
that will piss people off is the hardest these days.
Right.
I mean, everybody's-
When it comes to religion and politics and sexuality
and all that kind of stuff, sexuality,
that's not my business.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like I don't judge people on their sexuality.
You know what I'm saying?
I never have, and I never will.
And I don't know why people are so you know fixated on people
and their sexuality but you know I get when people say you're doing it on a
show where kids are watching and you kissing a man or whatever and now people
upset I get that but at the same time I ain't really worried about nobody's
sexuality but as far as religious beliefs and politics and shit I try to
be careful right because all this shit is gang shit to me.
Well, speaking about politics, I mean,
Donald Trump pretty much adopted your red kingdom anthem.
How do you know that?
Listen, I pay attention to it all, baby.
How did that feel for you?
And we can cut this part off too.
No, you don't have to cut it off.
Okay. No, you can ask me anything.
Yeah, I just, you know, I just always want to be respectful, but you have to cut it off. Okay. No, you can ask me anything.
Yeah, I just, you know, I just always want to be respectful, but you know, I was wondering.
No, I have my kids calling me like, daddy, you got to say something.
You got to get people going to think that's you.
I said people can think what the fuck they want.
Right.
When you write music and you put it out to the public, their perception of what it means is gonna be different.
However they perceive that song is how they're gonna use it.
Right.
And when they put it out,
you know, when you put it out, you know,
that's what happens, you know,
and my kids didn't like that.
You know, so they wanted me to tell people,
I don't fuck with these little mums.
I'm like, nah, nah, no, no, no.
You can't get into politics
because you'll be damned if you do damned if you don't.
All I know is that it's crazy how on that song,
how the numbers spiked.
Oh, because it's literally, it became pop.
You're already such a huge presence,
but it became like pop culture.
Once you hit that pop culture stream.
What was that?
Was it an indictment trial or?
I forget.
Impeachment.
Oh, was that what it was for?
Okay, I thought it was for his campaign.
Yeah.
Yeah, they did.
They called it Riot Music.
And I made it for the Chiefs.
You know what I'm saying?
I'll say number 58 is DT the Great
and we flaunted Derek Chalmers, rest in peace.
You know what I'm saying?
But the hook, Red Kingdom, I had no idea
the Republicans were gonna hijack my song
and turn it into their shit.
Listen, the Republicans hijack everything.
I had a fucking, what was it that went viral?
A sound that went viral that said,
I woke up this morning and I feel like trash,
but it's French for, I feel like garbage.
That's French for trash.
All the Republicans grabbed that after somebody said
something about somebody being trash in Puerto Rico
or something.
And it went viral.
So it's like, that's what happened to your song.
And that's why the streams weren't so crazy
is because that shit was on TikTok.
And I'm telling you, it was everywhere.
I was like, go tech.
I was so excited for you.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So we were the kind of,
I'm the kind of artist that I do the music and I go.
When I look back and then next thing you know,
I got all these fucking platinum and gold plaques coming in.
That was a flex.
I mean, as you should.
But I just do the work and then shit pops up.
Yeah. You know what I mean?
And let's dial back real quick and let's get into
when you got your first record deal in 97.
When you- No, it was in 93.
Was it 93?
93 was my second.
Sorry, I'm not looking at my notes.
No, it's all good, baby.
No, 93, I got my first record deal with Jimmy was my second. Sorry, I'm not looking at my notes. No, it's all good, baby.
93, I got my first record deal with Jimmy Jam and Terry
Lewis at Prospective A&M.
Yes, 93 to 95, correct?
93 to 95, they let us off in 95.
Started working with Don Juan around that time.
I was working with Icee Rock that got me the deal with Jimmy
Jam and Terry Lewis in 93.
Icy Rock was a producer of mine.
He did It's Alive, he did T9X,
he did a lot of songs for me in the past, you know.
And after that relationship was kind of damaged,
Don Juan came in and Diamond, Rest His Soul,
they wanted to see if I could do hood music.
I said, I'm from the hood.
Because with Icee Rock, we're doing Nuthouse shit.
You know, so we're doing the scrubs,
and you know, my mom, we're doing dark shit.
You know?
And he's like, you're doing that crazy shit over there
with Icee Rock, can you do some hood shit?
They gave me the beat to Mitch Bade.
I said, I'll be back tomorrow.
Have you ever met a nigga who was pie sprung?
It's a lot of slinky niggas where I come from.
There's another missile catcher just like him.
His name is Mitch O'Bade.
Mitch O'Bade.
You know what I'm saying?
The motherfucker's like, what the fuck?
I'm on there like, what up Mitch?
Is it every day thing for you to act just like a bitch?
How does it feel to have a nigga with a, I forgot how that goes, but I'm like bus like, what up Mitch? Is it every day thing for you to act just like a bitch? How does it feel to have a nigga with you?
I forgot how that goes, but I'm like bussing on it.
That shit went to the fucking top in Kansas City.
It was on the radio and everything.
Back then it was hard to get radio play, wasn't it?
Because like, yeah.
Yes it was, before then.
It was kind of like a cult that you had to get into.
That was undeniable though.
We had to play Mitch Bade. And it was a struggle to get into. That was undeniable though, that you had to play Mitch Bade. Yeah.
And it was a struggle to get songs on the radio
in KC for us for sure.
Yeah.
Until Mitch Bade, Cloudy Eyed Stroll and Mitch Bade.
Mitch Bade was the B side of my single Cloudy Eyed Stroll.
It was like really calm song.
Right.
Mitch Bade was the B side.
Yeah.
Cloudy Eyed Stroll was on the radio.
Yeah. You know what I'm saying? But Mitch Bade was the B side. Yeah. Cladestro was on the radio. Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
But Mitch Bade took over.
Then right behind Mitch Bade, I got my group,
my Bloodhom boys, and we started a group,
57th Street Rogue Dog Villains.
And we did a song called Let's Get Fucked Up.
On radio, everything we touched.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
And this was after your record deal from 93 to 95, or was this during? No, this we touched. Yeah. You know what I'm saying? And this was after your record deal from 93 to 95,
or was this during?
No, this is after.
OK.
This is after 95 when we got released.
Gotcha.
You know what I'm saying?
So with Don Juan, that's when we, in 97,
that's when we got the deal with Quincy Jones, Quest,
and Warner, yes.
One thing I respected about reading your situation
with the record label from 93 to 95 was that you said some that they they like put somebody in a car with you and the dude was telling you that you had to change.
Oh, yes.
And you're like, no, I'm not fucking changing who I am. And like, you really like stood your ground and was like, no, I know who I am. And I'm not changing for anybody.
I know who I am and I'm not changing for anybody. I know there's a name too.
His name was Laif Allah.
He was from the East coast.
Yes.
In 93,
he,
I guess, you know, Protect Your Neck just came out,
Wu Tang, you know?
And he's like, you gotta do this, son.
You gotta do this, you gotta do, you know what I'm saying,
M-E-T-H-O-D, whatever the fuck, you know what I'm saying?
I was like, no, that's them. I gotta do this, you gotta do, you know what I'm saying? M-E-T-H-O-D, man, whatever the fuck. You know what I'm saying? I was like, no, that's them.
I gotta do me.
And that was the tension.
You know what I'm saying?
Same thing with, in 97, with Quincy Jones.
He wanted me to do whatever I wanted to do,
but his people who worked at his label
wanted me to do like popcorn shit.
You know what I'm saying?
They wanted me to do this song for the Shaq movies
called Steel, he was like Robocop or some shit on it.
And I had a song like,
he's strange and I like it,
he's strange just the way he is,
take a knee now, take a knee now.
What's up, why you so damn psycho?
Couldn't tell you baby, you know.
It was like cookie cutter shit,
but I could do it.
Produced by Quincy Jones, his son, QD3,
Quincy Jones III.
But at the time I had,
dun, dun, dun, dun, tech night.
I had Planet Rock, the Down South remix.
I said, I want to start with this one.
He's like, nah, this is regional, nope.
I told Quincy and he started firing motherfuckers. He's like, nah, this is regional, nope.
You know, and I'm like, I told Quincy and he started firing motherfuckers.
So they hated us up there because he favored us, you know.
Right.
And I met Travis the next year, the next summer in 98.
98.
So before you met Travis and we're gonna pull Travis in whenever we get to there.
Yes.
You did something with Death Row and Suge Knight.
That was in 98.
That was in 98.
That was the year I met Travis.
Okay, gotcha.
But it was 98 when I was out in LA
before I went home to KC.
Gotcha, gotcha.
Tell me about meeting Tupac and like,
I actually have hung out with Shug numerous times.
Yes, me too.
And we can cut this out, I don't know if like.
No we don't, that's my brother, that's my brother,
no, no, no.
Well I'm talking about for me too though,
cause Shug gets such a bad rap.
Yes he does, he's a nice guy.
Thank you, I have never told this story
on the podcast before, but I used to do cocktails
at the Palms and Shug would come in every night,
he'd be so fucked up and he would be the nicest dude.
I'd just-
I'd have kicked him with him on several birthdays
and everything.
He was so nice.
Like he never was disrespectful to me.
He was like my homie, dude.
And he would tip me all the time.
Really good dude, really good dude.
It's just that- Great human.
You encounter people in the industry,
not saying they deserve anything.
I'm just saying you encounter fuck shit in the industry.
And sometimes people handle fuck shit differently.
You know what I mean?
I don't know his whole life,
what he done to people,
but I know when I'm around him,
and we're around all the homies with him and everything,
it's all love, all respect.
We partied together, he came to my shows.
Whenever I was in Vegas and San Diego, he would come to my shows, you know what I mean? Just showing love, all respect, we partied together. He came to my shows. Whenever I was in Vegas and San Diego,
he would come to my shows, you know what I mean?
Just showing love, man.
Yeah, absolutely.
What about when you met Tupac?
Cause you said you've met him on probably
like what, four instances?
Well, I met him in 93.
Okay.
No, 92 at Jack the Rapper.
It's a musical conference, a music conference that they used to have in Atlanta at the Atlanta
Hilton.
You know what I'm saying?
And I met him in the lobby.
He was checking out this stripper, this dancer.
Had a big old ass.
She used to be at the BRE conventions
that I went years before.
I'd see her all the time.
She was Caucasian girl with a big old ass.
We love those.
Pac was standing behind her.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, I was like, I can just visualize it.
But I'm just, okay.
Pac was standing behind her. It's like, I'm black owned.
