Adeem Interview Author: Adam Bernard
A gravedigger and the stories of the dead. Those are the topics of Adeem's
first official solo effort, The Volume in the Ground.
Don't think of this as
the former Glue emcee becoming unglued, though. It's really an artistic
effort that's been more than two years in the making. This week RapReviews
caught up with the New Hampshire native to find out more about the album,
why he titled his website "winners never sleep," and why the members of Glue
decided to go their separate ways.
Adam Bernard: Your website, and record label, are titled Winners Never
Sleep. This sounds like the indie, DIY, mantra. I gotta ask, do you miss sleep?
Adeem: {*laughs*} You know, I feel like I haven't really slept well for most
of my life, so I don't really remember it enough to miss it. My wife and I
had a daughter seven months ago and insomnia completely prepared me for
having a child. It was great. So I don't miss sleeping and I feel my most
productive when I'm not sleeping because then everyone else is asleep and
I'm awake.
AB: Having that "Winners Never Sleep" mentality, do you ever allow yourself
to feel a sense of satisfaction, or are a you always going?
A: That's a good question. I don't know. I think that there are definitely
times when I just stop because I think that I have a tendency to get
overwhelmed by my own busyness. I say "winners never sleep," but at the same
time I definitely sleep a lot for someone who has a website that says
"winners never sleep," so I guess I'm kind of a hypocrite. At the same time
it means just the constant drive to be better and to be doing bigger and
better things and never to necessarily be satisfied with yourself until
you're done, whatever being done means, until you're finished with your
career, or whatever it is you want to do with your life. It's all the same
thing, I'll sleep when I'm dead, winners never sleep, and so on and so forth.
AB: So winners never sleep, but they do get to nap.
A: Absolutely. It's important to nap. Even though I'm horrible at taking
naps. Maybe it should be "winners never nap," but "winners never sleep"
seemed to fit better. Where that comes from, I was in a group for a really
long time called Glue and it was 2001 and when we had first come together to
work on a record there was no sleeping. We were so excited to all be
together and we were in a basement in Aurora, Illinois, in a basement
studio, and we were just working on this music. We did this one song, it was
a three part song and none of us had ever done that before. The beat changed
three different times and it took a really long time to put it together and
I just said "winners never sleep." It was a joke, but we ended up calling
the song "Winners Never Sleep" and that really ended up becoming the whole
mentality of that project and I felt like it kind of carried on.
AB: I'm glad you mentioned Glue because a lot of people probably remember
you from Glue. Why did you guys disband, and are you still in contact?
A: Yeah, we're a family, it will always be that way, but it was life. I was
getting really itchy to make more music and we've never lived in the same
place, all three of us. I lived in Chicago for two years because that's
where the producer, Maker, lives, and the DJ, DQ, he lives in Cincinnati, so
it was a lot of traveling and it was a lot of going. It was a nonstop thing.
It's a really long story, but the short of it is that we weren't really
moving. Things were not going in a forward motion anymore and I really
wanted to work on this album. I had come up with the idea and originally
pitched it to be the next Glue album and it just wasn't the album that we
were all supposed to make at the time. I really wanted to go in that
direction. DQ was really interested in going back to school. He's in his
mid-30s and he had never finished school, so he wanted to get his degree, so
he did that. Maker was DJing. We just went in three different directions.
They're actually on this album. Maker produced two songs and DQ did the
intro and did scratches on another song.
AB: And the album is The Volume in the Ground.
What does the name represent?
A: It is directly related to the concept. To me it meant a bunch of things,
but I was thinking a lot about how the word underground is such a cliche
thing now. It's like everybody who's underground rap is really just selling
CDs out of their mom's basement. It used to mean something different, but I
was taking that term underground and looking at it and applying it to the
concept of the album. The concept of the album is about a grave digger and
he can hear the stories of the people he's burying. That's what all the
songs are, they're different stories. A couple are about him and the rest
are about the ghosts that he's seeing and that he's burying. When I came up
with the idea, it took a long time to find that title, but The Volume in the
Ground, to me, it just worked. I like the word volume a lot and it implies a
lot of different things. The volume is important being applied to sound.
It's the noises he was hearing in the ground, the songs he was hearing, so
it's The Volume in the Ground.
AB: Twenty three people contributed to this effort. With that kind of a
lineup is it still fair to call it a solo record?
A: {*laughs*} Probably not. It's more like a communal record, probably. There
are all these people involved and what was so incredible about all those
people, a handful of them, maybe one or two of them, they paired off into
who knew each other. It's not like everybody on the record all knows each
other. Because the album took so long and I worked on it for so long, I
would just be meeting different people and it was wide open. I would say I
met this person and they introduced me to this person and so maybe they can
add something. Then that person would introduce me to somebody else and it
just kept going down the line. All of those contributors are over two years'
time. I definitely was pulling strings with everybody and at the end of the
day I call it a solo album because I was 100% in charge of mixing and I did
that with a really incredible engineer, but every little piece came out of my head.
AB: How did you go about combining that many minds, voices, and
personalities into one cohesive piece of work?
A: It was really tough. It was not effortless, at all. It's funny, I have a
publicist that I'm working with who is awesome and when she said explain the
album a little bit and how it came together I had like seven pages of what
happened, and Chad (Chadeo of Hunger Music Productions), who you know, was
such a huge part of this. I knew what I wanted, I knew what I wanted to hear
and I knew I could tell people I want it to be similar to this, or all your
drums have to sound like this, or if you're gonna gonna use electric guitar
I want you to run it through an amp and put this effect on it. It took a lot
of getting the beats from people when I would work with different producers
and then I would basically take those beats into the studio and then I would
add a lot of things on top of them, a lot of percussion. The reason there's
a ton of tambourine on the album and a lot of hand claps and a lot of stomps
is because I would take a beat and I would add things that were similar. So
Chad could send me a beat and MF Shalem could send me a beat and there would
still be the same tambourine on it, so it was something that was cohesive.
In the mixing process, too, I tried to mix the drums similar, any guitar
that was on it, I tried to mix that similar. I tried to do things that made
it sound more cohesive than it was in its raw state.
AB: Finally, the first single you've released from the album is "Meet Death
with a Handshake." Why are you so cordial with the Grim Reaper?
A: {*laughs*} I don't know. I feel like, I think I have a healthy obsession
with death, which I think is different than I'm sure a lot of other people
who do not have a healthy obsession with death. I really don't know. I think
I've been obsessed with death my whole life because life is, it's something
you can see, you can live that. You can live life and you can talk about it
and you can figure it out and you can go to therapy and you can talk to your
friends and you can do all these things, but you can't live death. You can
experience death once and then never get to talk about it with anyone, other
than people who have quote-unquote "near death experiences." No one's ever
said "I died and that shit was crazy." And it means so many things. The
death of a relationship, the death of an actual thing. I try not to focus on
it, but at the same time I am fascinated with it.
Be sure to check out Adeem on the web at
winnersneversleep.com
and follow Adam on Twitter @AdamsWorldBlog.
The Volume in the Ground is in stores now!
Originally posted: June 7th, 2011
source: RapReviews.com
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