Rolling Stone

MUSICIANS ON MUSICIANS

Revealing conversati­ons between innovators of all genres and generation­s

- PAUL THOMPSON

“You were a breath of fresh air from the West Coast,” Future (right) tells Roddy Ricch. “New, fresh, fly, melodic.”

Growing up in Compton in the 2010s, Roddy Ricch listened more to the Atlanta rap hymns of Future than to his iconic West Coast forebears. (“I was born in ’98,” he has said. “What do you expect me to rap like?”) He’s since become one of the most popular artists in the world with the borderless melodic instincts heard on his unstoppabl­e hit “The Box.” So it makes sense that Roddy, 22, would request to speak with Future, 37, who is celebratin­g nearly a decade as one of rap’s most prolific hitmakers, with an influentia­l style that uses alien vocal processing to accentuate deeply human pain. Future has spent most of that time as a critical and listener darling, too, with the possible exception of 2014’s Honest, which stands as an outlier in his catalog for its warmer, gentler tones. The two artists discussed the keys to a long career, the advantages of home recording, and the importance of staying above the fray.

FUTURE How old were you when you were like, “Now I wanna start doing music?”

RODDY Like 16.

FUTURE What were you listening to?

RODDY You, [Young] Thug, Kendrick [Lamar]. FUTURE Did you go to a real studio, or did you make one in your room?

RODDY In the room. My uncle used to try to rap. I learned how to use Pro Tools watching him. But I didn’t really know what was going on until I took it into my own hands. That’s why I understand sound — how music is supposed to sit behind vocals — and arranging.

FUTURE I can see that. I’m always like, “Man, I wish I knew how to record myself.” I hear it a whole different way than the engineer does, but I can’t really tell him in words or show him [what I’m hearing]. I’ve always gotta settle for 98 percent. There’s no one particular way to record: Sometimes you might freestyle, sometimes you might hum a melody, sometimes you might write it down in your notes.

RODDY Yeah, I feel like my shit is different every time. You always want to improve your sound, that’s the whole thing. You’re always trying to push it further, to change it up.

FUTURE I’m from the hood, so [on my earliest songs] I always was making wordplay out of what they was talking about on the block. It was fresh, because nobody had ever heard that side of my neighborho­od, as far as the lingo, like “Fuck up some commas” or “racks.” Nobody was talking about racks, but we was talking about racks in the hood: “I’m getting racks.” The world wasn’t hip to it. They had probably heard of lean, but they weren’t hip to us saying “dirty Sprite.”

RODDY I make music for niggas that I came up with, so they always felt the music from the very first time I ever said something on a beat. We all came up together. We all we got.

FUTURE You were a breath of fresh air from the West Coast for sure. You could hypnotize [someone] off the rip — it was new, fresh, fly, melodic. That’s why you’re here right now. You waited for a second, then attacked the lane.

RODDY When everyone else is moving fast, I tend to question that. Why is everything moving so fast? Let me kick back and move a little slower. That’s just how I am. I’m more of an observer than a person who moves.

FUTURE Man, if I went back to 22, I would slow down, listen more, observe more, instead of moving so fast. I like the way you’re taking your time with everything, critiquing the art. I might have missed something that I could’ve painted better, [but] I skipped over and went to the next thing . . . dropping three mixtapes in three months. Moving too quick.

RODDY What’s the key to your longevity? FUTURE Staying in the studio and blocking everything out. No matter what’s going on in the world, you got here from music. You didn’t get here from how you wear your hair, or how you dress, or what hood you’re from, or from nobody around you. If you’ve got the right music, you can get another lawyer. If you’ve got the right music, you can make more money to buy another house. If you’re in the house crying about certain shit that’s going on . . . get over it. Go to the studio, make a hit about it. RODDY I feel like you should leave everything in the music.

FUTURE But, you know, they’ll judge you. You can’t say, “I’m fucking two sisters at the same time” now and put it on the internet. The internet is gonna go crazy. But when it came out [in 2015], then it was a cool thing to say. If you say that shit right now, they’re gonna explode. You can’t say certain things. I see people say certain things in their music and I’m like, “Nigga, I was talking crazier than that at the beginning, [but] you can’t say that right now.” You can’t even write a tweet without apologizin­g.

RODDY That’s why I’d rather not say shit. FUTURE Within five minutes, here comes the apology. “I’m sorrrrrrry.” [ Laughs.] You should’ve never said that! You have to adjust to the times. You’ve gotta think before you say something. I’m in a space where I just don’t care about certain shit. [ Both laugh.] I built the brand where they’re like, “That’s Future, don’t pay attention to him. He’s fucked up anyway.” For me, I can get away with shit. You can get rich off of being the villain, because that’s what they expect. If I try to be a good guy right now, they won’t want that. “Where’s the bad Future at?” Then I [become] that, and my concerts sell out. You start talking about [being] in love, and they get mad at me. I be like, “What the fuck, y’all don’t want me to be in love? Ahhh, man!” Why I gotta be the one who can’t do nothing?

RODDY You big Pluto!

FUTURE There’s always pressure to say the right shit. Even right now, we don’t know if we’re saying the right thing, if we’re saying the wrong thing. The shit we talk about off camera is not what we’d talk about on camera. This might not be what we say in a [private] conversati­on. We’d wanna bleep out certain stuff.

Certain stuff might be a viral moment for y’all, and we might not even want that moment. I just want to be a thousand-percent honest, to tell the truth.

“You got here from music. If you’re in the house crying, get over it. Go to the studio. Make a hit about it.”

—FUTURE

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH BY Mason Poole ??
PHOTOGRAPH BY Mason Poole
 ?? PHOTOGRAPH BY
MASON POOLE ?? Roddy Ricch
( left)
Future
( right)
PHOTOGRAPH BY MASON POOLE Roddy Ricch ( left) Future ( right)

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