I'm black owned.
And you know, I guess this is after the riots.
You know what I'm saying?
He's like, I'm black owned.
Yeah.
And I went up to him and I was like, hey, you're too Pac.
You can do whatever you want with that.
He's like, nigga, I'm black owned.
Like, what does that mean?
You know what I'm saying?
And I was like, oh, during the riots,
whatever building had Black-Own, nobody would fuck with.
So he said he must've got Black-Own written across him
because the bitches wasn't fucking with him.
You know what I'm saying?
So I met him that year, 92.
Then in 93, I got my record deal with Jimmy Jam
and Terry Lewis, Life A La and all of them.
I met them the first day there, you know what I'm saying?
There was a guy named Jordy, you know what I'm saying?
Who drove us around and Life Allah was the guy
who was trying to turn us into whatever they wanted us to be.
They took us to this club after we checked into the La Dufe,
you know, in Hollywood, you know?
And they took us to this club and Tupac was there.
I went over there and hollered at him,
hollered at Moe Prem, his brother was with him, you know?
I saw him that whole summer.
We was fucking the same bitches and everything.
You know what I'm saying?
Just on a rotation.
Yeah, man.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like, the bitch be at my house,
she be crying because Pac said something to her.
You know what I'm saying?
It's like, I remember like it was yesterday.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
That was like such a cool era, you know,
cause I was in Vegas at that time too.
And I was actually in Vegas when Pac was murdered.
And it was, I remember it was like one of the saddest days.
Like it was just such, it was like an end of an era.
The connection was QD3, the producer.
He did music for Tupac.
Gotcha.
And me, and Ice Cube, and Dub C.
You know, a lot of people, you know what I'm saying?
Yuck Mouth, you know, the Looney's, you know.
I got shot nine times.
Yeah.
I love Yuck Mouth.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So that was the connection, you know what I'm saying?
Cause you know, I would see Pac,
but we never talked about doing music,
but he talked, QD3 would talk to him about Tech N9ne, you know what I'm saying?
And he had told me that Pop wanted to work, you know what I'm saying?
And when he got killed, QD3 already had a song in mind,
you know, because we were already, he was already working on one.
He said, I got one, I'm working on it.
Then he died.
Then like two weeks after he died,
QD3 called me and said,
hey man, I got this verse on it,
you still wanna do the song?
I said, fuck yeah, I do.
It was called Thugz Get Lonely 2.
It was a version that had Prince sampled.
If I was your girlfriend, you know.
It had that sample and Prince wouldn't have any samples.
Yeah, and that's when Prince was still alive too.
So for him to even okay that is historical.
Maybe he would have did it for Pock, I don't know,
but it never came out.
It leaked somehow, we didn't leak it though.
I was just so happy it leaked
because I mean, people think I was lying, you know.
Right. Like dude. That's a piece of it for years.
You know what I'm saying?
Seeing him in L.A., seeing him in Atlanta, you know.
Like so that same year that you're going through all that with death row.
Travis enters the picture and 98, 98.
I came back home from L.A.
I brought that song, Planet Rock,
that I wanted to fucking put out
instead of taking in, taking in,
why you so damn psycho, you know?
I wanted to put the Down South mix out,
so Quincy let us go,
went back to Kansas City,
brought Planet Rock back with us, me and Don Juan.
We put that shit out, we start playing on the radio,
it fucking blew the fuck up, okay?
So, like I thought it would.
Right.
He leaves out right when we're about to get to him.
Yeah, and if you need to use the restroom too,
we can break too if you want to use the restroom.
No, it's all good, I'm good, I'm good, I'm good,
I'm good, I'm good, I'm good, I'm good, I'm good.
I'm long-winded, I can stretch it.
No, you're good.
Even if you have some shit, you know, as I can stretch.
But, we brought Planet Rock 2K back to Kansas City
and it blew the fuck up.
It was a fashion show that was being held
downtown Kansas City.
It was a clothing company called Paradise Originals.
My boy Heath and all his buddies.
Travis was funding it.
I went down there to the fashion show and I did my song.
You want me to jam, I'm finna, you know, brainwaves,
paying for them insane days, making sick like bad mayonnaise.
Tech nine, got the remedy rhyme, infinity, criminal leaf,
gonna be some shit, I'll crack you open
like the youngest Mel Kennedy.
You know what I'm saying?
Like I'm really doing tech nine, you know?
But it's that beat.
Ta-da-da-da. Tech nine9ne, you know? But it's that beat. Bum da da da. Tech N9ne.
Boom, boom, boom, boom.
Tech N9ne.
Bum da da da da.
You know, it was like that.
It was like that shit.
Yeah, yeah.
They said.
I get hyphy when he does that.
Every time he does that, I'm like, yeah.
I get so excited.
Right, right, right, right, right, right.
Told you I'm animated.
No, I love it.
Listen, I've been to your concerts before
and nobody puts on a show like you.
Yeah.
Like it's insane.
Travis, you can go ahead and sit on the couch too, baby.
But you know,
You're good.
Right before we were here, we had breakfast
and the guy taking our order like, you want coffee?
I'm like, no, I can't have coffee.
I can't ingest any caffeine.
I'm naturally caffeine.
Right. If I have caffeine, I'd be up for three days
and I need to sleep with my job.
Fuck that shit.
Never could I have any caffeine,
can't drink no goddamn Mountain Dew,
no Dr. Pib, Mr. Pib or Dr. Pepper.
I'm sensitive to caffeine too.
There's no way.
Or was it Mr. Pib?
Yeah, Mr. Pib, Dr. Pepper.
Dr. Pib, that's disrespectful, dude.
I was catching what you were putting down though.
So I did that fashion show for Paradise Originals.
Travis was funding them, you know what I'm saying?
Heath and the boys.
The next day, George Forte hit me and he said, our boss want to meet you.
The boss. Yeah. you. The boss.
Yeah, I said your boss.
He's like, yeah, the guy, you know, makes paradise work.
You know what I'm saying?
I'm like, oh, okay, let's go.
Took me to his house in the Blue Springs
and we had our first meeting.
Travis, Mr. Travis O'Gwen has joined us on the couch.
I'm really excited to get you both together
because I think it's very-
It's legendary. Yeah, I think this is very rare that I've ever excited to get you both together because I think it's very,
yeah, I think this is very rare
that I've ever gotten to see you two
in an interview together, at least recently.
I don't think it's ever happened, to be honest with you.
I mean, we always do individual interviews.
I don't do very many.
So this might be a first.
I feel honored, like for real.
So Travis, I'm happy that you're here.
And like we were just saying,
I am so honored that you guys are doing this together.
Cause I have so many questions,
especially with you guys being like
the biggest independent label, pretty much in the world.
You guys really built something from the ground up.
What was, you were already involved in music
before you found tech?
Cause you were funding the fashion show?
So I was actually involved in a clothing company,
Paradise Originals, how we met.
I wasn't really into the music business at all.
As a matter of fact, I had no experience,
no background at all.
Wow.
And so, but when I went to high school,
I grew up in a very diverse neighborhood, but more importantly,
my school was about 80% black. So I grew up around hip hop my entire life. I mean, from grade school,
middle school, and then into high school. So I was always into hip hop. So whenever we wanted
to do this fashion show, Tech had a buzz because of those songs that he talked about being on the radio.
And I'm like, okay, yeah, let's do this. Let's, let's, let's find him.
Let's get him in there and see if he'll do it. And he did, which was awesome.
And, uh, but afterwards, like I knew of him and I knew of several of his songs.
And I always heard about how, uh,
he was about to be the next biggest rapper and
everything else and then after we did the fashion show I really wanted to talk
to him to understand what that journey was because it wasn't a lot of the
things that I heard were going to happen weren't happening so I just wanted to
understand why like okay you know what what what's your story and and he came
and he was really really really, really open with me.
And he told me every detail.
He told me about the managers that he had, which there was a lot of them, by the way,
and then he had like five managers or something.
I'm like, damn.
And so, and then, you know, all the people that were involved.
And, um, at first I was like, okay.
Um, you know, he told me about the, the, the deal that he had with quest and how
that was through Warner brothers, and he had about the deal that he had with Quest and how that was through Warner
Brothers and he had a publishing deal through Windswept. And it seemed pretty complicated.
And at first, I thought I could go in and say, you know, maybe I can give some advice. I was
really good at business. I had a really successful furniture business at the time,
successful with the clothing, successful with real estate, I was doing my thing and I thought maybe I could offer
some advice and after I met with him, I realized
advice isn't what he needed.
He needed some money and he needed somebody
that would go in there and kind of clean up a few things
because it got a little, it got a little,
to be a little bit too much, it was gridlock amongst the label
and then the local label, Midwest Side Records,
and then Quest and then Warner Brothers.
And at that time I'm like, dude, that's crazy, man.
Good luck, cool story.
Good luck and wish you the best.
But I didn't think that I could offer any words
that was gonna change anything.
And but we stayed in touch.
And then there was a time when he reached out to me and I got an opportunity to go down
to it was icy rocks house.
And he played me a song because we were together at a restaurant when they were writing a song
this this restaurant was called hops.
Yeah. when they were writing a song, this restaurant, what was it called, Hopps? The Hopps? Yeah, and so, and I was intrigued by it,
and then after it got done,
I got an opportunity to go down there and listen to it,
and that song was called This Ring.
Yes.
And I was blown away by it.
He was nice enough to let me have a copy of it,
and I must have played that song a thousand times
in my house. Dawn was like
over. She was like, what are you doing? Shout out Dawn. And not only that, but it's like,
wait a minute. He's trying to balance being tech nine and being married. Are you trying
to say something? Like, why do you keep playing this damn song? And it was, I couldn't leave
it alone. And then that's when we ended up meeting again. And I'm like, hey man, tell me what you want to do.
I heard what everybody else has in mind for you,
but fuck all of that.
Like, what do you want to do?
And that's when he told me that he had a publishing company
called EGN Arts.
And I'm like, okay.
And then I tried to put together.
Yeah, and then I was like, he goes,
that's strange backwards. And I'm like, oh, okay then I try to put together. Yeah. And then I was like, he goes, that's strange backwards.
And I'm like, oh, okay.
And I said, why is that?
And he goes, well, because if I ever have an opportunity to do my own label, I want
to call it strange music.
And I'm like, oh, and then he told me about his love for Jim Morrison and the doors and
all of this stuff.
And so I took a leap and said, Okay, well, listen,
man, I, I don't know the music business, but I'm a quick learn.
