The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Goodie Mob returns

‘ Survival Kit’ is group’s first release in seven years.

- By Melissa Ruggieri melissa. ruggieri@ ajc. com

About halfway through Big Boi’s performanc­e at October’s “Big Night Out” concert in Centennial Olympic Park, he introduced his longtime musical brothers in Goodie Mob.

As the colorful foursome of Big Gipp, Ceelo Green, Khujo and T- Mo strolled onto the stage and slammed into “Cell Therapy,” the 2,000 socially distanced fans elevated the noise level to eardrum- vibrating decibels, so thrilled to see Goodie Mob trading verses with laser- like precision and verve.

The hip- hop veterans remain Atlanta royalt y, but their worldwide appeal was reignited earlier this year when Internet sleuths discovered the eerily prescient lyrics in their 1995 song, “Cell Therapy,” and its correlatio­n to pandemic shutdowns.

With time to spend in the studio and frank insight to share from a summer filled with Black Lives Matter protests and police brutality incidents, Goodie Mob corralled the Atlanta production crew of Organized Noize, as well as major guests including Chuck D, Big Boi and the musically elusive Andre 3000 ( on different tracks, so no, not an Outkast reunion) to craft their first new album in seven years.

On Nov. 13, the group released “Survival Kit,” a musically fluid, lyrically gut- punching collection of 16 tracks ( including interludes from Atlanta spoken word artist, Big Rube).

Recently, Big Gipp and Khujo checked in to chat; toward the end of the call, Green popped in between other interviews to drop some of

his specialize­d wisdom.

This is your first album in seven years, and “Frontline” and “4 My People” are incredibly resonant right now. What prodded you to do this album?

Big Gipp: We were about to do a Dungeon Family album that would consist of all of us since we had just come off the ( 2019 anniversar­y) tour. We thought, instead of being Goodie Mob or Outkast, let’s put it all together. We went in and started, and then ( Andre 3000) got a new movie rolling, so we weren’t able to do it. As soon as the pandemic hit, we started having conversati­ons with Organized Noize, and they said since we’re sitting around, let’s work; let’s put what we’re having phone conversati­ons about in songs. When the pandemic hit, people started saying, “They talked about this 25 years ago” ( in the song “Cell Therapy”), so our relevancy grew even bigger, and people were finding Goodie Mob. The actual lyrics, we were talking about there would be a time when the government would lock everything down. We didn’t know there would be an actual virus that would cause it, but we put it into the universe.

You’ve got a lot to say on this album, starting with “Prey 4 Da Sheep” and “Are You Ready.” What are some of the messages you want people to take away?

Khujo: Always think for yourself. Don’t be complacent. Always try to educate yourself so you’ll be an asset to others.

Big Gipp: Informatio­n is king. The biggest thing about hip- hop i s that we have to teach. I feel like Goodie Mob, this is our scroll. You’re gonna have to take some me time for yourself. You’re gonna have to learn how to understand. Most people don’t understand what’s in their faces right now. The sheep will always be the followers and never go outside what they’ve been taught.

You have some high- profile guests on here. How did you get Andre 3000 out of music retirement?

Big Gipp: It’s not even about music retirement. OutKast has had so much success and ‘ Dre don’t rap unless he likes the actual song and the actual topic. We sent him a couple of songs, and he picked what he wanted to be on. We don’t force nothing. We let him speak on what he’s comfortabl­e with … We’re just showing to our community, our city, our hip- hop fans, that the Dungeon Family, we stay together through it all. Nothing will ever separate us, not the industry or this thing you call fame.

Khujo: We were a family who watched each other grow up. That being said, the money and the fame, it didn’t have that type of effect on us like other people and other groups. Neither Big ( Boi) nor ‘ Dre had to jump on this record, but they’re our little brothers, but now they’re like big brothers to come in and help us celebrate like this. Looking back for a minute, it’s the 25th anniversar­y of “Soul Food.” When you think back to that album, did you feel like you were breaking ground at the time?

Gipp: We did. “Soul Food” was about Southern culture and the things that we learned as kids. After it came out, a lot of people let us know how much we helped them. It really gave the South an identity.

How would you describe what each of you brings to Goodie Mob?

Green: ( T-) Mo i s really direct, to the point. He translates to real people. I’m a hippie and kind of artsy- fartsy in that way, but I do bring that community along with me. We’re not a monolith; there’s a multitude of many different perspectiv­es. I always liken it to the Village People.

Khujo: I love to hear all the guys talk just to see where we are, and at this age and experience, it’s amazing to me. I love the interviews so we can explain what we can bring to the table. With “Soul Food,” we were bringing food groups to the table, but now with “Survival Kit,” we can each bring one of those things. I’m gonna take a good guess and say maybe I’m the first aid kit.

Big Gipp: I can always identify people who can go where we do. We never hated on no one. Everyone who came up in the city, we were involved in their careers. I know my fashion sense, it helped Atlanta; it was never boxed in and that’s part of Atlanta. You can put Atlanta in the room and nobody looks the same.

 ?? COURTESY OF NINA KARETOVA ?? Atlanta’s Goodie Mob — Khujo ( from lef t), T- Mo, Ceelo Green and Big Gipp — released their first new album in seven years, “Survival Kit,” on Nov. 13.
COURTESY OF NINA KARETOVA Atlanta’s Goodie Mob — Khujo ( from lef t), T- Mo, Ceelo Green and Big Gipp — released their first new album in seven years, “Survival Kit,” on Nov. 13.
 ??  ?? Goodie Mob’s 2020 album, “Survival Kit,” features Andre 3000, Big Boi, Chuck D and others.
Goodie Mob’s 2020 album, “Survival Kit,” features Andre 3000, Big Boi, Chuck D and others.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Goodie Mob’s Khujo joined the rest of the group and Big Boi at the “Big Night Out” concert event at Centennial Olympic Park in October.
CONTRIBUTE­D Goodie Mob’s Khujo joined the rest of the group and Big Boi at the “Big Night Out” concert event at Centennial Olympic Park in October.

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