And, and I have the means that you know, the financial means
to help out. And I think I have, you know, a good business
acumen, and I know how to move forward relatively quickly. So I
said, if you want to truly do that, I'm in man 5050 and we'll go and we'll figure this
thing out. And oh boy. Yeah. Yeah. Like what, what a wild venture for you guys to both be like, you
know what, let's start or was it, let's start a record label or was it just going to be like,
Hey, let me just help you out as an independent artist first. It was record label. Let's start a record label. It literally was record label from the gate.
Right. Yeah, because I think, you know, he was kind of like tired of being stuck and
nothing actually come into fruition. Like, so it's like, you know, nothing ever really
materialized and you get tired of that stuff and you're living on like minimal per diems
and you can't go out there and really.
Oh, I get it.
We lived it.
Right, make a living.
So it's like, you know, and I had to learn, man.
I mean, we took and we put together
and we had to gather a bunch of songs
and a lot of the earlier producer of those songs
wouldn't give us the files
because they wanted to be paid a second time.
That was a really volatile thing.
And I'll save all the back on that.
The music industry is so sneaky.
What's that? The music industry can be so sneaky.
It's it's filled with a bunch of people that I I don't care for 90
plus percent of the people that's in the music business.
Yeah. You know, and that's no, fuck that.
It hasn't changed.
I still don't like it.
No, I.
Talk your shit, Travis.
Yeah, I mean, I don't because because there's so there's so many of them that are just they're
full of shit.
There are people that are not they're not, you know, are there filled musicians who find
a way to wiggle into a position in the business
and then they don't know what the fuck they're doing.
I call them car salesmen's
because they all have that icky like car salesman personality.
Right, right, right.
All those comments, oh yeah, that's gonna be bananas.
Fuck is it, bananas got to be the best.
Especially in LA, you know what I'm saying?
Yeah, I hate it.
That was LA, everything was bananas in LA
and everybody was a dick in New York. Like everybody was
crazy.
So I have a couple questions that I want to ask you guys if you guys don't mind, because
I really am just so blown away by what you guys have built. But at a time when labels
were everything you when labels were everything you guys went the independent route, did you
guys ever doubt yourselves like whenever you were first starting out?
Well you know you got to be a kind of a crazy slightly crazy to lose 140k on your first
tour and then go back right?
Wow.
Lawson when this thing started in the first couple of years we were I was a little over
two million dollars of my own money in.
And initially I had in my mind that, you know,
I might end up spending a couple hundred grand
to get this thing to go the right way, not 2 million.
You know what I mean?
And, but things were challenging, things were expensive.
And it was hard to figure it all out.
And we kept having to throw money at it.
And, but-
And it was harder because I was a black kid
with spiked red hair, with a painted face,
bishop's robe on stage, up under it, blood clothing.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, you know, it was just like a cluster fuck.
I would feel like that would set you apart
from everybody else though.
It did, but it's a longer road.
But not in a good way.
If you're not doing what everybody else is doing, you know?
Right.
Think about this back then in like 99, 2000, 2001.
There were no independent hip hop tours, period.
Right.
The only hip hop tours there were is like you've seen Run DMC coming with the Beastie Boys,
or have you seen, you know, there was a few of those big tours.
Yeah, stuff like that.
But there was no independent hip hop touring at all.
So then take, add in black dude with wearing like spiked red hair.
His name is Tech9, the name of a gun.
First strike.
Right.
And then he's got face paint on and in a preacher's robe,
and he's got two strippers taking the preacher's robe off.
Yes, yes, yes.
Right.
So it was not an easy sell to white America,
white club owner America.
So I'd literally get on the phone with these guys
because I started by putting together our own tours
by ourselves.
We didn't have an agent.
Nobody was messing,
they were not gonna touch us
with a 10 foot pole.
Then the club owners didn't want that in their club.
They were so fearful of it.
So we would make deals.
I had to talk to tech like, man, this is crazy.
But our very first paid show was 500 bucks.
At an Italian restaurant that turned into a nightclub during the weekend.
Simply Sicilian.
Simply Sicilian in Blue Springs, Missouri.
Shout out to them for giving you an opportunity.
Yeah, right.
Absolutely.
You had to tell them to give the money back if we have any problems.
We had to literally convince all these different people by saying,
hey, look, let us come there. Let us do this show. We'll do a door deal.
And if anything goes wrong, you keep all the money.
So would people not let you buy on to tours?
Was that not a thing back then?
They wouldn't let, we didn't really
want to go with the idea of buying on
because there were no tours back then.
Right.
I mean, this is honestly, there were no tours
to buy on to for someone like him or us or whatever.
So we had to go out there and do it ourselves
or we weren't going to see anybody.
We weren't going to tour.
And that's where we lost money on the first tour.
But I always looked at it like,
look, if we can get in these places
and we can plant a seed, then great.
Yeah, we're gonna spend money.
You spend money when you do that.
And then we'll come back the next time
and we'll water it, right?
And we still may not make money,
but at the end of the day,
at least we're gaining momentum, gaining fans.
And then once we come back again,
now maybe we can pick a little fruit,
whatever the case might be.
So it was a journey to get to that point,
but it worked out.
We played a show in San Diego at the Blue Agave.
Seven people.
Seven people, seven people.
The next time we came, it was like much better, 300 and something. The next time we came, it was like much better,
300 and something.
The next time we came and every time since then,
we've sold it out.
Every single show in San Diego.
So, you know, it worked, but nobody knew it.
And I knew that I wasn't gonna fail
because I just, I can't accept failure.
Like it's a mental block for me.
But, and Dawn, my wonderful wife, she never doubted me,
but did I get some of these looks?
Like, I got a few of them, but she never doubted it.
And she knew that I couldn't stop.
And thank God.
And she helped, she worked there.
Her and Glenda and, you know, sending out CDs
and vinyl to radio stations and stuff out of our basement.
Yeah, I mean, but yeah, it was interesting
in the beginning.
Yeah.
Do you guys feel like the Juggalo community
is what accepted you first?
That, what?
Do you feel like the Juggalo community
accepted you guys first?
No, no, no.
Or who do you feel?
They came in in 2003.
Okay.
Now, I started in Kansas City.
Right.
You know what I'm saying?
And I think with Mitch Bade being the first thing,
all the gangsters were first.
Right.
You know what I'm saying?
And then the college kids came.
And those college kids will run the numbers up.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
But we did Sprite Liquid Mix Tour in 02 with Jay-Z, NERD,
Nappy Roots, you know what I'm saying?
Hoobastank.
Oh wow.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That would be a great tour to like circle back.
So we was already buzzing on that tour,
you know, motherfuckers,
Jay-Z was coming out to see my set on the second stage,
you know? Right.
You know, they heard about this ring, you know?
Everybody's like, you should gotta see this ring.
You remember Kanye? Kanye was there.
I never saw him, but Chris Calico saw him.
He was with Taliq Kuali, he was on that tour too.
So the next year, 03, is when I met the Juggalos.
When I finally found out everything about psychopathic.
Cause I'd heard about Insane Clown Posse years before
when they got signed to Disney or something.
Y'all was like, baby, more clowns, more clowns.
You know what I'm saying?
I painted my face, you know.
And 03 is when the Juggalos came
and added a lot to our fan base. Right.
You know what I mean?
And the metalheads came, you know, and it just kept growing.
And that first tour, that first tour that we did with them, actually the only tour we
ever did with them, I guess, other than the gathering, but it was Insane Clown Policy.
It was Bone Thugs in Harmony.
It was Cottonmouth Kings.
Iconic. And so it's like, you know, that we, we, we thought, oh, wow, what a wild
menagerie of craziness and loved it.
And I'll tell you what, their fan base was so intriguing to me because
they were so devoted and looking at that fan base and looking at, I had an
opportunity to talk to and work with Hank Williams Jr.
and go to his butt naked barbecue in Paris, Tennessee
and all this other shit.
I'll miss that one.
Was everybody naked?
No, no, the only one naked was probably Hank.
And that's cause he had to climb out of the damn
lake that he drove his four wheeler in
because he was out of his mind.
Hilarious stuff goes on around,
they shoot cannons and shit in the backyard.
Oh, I could only imagine.
It's a trip.
But watching with the Juggalo fan base,
what Hank Williams Jr. had to do
when country music shunned him,
because they didn't wanna deal with this nepotism,
because of, you know, and then looking at that,
and then looking at what Kid Rock,
this white rapper that moved to New York
and was in the apartment downstairs from Queen Latifah, but looking at what Kid Rock, this white rapper that moved to New York and was in the apartment downstairs from Queen Latifah,
but looking at the fan base that Kid Rock was able to build.
And those were the things that were so intriguing to me because look at these
fan bases, they built them and all the odds were against them too. And that's when,
you know, uh, that's when I think that we really started to focus on how can we
look at and understand and take the best things out of all these different people's followings.
What can we get out of that? What can we learn from them? And we learned a lot from each one of them, including psychopathic and their merchandise game was mind boggling.
Insane.
It was so wild to see that, man. They did something that not a lot of people have ever done.
Well, they've built a cult following, you know?
And that's where your real core fan base is,
is in that cult-like following.
And it was a very distinct niche that they had.
And those people-
That's why they're still able to do it.
Oh, it's wild.
I literally, I didn't know
what a jugaloo was. But the crazy thing is I listened to Insane Clown Posse when I was younger
but didn't know the jugaloo statement. I didn't know what a jugaloo was until I went to the
gathering. I saw so many buttholes. Right. And people have, I mean but they are the nicest humans
ever. Like they're so great. They're wild. That was one of the biggest parties I've ever seen.
The biggest, wildest parties I've ever been to.
Wild, yeah, no, it's insane.
So when did you guys know,
like you guys were able to like look at each other
and be like, this is gonna work
when it came to the record label.
06.
So when like, Carabooloo came out?
That's when I was in the 06.
We hit a few bumps along the way.
The very first deal that we did in 2001
was with a company called J-Core and a guy named J-Ferris,
who for the record is a complete piece of shit,
still is to this day.
And I'd love to bump into J sometime, I take the charge.
I love how you guys used first and last names.
Yeah, yeah, J-Fucking-Ferris.
Fuck you, J.
You're a piece of shit. He's like, and I stand on it. Yeah, I mean, fucking Ferris. Fuck you, J. You're a piece of shit.
He's like, and I stand on it.
Yeah, I mean, here's the thing. We did a deal with them and we did everything that we were supposed to do.
And then he literally sent us to Los Angeles to shoot a video and he would only pay for part of it.
So we had to cut Annie up some money and the only reason we got to shoot the video is because we did a first week number that far exceeded what they thought they were going to do. Keep in mind, we're an independent
label. Back then there wasn't independent distribution. There wasn't any Fontanas or
are those types of small indie label. You still had to get distribution. The only way you
could get it at that time was by doing a deal because we didn't have any sales history to
really to warrant us being able to get that type of deal. So we did this deal because we didn't have any sales history to really, to warrant us being able to get that type of deal.
So we did this deal because he had a distribution deal through Interscope and
it was a 50 50 JV and we outperformed everything that they expected.
And then we're supposed to shoot a video. We fly, we get to,
we get out to LA and we're in the hotel room and we're supposed to do something
the first, the next day and
it doesn't happen. And then another day goes by still nothing because we found out the
label or J Ferris and J Core Records wasn't wasn't advancing the money for the video the
deposit. And so we're like, what's going on? A third day pops off. And finally, I get on
the phone and I'm talking to the people over there
because you can't ever get to Jay and they say,
well, he's had a change of heart and thinks
that you guys need to do more touring
before we shoot a video like this.
What?
Absolutely blew us up.
I left us in LA, I'm on Sunset,
I had to go in the hotel and tell him this
and I'm beyond furious in ways that I can't explain.
And so- I would not want Travis O'Gwen mad at me.
I so I they had rented us a Lincoln Navigator for local use around there.
I went ahead and hopped in the Navigator with a couple of the guys that were out there with me.
We arranged travel to get him back home.
And I literally drove from L.A. all the way to Kansas City and their navigator,
their rental navigator. Then I picked up a few of my very, very large friends and drove all the way
to New York City where Jay Ferris was to get out of that deal. And on the way there, I'm talking
to my attorneys, drawing up paperwork. You know, he owed us
money at that time. And we got there and they still wanted to talk. I was done talking.
There was nothing else to talk about. And we went in the offices, they had a scare there
because they basically didn't pay a street team company and the street team guys came in there
and like beat up a bunch of their monitors
with some baseball bats and scared the shit out of them.
And so they had armed security.
So when we showed up, there's armed guards,
all this other dumb shit.
And we unarmed them and placed them
in a nice comfortable room and went over
and got the paperwork with Jay and got
him to sign off on it and no one was harmed. No, you know, everything went fine. Yes. And
real gangster shit. Well, we got the album back. Yeah, we got the album back and and and we call
it Anshellic reparations. Yeah, yeah. And in doing that, then the guy that took us over there,
a guy named Dave Weiner, because Violet Brown was
a very big part of the early days.
And she had introduced us to Dave Weiner,
who was at Priority Records.
And then they sold.
And then Dave went over to J-Core.
And there were a couple of other people
like Brian Shafton and some others that were a part of that huge success that Priority had
during all those years with Master P, with NWA, with everything. And so he ended up quitting
that job in protest of the way we were being handled and went back and got with his old mentor, a guy named Mark Cerami, who was the one of the two owners of Priority Records.
And then that's where we ended up.
We followed Dave over there and did a deal.
And those two deals are the speed bumps and the education that we needed
and the sales that we needed in order to get the attention of Fontana and Universal
to get our own deal.
So then we were able to cut out the middle man
and really focus on how to do it
the way that we thought it needed to be done.
And MSC wasn't really much better.
Mark Cerami ended up being a fuck,
he's an asshole too. A fuck person. He's a fuck boy.
Fuck boy. Yeah, I really don't mind. Like, we actually recently
just a few years ago, we ended up getting all of the albums we
put out through him back as well. But you know, and I, he uses
this crutch of he had a stroke, he ate a tray of weed brownies,
got on a Learjet to go look at a fucking yacht, had a stroke in the air, had to learn how
to eat, walk, talk and shit again or something.
And he wasn't the same guy.
But again, the guy that took us over there quit in protest again and moved to fucking
Hawaii.
And so it's like, you know, it was a weird combination.
You know, take 2000 to 2006.
That's how you can fuck around and spend 2 million bucks.
Yeah, absolutely.
And but we got all of our shit back from from Mark Cerami as well.
Fuck him too, for the record.
And 2006 is when we got with Fontana and we did and we got to do our deal we did already
no middleman between us. And look, got to do our deal. We did it already. No middleman between us and look,
the results are what the results are.
If we work hard and we perform and we get something,
we actually get paid.
Our wires come in religiously every single month.
It's so good.
Yeah, it's beautiful.
And we went there and we've been there ever since.
We're still there.
I mean, it's changed names.
It was Fontana, then it was Ingrooves,
and now it's Virgin Music.
But at the end of the day, we ended up finding a way to succeed, becoming in the top one
or two or three, normally top one label that they had.
And we've maintained that for a really long time and been able to do other cool shit. Like it goes up, you know, our distribution arm,
which is where jelly came through.
You know what I mean?
So it's like,
he signed on Valentine's day in 2020.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's so weird that it was Valentine's day.
Yeah.
But yeah, man, I mean, it's 2006 is when we realized
that now that nobody could screw up the money
and nobody was in between
us and that, then it was all up from there. And that's really when we started having real success.
Tech, what was it about Travis that made you trust this process? Because that's a long time,
2000, 1999 to 2006, before you guys are even seeing any recourse, you know, like what was it about the struggle
that made you trust him?
When he said that he, that I opened up and told him everything, he's always been forthcoming
with everything, you know what I'm saying?
Like, he's always been open, not secretive when it comes to any type of money or any
kind of thing that would come in, you know, it's like,
he's always been open, an open book, just like me, you know what I mean? And you can feel that,
you know what I'm saying? Especially being in business for 25 years, you know what I'm saying?
It's pretty much self-explanatory. Like, absolutely. Yeah. yeah no i'll always be fond of Travis he was there when i
got my first Rolex or was it was it me or was i buying Jay his first Rolex i forget you were
buying Jay the Rolex through a guy here buying it from a company that i work with all the time
yeah you know what uh yeah yeah carlin creations yeah that's actually where it came from yeah yeah
yeah that's actually where that watch came from i think that might be where this one came from.
I have no idea, but it's just I love my love for Travis
always is going to run deep.
So just really one other quick question will actually too.
But what's your take on this mainstream versus independent
debate? Because you know, especially the country rap world
right now, they're insane with, you know, wanting it.
Everybody needs to stay independent
or should you go mainstream?
How do you guys feel about that?
I think it can work either way for people,
depends on what you want.
Right.
Yeah.
I think that we were independent way before it was cool,
way before it was sexy.
We were independent pretty much out of necessity. I think that, you know,
the lines are blurred between what was independent and, you know, there's so many different projects
that like, even we worked early with TDE, we signed J-Rock, we had Kendrick Lamar was over there,
you know, Schoolboy Q, Absol, Black Hippie. I love Schoolboy Q.
And so, but when you look at that, though, like when that deal
upstreamed, Interscope didn't want to be mentioned.
They wanted it all to be about TDE and Top Dog Entertainment.
And they wanted it because independent was cooler to the fan base.
And they felt like it was going to connect better if they were in the shadows.
You know what I'm saying? So, but now I think it's so incredibly blurred that I think that whatever it is the end goal is, if you want to go out there and you want
to be huge at radio, you might have to make that sacrifice and sign up with the folks that are
capable of doing that. But you also have to make sure that that is the right fit and that they're
going to do what they say they're going to do. that you end up getting a result that you want because if you don't,
that's a very expensive situation.
You go sign a major label deal, you sign a 15, 16, 17, 18 point deal, and now you're
recouping at the rate of that deal.
And so, you know, everybody doesn't understand that for every hundred dollars the major label spends
and then they recoup, you're only getting $18 of a credit
out of that hundred bucks.
And so now you're in a pretty deep hole
and how wild is it not to make money
and you got the number one record in the country
and you're not getting paid
though from the record label. It's because the deal structures are very favorable to
those majors and that's a, but if it goes crazy and you have seven number one songs,
then it begins to make a lot more sense. And you have the ancillary, you have the touring income, you have,
you know, all of the merchandise income and all these other ancillary incomes. So sometimes a
major deal makes sense and works for folks. But the deals are constantly shifting and changing.
Yes.
Distribution is constantly shifting and changing and how it's done. So it's a wild time, but you
just have to be smart and dissect the deals that
are in front of you and really try to figure out what your path is. If you don't care as much about
radio or you want to go through the process of hiring and doing radios and working with
the independent yourself, you could of course do that too. And then your reward is much, much
greater if it does connect and it does go, you're going to end up in a really great place.
Right. You know, but but I mean, it's I feel like radio is so outdated to like how you have to get plays and all that stuff.
Like I watching my husband go through it, which I'll probably get shit for talking about this.
I just feel like they're the way they go about things is so outdated.
And isn't everything more on streaming now as opposed
to radio? Everything is indeed more on streaming than it is radio but radio, terrestrial radio,
is still a big factor on getting people to a mass popularity. It is unfortunately or fortunately,
however you look at it, still kind of like the it's a huge part of it. But now you don't only when we started was about the music.
Now it's also about the social media.
It's about the tick tock. It's about Instagram.
It's about and not only that, but now wait a minute,
not only do I have to do those things, but OK,
my tick tock needs to be for my personal moments or something.
You know, you got to campaign the shit, right?
So it's about this.
And then my Instagram is going to be about the music making process.
And then my Facebook's going to you have to come up with strategies and plans.
And you navigate this space all the time.
But like, it's way bigger than than the music now.
And that kind of sucks. Right.
And they want the personality behind the music. Yeah, and streaming is the biggest fuckery that we're all dealing with. How is a guy, Daniel Eck,
how is he worth 3.6 billion, or no, 4.6 billion recently on the backs of all the artists. And how did they make a $1.5 billion profit
yet they're paying less than one third of one penny
per stream of the actual artists that put in the work?
And the way it happened was the remajors
made an alignment with Spotify.
They have ownership stake and it was the new way
for them to get control of the business
again because independents like us were kicking their ass.
We were the subject of a lot of different board meetings where guys would go in and
like literally like I had this guy Richie who used to call me like man like what's up?
He's like dude we had to hear about you guys for 30 minutes straight people yelling at
us over how the fuck are they doing this?
And we can't even do this. But he said he used to tell his artist about us. Yeah. Yeah. Wow. Yeah.
So it's like, you know, but streaming is really, really twisted. And the creative accounting that
goes on with streaming, and you got guys that are making songs in AI,
a hundred thousand songs, collecting millions of dollars.
It's fucked up.
And I'm waiting for people to get as sick and tired
as we are, you know, you gotta get people to be sick
and tired of being sick and tired and to make a change.
And there's no way an artist can fight back for that.
We have a lot of really kick ass ideas.
Like back when we did the whole
fuck the industry thing, that whole campaign,
we have it, but there are much larger risk at play now
because, you know, when you're when you're not making any money
and you're willing to say and do a lot of shit to rattle cages,
you know, and now we have to be very methodical
because we have artists that are signed to the label.
If we did something radical, like pull all their shit off of a platform to create our own platform,
we could run into obstacles that would be uncomfortable for others.
So it's not just his and mine at stake now.
It's a whole collective of people and content and catalog that we have to be mindful of.
So we're hoping to do it
in a better way. Still going crazy on people and doing things differently is I'm down for that.
And I have no problem saying, well, obviously I've said it a few times.
Yeah.
Fuck the industry.
Yeah. I don't have anybody to fuck the industry and fuck anybody else that
wants to not treat artists fairly.
Yeah. That shit pisses me off to the core. And I don't know how you can allow people
to put all their work in and pay them fractions of pennies. That shit is irritating beyond
work. No, it's not fair at all. Touching base real quick on the artists
that you guys have signed, you guys have Chris Calico,
Ritz, Mayday, and Stevie Stone, artists like that.
What do you guys look for in an artist
before bringing them in, and what would somebody have to do
to be signed by you guys?
If somebody's listening to this right now and is like,
I wanna go to Strange Music.
Well, I like artists that understand music.
And I don't have to babysit.
Right.
You know what I mean?
I like artists that I can see hanging with me, artist-wise.
You know what I mean?
That are able to do hits, if you got a chop. You know what I mean? That are able to do hits.
If you got a chop, you know what I'm saying? It's not a requirement, but you know what I mean?
We started something, Strange Music,
and the chopping was part of it, you know what I mean?
But we have other songs, like you said,
Carol Boo-Loo, and Who Go Crazy, and Everybody But Me.
You know, you've got a whole bunch of songs that, you know, we look for artists that can
do that.
Like you found Sky Daddy, right?
I love her.
Yeah, Sky is doing incredible things.
She's through the distribution.
And I think also another thing that we look for, cause you mentioned artists like Chris Calico and others,
I think people that can create music that means something that is meaningful to
the human experience. That's, that's what I want to hear something as a message.
How, yeah, how can, what, what, and sometimes, you know, the,
the content is heavy, but that heavier, the content,
the more help it provides to people going through the same thing who feel like
they're alone. And so like, if you took all of these thousands of emails that we
get talking about how the music saves someone's life and, and listen, let's
assume, let's assume for this purpose that only that's only really true one
time. That's okay. It's still worth it. If you could actually say something that you helped do,
you worked with an artist, they created this wonderful song,
and helped this person take the gun out of their mouth,
that's huge, and that's what therapeutic music should do.
And that's the one thing that drew me so much
to your husband was all
of that because knowing that people have that reaction to what he is saying on these tracks
is massive to me. And walking down, you know, I was telling him the story last night where
me and Jellie used to walk down Broadway when I came and visited and a few people knew who
he was and that was a cool interaction. But then inside,
I won't go with him anywhere. It turns into a meet and greet.
Inside the restaurants though, when people would come up crying to him and way
back then I'm like, like, there it is. This,
this is why I have to help him grow this thing.
There's no, I, at that point,
you were there for save me or that you are what helped Save Me get the notoriety that it got.
Because he wasn't sure about it.
I'm sure.
I think I heard something.
He wasn't sure how his fans would take him singing.
It was the very first time.
You know, we talked about the five-year plan.
You've heard the five-year plan.
And then we talked about getting to the root of what it is he really wanted to do,
which it took me a while to get him to open up to me
and tell me about his mom and his dad
and the music they played and his wanting to write songs
and how he wanted to be a part of Music Row
and then how he wanted to get more into the singing.
And we finally, you know, he does this song and then he sends it to me and he's like,
can we just get this up real quick?
He was afraid of that song.
You know that, right?
I mean, I know he talked to you.
He told me about his conversations with you too.
And you thought the song was beautiful.
I told him it would be as big a song he ever did.
Right, right, right.
And as did I.
You were right.
Yeah, as did I.
I said, look, this is going to be,
this is what we've been talking about.
It doesn't, you know, he told me that
it's the first song you ever did without a rap verse.
And I'm like, okay.
Now I can't get him to rap.
Can you make him rap again, Ty, please?
I miss rapper role, okay?
Yeah, but that's the shit though.
Like, Save Me though is, that's a mess.
That song, what are we at?
298 million video plays on a simple video.
That's because it connected, it touched,
it means so much to so many people.
And to be able to be a part of that,
that's the only reason, honestly, Bunny,
the only reason that I'm still doing this shit,
I have no financial reasons to do this anymore. I haven't had for a long time, neither has he.
But the reality is when you know that your music has such an impact on
people, that's hard. If you help create the soundtrack to a lot of
people's lives, and then what do you do? You just say, oh never mind, and you fuck
up. What? So that's it, you know, and I deal with the things like
with Mackenzie and all these other, the mental health of our country is challenged pretty
heavily. And if we can create stuff that helps people and human beings and help them stay
alive, we better do this, we better continue or else. Like I feel responsible.
Like it's like it ain't even a job for money.
It's like a responsibility is where I'm at with it.
And to follow what strange music means,
the S and the logo is taken from the rod of Asclepias.
You know, you usually see it at the hospital.
You see the snakes going around the rod,
symbolizing medicine.
And the bat being nocturnal.
We are the medicine that navigate through the darkness.
So we've fit that tight like a motherfucker.
You know what I mean?
Absolutely.
Your song, Fragile, is like saved me for me.
Oh yeah.
I was going through a really bad abusive relationship
when that song dropped and it literally like saved me
so many times.
So I mean, you guys are definitely making therapeutic music.
And yeah, it's amazing.
Javis, thank you for sitting in.
I appreciate you being here so much.
Yes, thank you.
Tech, we're gonna move on, but I'm gonna let you guys go
because I feel like I've kept you for so long,
but we're gonna move on just a little bit. let you guys go because I feel like I've kept you for so long, but we're gonna move on just a little bit.
I wanna touch base on one story that I heard before though,
because you were touring at a pace
of doing 250 shows a year at one time.
That's insane.
Yes, it is.
Like, how does somebody function
to be able to do that many shows?
Conditioned ourselves throughout the years
to be able to know what to do with your voice for one.
By cutting out the party after the show,
getting rest, you know what I mean?
You had to go through the shit early on
to know how you don't be hoarse during the show.
On that ICP tour, man, I lost my voice in Kentucky, man.
It was frightful.
And ever since then, I really start pacing myself,
you know what I mean?
You learn your lesson.
So we've always been conditioned to do it.
We've done it so much that at the end of some tours,
I've popped my gastrocnemius muscle on both sides.
You know what I'm saying?
From jumping?
Yeah, all that.
All that Michael Jackson sliding and shit from pop locking.
You know what I'm saying?
The shit I do on stage.
No, it's high energy.
You know what I'm saying?
From the minute you start to the end.
But I was fucking off and not stretching
and not working out back then when I was popping shit.
Since I've been working out in my personal trainer,
I ain't popped a motherfucking thing.
On the following first tour, I didn't get sick
not one time, I didn't pop one fucking muscle.
Let's go.
That probably contributes to your sobriety too.
Yeah.
Touring that much, do you ever just get afraid
that when you're at home,
you're just gonna get lost in your thoughts?
Or is it that you just get antsy whenever you have time off?
No, because I never got like that because usually when I'm home is when I start working on records
You know we tour, get home, work on music. Tour, get home, work on music. You know what I mean? And
It was like, it was like that for a long time. You know what I'm saying? And I
Never felt like I had to, you know,
even though I have to do mantras to go to sleep,
you know what I mean?
I found that and it works for me, you know,
but now we pretty much have a, I have a regimen,
you know what I'm saying?
And I'm conditioned to do it.
Let's talk about your sobriety.
Can you take me on that journey?
Because it says you almost died
from alcohol poisoning one time.
That's not true, but something like that.
You know what I'm saying?
So my life, since my early teens,
I've been drinking like a rock star
because I've pretty much been a rock star.
Yeah, I mean, you are a rock star tech.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You deserve that title.
I've been knowing that since my teens.
You know what I'm saying?
So like that's how I felt.
That's how I built this to be, you know what I'm saying?
A hip hop rock star, you know what I'm saying?
So imagine every day I wake up,
I have breakfast out somewhere or brunch or something.
I start the day with maybe three mimosas,
whether it be orange juice mimosas or a pineapple mimosas.
Lunch, you know, you spend the day in studio,
you know what I'm saying?
Lunch, take lunch somewhere at a bar.
I have maybe three cosmopolitans, top shelf.
You know, dinner, you have your red wine.
If you go to, if you go to a Capitol Grill, you're going to have four Stoli-Dolis.
If you don't know what Stoli-Doli is, it's like they marinate pineapple in vodka
and they pour it, you know, and it's fucking beautiful.
That's one day.
And then I come home, we might have a party.
We drinking Caraboulu, KCT, Hennessy Sprite and Lemon.
This is daily.
Because I'm a social drinker and I love to party.
So I'm doing this for years.
Maybe I'm talking about this is like,
fuck the drugs that I was doing.
You know what I'm saying?
I stopped that in 06 or was it 07?
It was 06 or 07, one of them years, you know what I'm saying?
Stopped.
Ecstasy, shrooms, acid, GHB,
what's it called?
The red pills.
No, no, no, no, that'll quit later.
That'll quit later, that'll quit later.
I'll remember in a minute,
but I would do that shit all in one night.
When was your first time taking drugs, like hard drugs?
My first time with ex, you know, was 98 when I came home.
When I first met Travis,
he didn't know I was on the shit though.
Right.
I met a dancer at this club.
She gave me my first, no, no, she wasn't the first one.
Nope, nope, I take that back.
He wasn't the first one.
It was a girlfriend I had before that.
Was it 98?
This is so hard to find.
It's okay.
But it was the Grant Rice era for sure.
You know what I'm saying?
So your first drug you ever tried was Ecstasy?
Yes.
Wow.
Yes, I'm like-
Most people like smoke weed or-
I don't call weed drug though.
Right, well most of the smoke weed do blow.
But it is classified as a drug,
but to me it's natural.
Just like most rooms, sorry and shit.
But I'm talking about drugs.
You know what I'm saying?
Molly and ecstasy.
I found that first.
Yeah, I think the dancer was the first one
to give it to me, my first one at a movie theater, she said, you're going to take this pill.
It's going to take 30 minutes.
You're going to feel like you have to shit.
Don't shit.
You know what I'm saying?
Fuck up the whole thing.
Don't shit.
I'm like, I'm not going to shit at the movies.
So you're not allowed to shit on ecstasy?
No, you ain't supposed to.
Or mushrooms.
You know what I'm saying?
You're supposed to fill it and keep that shit in.
That's what I was told.
I never knew.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You know, you get that shit going. I was shitting all the time.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.
You learn something new every day.
She did fart over there, you know what I'm saying?
Ha ha ha ha ha ha.
Oh my God.
Ha ha ha ha ha.
But anyway, 98, I took my first pill
and I was doing that shit all the way
from 98 to 2006
or seven, you know what I'm saying?
And...
What was it that made you want to get sober?
Shit was happening, you know?
You remember you came up to the house
and they said somebody was outside eating pussy
at six o'clock in the morning, outside on the bench,
and all the people in the apartment complex could see it, you know what I'm saying? Police came, all kinds of shit. Was that you, eating pussy on six o'clock in the morning, outside on the bench, and all the people in the apartment complex could see it.
You know what I'm saying?
Police came, all kinds of shit.
Was that you eating pussy on the bench?
It was at my house.
Oh, okay.
You know what I'm saying?
He's like, I'll never say if it was me or not.
I had people over, you know what I'm saying?
Shit was going on.
You know what I'm saying?
Upstairs, downstairs, outside.
You know?
Because when you're on that shit,
you know, you stand up to four and five
and six in the morning.
Right. And you know, they're not- Jaw grinding. You know? shit, you know, you stand up to four and five and six in the morning. Right.
And you know, they're-
Jaw grinding.
You know, yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
So,
Adderall, that was the red pill.
Adderall. Adderall, okay.
I'll put that on top of that,
cause you know, it feels so good.
Oh my goodness.
Ooh, I should have been-
Whoa.
I should have been Chris Farley, my nigga.
I was, I was putting shit on top of shit, homes.
Praise God. You know what I'm saying?
So, around 2006, ever ready time, it starts slowing down.
You know what I'm saying?
Travis said, man, we had a meeting.
Travis said, man, everybody's saying you're gonna die
just like Jim Morrison.
You know what I'm saying?
I can't be involved.
He said, I can't keep doing business
with somebody that's gonna kill themselves, man. I'm sorry. You know what I'm saying? I was like, oh no, I ain't be involved. He said, I can't keep doing business with somebody that's gonna kill themselves, man.
I'm sorry.
You know what I'm saying?
I was like, oh no, I ain't gonna kill myself.
You know what I'm saying?
I ain't gonna kill myself now.
So, you know, I thought about that.
I'm like, I see it every day.
People seeing me fucked up.
Like, we're gonna lose them just like we lost Jim Morrison.
You know what I'm saying?
That's that and the shit.
Because that's who I attributed that idea to do Strange Music to, you know what I'm saying? That's that and the shit. Because that's who I attributed that idea
to do strange music to, you know what I'm saying?
I went to Paris and thanked them at the cemetery,
thank you for the inspiration brother.
I worked with the rest of the members after that.
It was, ah!
Yeah.
But when Travis said, man, it's getting bad, dude.
You know what I'm saying?
I'm like, I'm just kicking it.
I don't do this shit all the time.
I did do it all the time.
You know, because we in the strip, we run in a strip club, sat in dolls.
We down there.
I'm getting every bitch in the, you know, I'm like a house dad, you know,
I can go in there where bitches are.
And I'm sorry, I talk like that, bitches, but you're fine.
I say it all the time, too. bitches are and I'm sorry. I talk like that bitches, but you know, women are. I say it all the time too.
Go in there where bitches are.
Trust me, I get it.
Like a bag of 60 rolls, you know what I'm saying?
Like rolls, ecstasy, you know what I'm saying?
That's what you just calling back then, rolls.
You know, you rolling and people, you know, but anyway.
I'm putting them in bitches' mouths, like, you know,
tech, you gave me my first pill.
I see them now, I'm like, damn, I fucked up.
You know what I'm saying?
I was like, I started a lot of people.
I was, I used to put it on my tongue,
I'd be high and like, pick it off my tongue, baby.
You know what I'm saying?
I was fucked up.
You know what I'm saying?
But I was partying, you know?
And because I was going so hard,
and you know, me and my partner had that meeting,
I'm like, we got motherfuckers eating pussy outside.
You know what I'm saying?
I said, okay.
I went home one night and my kid,
this is when it starts slowing down.
My kid, Rainbow at the time, she was probably like three,
two, I don't fucking know.
I saw that she saw me.
I felt like she saw me being high.
I used to sneak in and lay on the couch.
You know what I'm saying?
Like I've been there all night, you know what I mean?
Sweating like a motherfucker.
My wife at the time was like, when I sleep in the bed,
she's like, why are you sweating so bad?
I was like, I'm hot in this motherfucker.
She's like, still in fan on this winter time.
You know what I'm saying?
What the fuck are you doing?
You know?
I was dying over there, dude.
You know what I'm saying?
I didn't know.
So.
Is this the time that you took 15 Xanax?
No, I didn't take no 15.
You didn't take 15?
15 pills in one night.
I'm talking about X pills.
Right.
Or not Xanax. 15. No, not Xanax. I didn't find out about Xana didn't take 15? 15 pills in one night. I'm talking about X pills. Right. Or not Xanax.
No, not Xanax.
I didn't find out about Xanax till the last day I rolled.
I got it mixed up.
The 15s, this is when you took 15 ecstasy pills?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
That was out in LA.
That's something different.
OK, gotcha.
We're taking three at a time.
You know what I'm saying?
That's something different.
I was on one.
You are wild.
Oh.
I shouldn't even be alive right now.
That's why I'm so animated. That's why you are an angel. Because I Oh, I should be alive right now.
That's why I'm so animated.
That's why you are an angel.
Because I ain't supposed to be here.
You know what I'm saying?
As much as I drank and I was fucking around,
I'm gonna stand with drugs, you know what I mean?
I'm talking about we had take ecstasy and the GHB together
and just fall asleep on the stage in the club.
When we get there, it's packed.
Everybody let me in, I'm Tech 9.
Cops waking us up, Tech, man, you gotta wake up, man.
I'm on the stage with the business with me
and my brother, Dino Mac, at the time.
We sleep on the stage, fucking with GHB
and ecstasy and drinking Robitussin like it was cool.
Just doing stupid shit.
Just trying to explode my heart.
I wasn't trying to, I'm just like, fuck it, let's just go, let's just go. We just didn't know anything. I don't know. I wasn't trying to, I'm just like,
fuck it, let's just go, let's just go.
We just didn't know anything.
I thought I had it in control, you know what I'm saying?
Then we had that meeting, I'm like,
I gotta calm down, you know what I'm saying?
And then Rainbow, I was like,
okay, that's my little girl, Rainbow.
I'm like, nope, can't do it no more.
So 2007 came, I've been cleaning off all drugs since then,
you know what I'm saying?
But with the drinking, four years ago,
my doctor told me I was having a physical,
Doctor Strange Love D'Angelo said,
you know, your blood pressure's through the roof
and your cholesterol is,
you need to cut that drinking out
or your heart's gonna explode like your dad, you know?
And I was like, oh, I'm gonna die?
Okay, I quit.
And my wife's like, I'll quit with you, please.
Just, please stop, you know?
So Valentine's Day just passed,
that was my fourth year sober off of liquor.
Congratulations.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's hard, man.
I've been sober off of liquor since 2018,
sober off cocaine and pills since 2017.
And sobriety is a journey.
Yeah, it is, man.
It's a journey.
Even the mocktails I take slow,
because it's still sugar.
When I first stopped, I was on mocktail heaven,
and I was like, I'm still getting fat.
It's sugar, motherfucker, what the fuck?
You know what I'm saying?
So I have one every once in a while.
Do you feel better now?
And are you sober off drugs or do you still smoke weed?
You're sober off everything?
I don't smoke weed, but I can.
You know what I'm saying?
I want to keep my lungs.
So every once in a while,
I might hit it with my wife or something.
You know what I'm saying?
I don't smoke with nobody no more.
That's how I got COVID.
Oh, yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Blunt.
Oh, that's the worst.
I tell my wife, don't, I don't give a fuck who it is.
Don't smoke with nobody.
Don't bring that fucking sickness into our house, man.
No.
That's how it's happening.
Motherfuckers is licking it.
You know what I'm saying?
Just feel it and shit it.
Just sopping it up.
Just to get...
Put the fire on it.
No, nigga. No. No, get. Put the fire on it.
No, nigga.
No.
No, sorry.
No, no, no.
So I haven't taken a blunt or if it's not pre-rolled
in a dispensary, I'm not fucking with it.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
So I very rarely smoke.
For a while I was taking a shot of distillate juice
and like I got a person that can make like a lemonade distillate
or strawberry distillate, you know what I'm saying?
I put it in a shot glass and it's like...
What is that?
It's, it's, it's liquefied THC, you know what I'm saying?
Oh, gotcha.
To put it in juice.
It's called distillate, you know?
You're a savage, dude.
You are a sav.
What you mean?
Dude, liquid THC, I'd go to the fucking hospital. No, but it's only, the drink is,
the shot is only 20 milligrams or something like that.
I can't go.
I ate some fricking weed butter and called 911, okay?
I'm saying that's cool, but beyond 20, nah.
You know what I'm saying?
10, 15, 20, that's it, you know what I'm saying?
Keeps you regular.
But the shot, the shot glass is like 20 milligrams or whatever,
and it's like a body massage.
I don't do it no more.
I was doing it for a while.
I don't do it no more because I don't got time.
You know what I'm saying?
Do you feel better now that you're sober
and like on this health journey?
Oh yes, I feel better.
I'm just nine pounds over my target weight,
which was 185 when I wanted to get in my suit
for my wedding, you know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
Which congratulations, we were talking about that.
I feel fat as fuck right now.
Just nine pounds ahead of 185, you know.
You gotta allow yourself grace though.
And you know, I've been working on this fucking album,
you know what I mean? 5816 Forest for a long time. By yourself, Grace, though. I've been working on this fucking album,
5816 Forest, for a long time. And I got a lot of deadlines and shit.
I'm still writing verses for motherfuckers.
And sometimes I miss my workout.
I haven't seen my trainer in almost a month.
You know what I'm saying?
So I gotta get back with them.
Because I'm in there from 11 to 12
and I get to the fucking studio at 12, 30 or one
and when I get some food, you know what I'm saying?
And round three and four, I gotta get home, you know what
I'm saying?
It don't make no fucking sense.
I need to be at the studio at 10 o'clock to get the time.
So I've been missing my workouts
to try to get everything done, you know what I'm saying?
And I feel fat as fuck, but-
Have grace with yourself though.
What'd you say?
I said just have grace with yourself.
Of course, I give myself grace.
Yeah.
I get up in the morning every day and I flex my-
I can still see my abs, but it's still like, you know, I love dessert.
Dude, I used to hate blueberry muffins my whole life. I love them motherfuckers now.
I'm like keep them away from me. Please don't bring in the house. Don't bring that
fucking crumb of cookie in here. Please. But you're in your healing dad era too.
Yeah. You know like you've been a dad for a long time but now you have the little
foster kid. I'm sure she indulges with you too. Yeah, she does.
I'm just saying butter cake, wherever we go,
if they got butter cake, we gotta have it.
Now we used to get one each.
Now we split it.
Good.
You know, you're like, fuck.
Or just have one cheat day a week.
That's what I do.
Yeah, that's cool.
You have one cheat day a week
and then you just get it out of your system.
And you know.
Now we on the gluten- free Tate's cookies,
you know what I'm saying, every once in a while,
you know what I'm saying, I just love blueberry.
I just had blueberry pancakes the other day,
I said, look at me.
She makes them, you know, gluten free
and all that kind of shit.
I'm like, look at me, I'm eating blueberry pancakes.
But they're gluten free.
She said, yeah.
So you're doing good.
But blueberries though,
and it ain't got nothing to do with no blood, gang,
shit or nothing
I just never liked it. Yeah, but I loved it motherfucking. Yeah, and I said good for your brain. Yeah
It's crazy how your your palate changes as you get older because I was never a fruit girl. I always loved vegetables
I love something fucked up is happening to me
Right now as we speak. I haven't had shrimp or lobster since my marriage.
I had it, we eloped in Puerto Rico where her family's from
and on July 14th.
And then we had our second wedding for our family
and everybody on July 20th in Kansas City.
You know what I'm saying?
That was a flex too, we had two weddings.
You know what I'm saying?
But I haven't had shrimp or lobster.
The shit just starts feeling weird in my mouth.
No, did he?
It's like, it started feeling weird, weird, weird.
The texture.
Oh, okay.
I was gonna say, are you having like an allergic reaction to it?
No, the texture.
It just, you outgrow things.
It feels like now when I bite shrimp,
it feels like I'm biting cartilage or something.
I don't fucking know, you know what I'm saying?
Yeah, your taste buds have changed.
Maybe because you're sober though too.
Maybe the sobriety.
I mean, that's been four years.
I was just eating that shit last year.
Yeah.
Like a motherfucker.
I'm talking about like shrimp bowls and shit
with sausage in it and potatoes and shrimp and crab legs.
I ain't even had no crab legs yet.
I don't know if I'm weird on that. gotta eat some crab legs you because those legs are bomb
I know I've been eating them all my life a shrimp. I'm a little iffy with two something's fucking with me
You know say they call shrimp the roach of the sea
Cockroach of the sea. Yeah, I was just in
New Orleans and wouldn't eat no goddamn shrimp. I
Didn't even have no goddamn shrimp.
I didn't even have no crawfish. I love crawfish at Touffée.
I love it.
You know what I mean?
Like-
Your taste buds are just changing.
Shit is changing.
I'm eating chicken with skin on it now.
I can't fucking do it.
I'm taking the skin off now.
I've been eating chicken all my life.
There ain't no, there ain't no racist shit or nothing.
You know, everybody eats chicken.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
I've been eating chicken all my life, dude. You know what I'm saying? I've been eating chicken all my life, dude.
You know what I'm saying?
All my life, chicken, chicken all my life.
Sorry, you know what I'm saying?
But now I'm eating this shit
and I feel like that I'm eating human flesh.
I don't fucking know.
Steak was almost out like last year
because I've been watching these documentaries
saying they put glue in it and when you cut it you hear it. I'm like oh my god. Oh no. So me and me are having a time.
But it's your body. Your body is probably just trying to go through some sort of transformation.
Something's happening to me and I'm still trying to eat the, I ate a chicken sandwich at the airport,
it was good as fuck.
You know what I'm saying?
I'm like, okay, chicken's not all the way out yet.
You know what I'm saying?
This don't have no skin on it.
You know what I'm saying?
Right, right.
Yeah, let your body purge is just part of growing.
And it could be spiritual too.
Have you ever tried to Google like the spiritual meaning
of why your body is refusing these meats?
No, I just think that I ain't supposed to be eating that shit.
I don't think none of us are, I'm sorry.
Yeah, no, I agree.
It is what it is.
I don't know what I'm gonna turn into in the next years.
I can't wait.
You know what I'm saying?
But I can feel it coming.
I'm like, why do I feel like I'm a savage eating meat
these days?
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Well, I can't wait to see the transition.
My lady asked me the other day before I came here,
she was like, so I'm gonna, when you get back,
I want to have groceries and stuff,
you know, some fresh groceries.
What do you want?
I was like, salad stuff.
I go through phases like that too though.
Salad stuff, you know what I'm saying?
I go through phases like that too.
And sometimes it's just your body just needs a break
from that too.
I don't know what's going on, man.
It's like, I don't know if I'll ever eat shrimp or lobster.
I used to fuck lobster up.
I'm rich.
I love that Tek is so upset about the shrimp.
Yeah, it's fucked up.
Because the shrimp they had at the restaurant
we were doing New Orleans shit looked good.
It's about to die.
So fire.
You know what I'm saying?
And then I took my son.
My son came with me for the first time.
He came to do the Super Bowl with me
I my brothers was down there my uncle we all had brunch one morning the morning of the Super Bowl
Yeah down on Bourbon Street was fucking wonderful, and I saw that they had a crawfish at touffée omelet
I'm like, oh, I gotta try it
But I said damn I can't eat any shrimp and my said, I'll get it and you can taste it.
I didn't even fucking taste it.
You didn't have the urge.
No, I don't know what the fuck is going on
with the texture shit on my tongue.
You're just going through a phase right now.
It makes me feel like I'm eating something
I ain't supposed to eat.
But my wife's like, we gotta fucking eat.
You gotta eat something.
I know, I'm still-
You gotta get your protein in.
So you have to figure out a way to,
maybe like eating like beans and chickpeas.
Yeah, she's been making a lot of beans with,
you know, what's we call it,
with the meat, they put it on the Mexican breakfast.
What is it called?
Chorizo, there you go, chorizo.
Yes.
She got the chorizo with the beans, you know what I'm saying?
Chorizo with sausage.
Yeah, I know, I know.
So it's grinded up, it's cool. Yeah. I love the beans, you know what I'm saying? Chorizo with sausage. Yeah, I know, I know. So it's grinded up.
It's cool.
Yeah.
I love her beans.
You know what I'm saying?
I love the beans.
And I'm just, I'm just, it's just weird.
Yeah.
I'm going to Google some stuff for you tonight and I'm going to send it to Travis and see
if I, if we can like connect the dots for you.
Cause I really feel like it might be spiritual for you too.
I promise you, I know it sounds crazy,
but sometimes there's certain things
that your body rejects when you're going through
a spiritual awakening.
And she still makes turkey tacos, I fucking love them.
I love turkey tacos.
I'm fucking crazy.
She can make a turkey burger, you can't even fucking tell.
I'll be fucking this shit up.
I love your love for your wife.
Yeah, man. Tech, I have kept you for two and a half hours. Oh, I. I'll be fucking this shit up. I love your love for your wife. Yeah, man.
Tech, I have kept you for two and a half hours.
Oh, I told you I'm long-winded.
No, you're good.
I'm gonna ask you one last question,
and I'm gonna let you go.
So imagine this.
You walk off stage from your last show ever.
The lights are off, the fans are gone.
You're standing alone in the venue.
What's the one thing you regret not doing?
The one thing I regret not doing?
Like just in anything, life, career, anything.
I thought you were talking about the show,
because I got it.
That too, if you want to talk about the show.
I always talk to Chris Calico and I always said,
when I accidentally tell a joke on stage
and everybody laughs, it feels so good.
I was like, maybe I should write some jokes.
I said, I can't fucking do that.
You know what I'm saying?
I can't be tech guy and write the joke.
And I can do it.
I can do what the fuck I want to,
but I never fucking done it.
You know what I'm saying?
I think you could be a comedian.
And it's like, when I come out on stage,
what I love so much is that when I walk out,
everybody's screaming, everybody's smiling at me.
It's the best fucking feeling.
That's why when you see me rapping
like Midwest Charbers and shit,
I'm smiling behind the mic like,
cause everybody's fucking smiling at me.
And it's just a beautiful feeling.
But when I say something funny
and the whole year the crowd, I'm like,
that shit is crazy.
Now I know Dave Chappelle and Kevin Hart
and all these people, Cat Williams,
all these great people, Bill Burr, you know, I see.
George Carlin, crazy, you know what I'm saying?
But it's like Richard Pryor.
All of them.
I see what they talking about.
To make people laugh.
Smiling is great, but to laugh.
Yeah.
Ask Jelly, if he ever sits on stage and everybody laughed.
It's a feeling.
He thinks he wants to be a comedian right now.
That's all he hangs out with is comedians.
But I think it's because you guys have made people cry
your entire careers with how deep
your music is.
Yeah, what was my music we were specializing in.
That now you're getting a different response and it's kind of like a high for you because
it's something new.
So if that was my last show and walking out and like damn it's over.
I never fucking wrote a joke.
I love that.
I really love that.
But would you ever pursue a career in comedy?
Cause you're a funny motherfucker.
I write music so well, I'm not that funny,
but I'm the kind of motherfucker that gets on the elevator.
And when you put yourself in a box with strangers,
it's weird, that's why everybody looks at the numbers.
As they're going down, they just watch that
or go on their phone because it's weird being in a box
with strangers, especially with this stranger,
strange music, you know what I'm saying?
The Cabos.
So when I get on the elevator,
I'm the kind of mother who get on and say,
okay, if I'm on a floor like five,
and I was like, I was gonna tell a joke,
but by the time I'm done with this long ass joke,
we'll be down at four or one.
Everybody will still laugh, you know, in the elevator that breaks the monotony. I do it all the time I'm done with this long ass joke, we'll be down at four or one, everybody will still laugh,
you know, in the elevator that breaks the monotony.
I do it all the time.
You know what I'm saying?
Cause I used to study like Rodney Dangerfield's like,
take my wife and everybody would laugh.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The OGs of the comedy world.
It's like one liners, you know what I'm saying?
I think you could do it.
I think if you put your mind to it, you could actually.
I'm sure I could do anything.
Your delivery is so funny. Mentally I can do could do it. I think if you put your mind to it, you could actually. I'm sure I could do anything. Your delivery is so funny.
Mentally, I can do whatever the fuck. I'll break down barriers. I've done it my whole career.
Yeah, absolutely. But I never fucking took the time to write some jokes
in between my songs like I always said I was going to.
Do it. Now you got to do it. Now you got to do it. Now they're going to expect it.
And then you have fans like, I didn't fucking come and pay for a goddamn comedy show today.
It was funny, but fuck that rap motherfucking.
No, I don't think so. I think as long as you're rapping in between the jokes,
everybody's gonna have the best of both worlds, you know?
I don't know.
When are we gonna get a new album from you?
June 13th, my album, 5816 Forest,
where we moved when my mom married Abu Al-Hasan Rasul Khalifa, the Muslim.
It's an audio series with 17 episodes
about my life on 5816 Forest
on 5816 Forest from age 12 to 17 when I ran away from home in the pursuit of becoming Tech Nina. I love how you always go back to the nostalgia and the memories.
And it's in chronological order how we moved in and all the shit that happened at school and.
Yeah, and it's music that's doing all of this?
Yeah, it's music.
All music, but it's an audio series,
that's what I call it.
Because music is audio, you know what I'm saying?
It's an audio series of events that happened
from 12 to 17 when I'm run away, you know what I'm saying?
And it's in chronological order from 12,
my mother, years old, my mama fell in love with a Muslim, 58 block weeks, she took them or
some shit, you know what I'm saying? It's brand new music, I don't fucking know what
all right now. But, uh, it's starting at the beginning, you know, the first song is called
The Birth. Then the second song is called Friday to Sunday, you know what I'm saying?
Triality. Where on 58, 16 fourths, I found the King, the Clown, and the G, you know what I'm saying,
how all three of my personalities began, you know what I'm saying?
So it's all the way to the age 17.
And then after the strange music tag, we have a song called J6's after the tag.
We ain't never put a song after the tag.
You know what I'm saying?
And it's called J6's and it's two years after I ran away.
You know what I'm saying?
You know?
I can't wait for that.
And how my Jordan 6's were my good luck charm
whenever I wore them.
I wore them down here.
You know what I mean?
I don't have them on now, but I had them on yesterday.
Have you ever thought about doing a documentary or like-
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, but we're still writing it.
We're still writing the Tech Nines story, man.
You know what I'm saying?
Right now, you know what I'm saying?
You have so much lore though.
I feel like you could have a series of documentaries.
It could be a movie.
Literally, yeah.
It could be a fucking crazy ass movie.
It's one of them three hour movies though.
Yeah.
You know what I'm saying?
Like some Black Panther shit.
You know what I'm saying?
No, absolutely.
But yeah, man, I got a lot to talk about.
And 58164 is very informative
because I've told these stories in interviews before,
you know what I'm saying?
Like we talking, but you never heard them in rhyme form.
In chronological order. a lot of these stories,
like I have down in the middle,
it's a song called Excited,
where I talk about 14 years old,
this black girl I was dating named Chanel Winfrey,
broke my heart because I went to her 14th birthday party,
it was on the next block.
And, you know, I went over there with my boy Snubby
and, you know, we're dancing.
And when it's, when the lights went off, you know,
in the hood, I had to go across the street
to ask my stepfather and my mom,
can I go back to the party?
It won't be for too much longer.
I know the lights are on.
And he's like, yeah, you can go.
When I came back, I was looking for her.
Everybody was slow dancing.
It was a red light and I couldn't really see.
And I opened a room and my boy Snubby
was on top of her kissing. She broke my heart.
You know what I'm saying? And then I have the song right after that. It's called The
Nice One. How the white girls in the school, I was hanging with my thug homies from the hood, but whenever, whenever like a new Caucasian girl would come into school,
they would hear and find me at my locker's like,
you're Erin, right?
I'm like, yeah, we hear you're the nice one.
I'm like, okay, you know what I'm saying?
Out of all the thug niggas I hang with,
you know what I'm saying?
I'm the nicer.
So the nice one is right after, you know what I'm saying?
It shows the duality of, you know what I'm saying?
My taste has never been, okay, I'm, oh, you know,
I'll just date this girl because he's black.
I'll date this girl because he's white.
I'll date this girl because he's Puerto Rican.
I'll date this girl because he's Asian.
I never had a type.
Right.
I was just love, you know what I'm saying?
Whatever love, whatever that felt like.
It didn't matter what it looked like.
You still lead with love in everything that you do.
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
So, 58164 is a journey.
It's an audio series, 17 episodes, fucking crazy.
June 13th, baby.
Yeah.
I can't wait, heck.
So, the last song, Sacrifice,
is the only one that ain't done.
That's the Jelly Roll Hook.
Yeah.
Son of a bitch, I'm gonna go home and spank him. You know what? He's actually downtown. That's the last song that ain't done is the jelly roll hook. Yeah. Son of a bitch, I'm going to go home and spank him.
You know what?
He's actually downtown.
That's the last song we haven't finished.
You guys can probably find him downtown.
He's doing a whole bunch of interviews today.
I don't know exactly.
I'll call him and see what he says.
Everything else is done.
That's the one that don't have a hook.
I will get on his ass for you.
I promise.
He said he was going to do it.
You know what I'm saying?
If he says he's going to do it, he'll do it.
If I would have had it when he was on,
when he came to visit me on the Falling In Reverse tour,
he got on my bus, he said, what you working on?
I was like, I'm working on his album called 58, 64.
He said, you got anything for me?
I said, nope, but I will find it.
Yeah.
So I found sacrifice, you know,
so I got that across my chest, you know what I'm saying?
Years ago, you know, everything I had to do to sacrifice the time I spent,
it was perfect because it was some was me shit, but you know, the shit I had to do,
I couldn't, you know, go be with everybody else because I had to sacrifice.
And while I was being on punishment and shit like that, I worked on my craft.
You know what I mean? I became Tech Nine, you know, and just saved my life.
You know? Yeah.
So that's the last song, you know, I'm saying sacrifice.
And it's beautiful. The album is crazy. I'm saying? Sacrifice, and it's beautiful.
The album is crazy.
I can't wait to hear it.
I'm so excited.
Yeah, we used one producer on this one.
A producer I've never worked with.
His name is Jay Peasy.
He brought that fucking ghetto funk
that I ain't had in a long time.
You know what I'm saying?
Like that I had back in the rogue dog villain days
and let's get fucked up and Mitch Bay days,
it's those kind of beats, you know?
And I was fucking scared at first.
I told Black Walk, because he's the one who told me, man,
your fans want to hear all you,
nobody else rapping on it, just people.
If you want to put some people on the hook, that's cool.
Wayne did a hook, you know what I'm saying?
And it's dope, it's called Yoda.
And then-
Little Wayne?
Yeah, yeah.
Then Jelly got sent one, you know what I'm saying?
Got a couple of people that's doing hooks,
but I'm all the verses and it's never been done
while we've been doing this, you know what I'm saying?
So when Black Walt first brought me the idea,
I was like, I've been hearing fans say
they tired of me doing collaborations all this time,
you know what I'm saying?
They just want to hear all me on the song.
I think that's boring as fuck.
And he's like, nah, I told Travis that's what Black Walt said.
And he said, Travis said, he's right, Tech.
You know what I'm saying?
They want to hear you rapping, you know what I'm saying?
And doing your thing, you know.
I love that Black Walt is still around.
Black Walt is still around.
I love that.
Yeah, he just got out of jail some years ago.
You know what I'm saying?
He was, you know, clocking much dollars on the first of 15, sorry.
But I got into it, the album and doing all the verses
and a lot of the hooks too.
And I was like, holy fucking shit.
It relieved me. Yeah. It's so, it relieved me.
Yeah.
It was therapeutic for you.
I found solace in talking about my stepfather
and me running away when he was trying to make me a real man.
I didn't understand it when I was 17,
but when I got out in the world,
I understand he was trying to make me better.
And I said, I love him and thank you.
And I played him, my brother Hakeem played him the song
and he said he was so happy.
And I said, Donnie, I said, thank you.
You know what I'm saying?
Because I probably fucked with him.
I never came back.
Is your stepfather still alive?
Yeah.
Oh, good.
We played him a song.
Yeah.
You know, it was called The Punishment.
He used to have me on punishment all the time
because I lived in a blood neighborhood and he knew when I was around my You know, it was called The Punishment. He used to have me on punishment all the time because I lived in a blood neighborhood
and he knew when I was around my homies,
shit was happening.
So he's like, I fuck up in school,
I'm in punishment for the whole summer.
Summer's on punishment.
I can't wait to hear this album.
And I think that it's gonna,
I think it's actually innovative what you guys are doing
because I don't think anybody's ever really done this.
No, I ain't never heard nobody else call their upcoming album
an audio series with 17 episodes.
Yeah, no, it's huge.
You guys are just creating your own wave again.
Yeah.
So thank you so much for being here, Ty.
Thank you for having me.
It was so natural and so comfortable.
I appreciate you being here, Travis.
I appreciate you being here.
And I just, I can't wait to see, you know,
your growth and your journey just continue
like it has been for all these years, three decades, right?
Like you have just been moving and shaking
and you don't plan on stopping.
And I love that.
So come back and see me.
Yay.
Thank you guys for tuning in to another episode
of Dumb Blonde.
I'll see you guys next week.
Bye.