Blueprint talks Vigilante Genesis

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par Personnel Altwire

If one line Blueprint ever spit on a record could serve as a mantra for his career path, it might be this one from 2011’s “Radio-Inactive”:

“Make it more commercial, Print/
You probably would sell more”
But Iโ€™m eating now, so Iโ€™m like, “What the hell for?”

Blueprint is one ofย the most prolific producers, rappers, and collaborators in the underground scene since 1999. Blueprint has steadily churned out banger after banger with acts such as:ย Rhymesayers, Greenhouse Effect, Soul Position, and Atmosphere. He started out as a producer; churning out dark, head-bobbing beats for Aesop Rock and Illogic. Soon, he jumped into the rap game and honed his distinctive, yet deliberate pace, along with his elastic flows. His approach has been one of constant evolution and improvement from record to record; especially since 2011’s major stylistic turning point,ย Adventures in Counter Culture.

On April 20, Blueprint announced a new narrative EP produced entirely by fellow Rhymesayers veteran Aesop Rock. ย I got the chance to chat with him between his many projects. ย We spoke at length about hisย inspiration behind the album and the stylistic direction of the story. ย Read the interview below:

VG-CD-Cover-Update_smaller

AltWire [Dan Kok]: So Vigilante Genesis is a story album. What is the inspiration for this story in particular?

Blueprint: I mean Iโ€™d say itโ€™s a combination of reading comic books and having shit happen in real life that kind of makes you think about what you can do and what you would do if certain things happened, you know?ย  So the character in the story heโ€™sโ€ฆheโ€™s just a regular dude, you know, but heโ€™s just kind of trying to figure out how to find, you knowโ€ฆI guess resolution in an environment where thatโ€™s just not possible.ย  So, heโ€™s trying to find a way to get back at businesses or institutions or whatever his way is of fighting.ย  But in doing so he kind of getโ€™s taken down the wrong road.ย  I mean itโ€™s a fine line between activism and vigilanteism and just, you know, thinking youโ€™re taking matters into your own hands but thereโ€™s also the law involved.ย  And so the record kinda goes deep into-

Random nail gun noisily fallsย 

[laughs] Random nail gun.ย  Yeah, so thereโ€™s that fine line, so the record kinda comes from that.

Yeah

There was an event where I kind of felt likeโ€ฆI was dealing with this business and I felt like they kind of shitted on me.ย  And it just gave me the idea like โ€œMan, what do you do when you canโ€™t get no resolution?ย  Is this why people bust out windows of businesses?โ€ย  They say a lot of employee theft is due to, you know, being unhappy with pay and things of that nature, these little passive aggressive or just directly aggressive things that people do.ย  It made me think about that, so the story kind of came from that and from just falling back in love with and rediscovering comics again.

Are there specific comics that served as a jumping off point?

I think around 2008 or 2009โ€ฆI stopped drinking in 2010, but in 2008 and 2009 I started getting back into reading again.ย  You know I missed so many comic books; years of comics.ย  I remember looking at some top 10 lists of the best graphic novels of all time.ย  So I went back and I looked at the list and I was like โ€œMan, Iโ€™m gonna try to get as many of these as possible.โ€ย  So I took that list and I went back and, like, I read the Watchmen for the first timeโ€ฆ

So good

Yeah I read Batman: The Dark Night Returns, Batman Year Oneโ€ฆThe Sandman, some Daredevil stuff, I just started getting into more of the full length graphic novels and that kind of got me into reading again.ย  Those stories and that whole ethic.ย  You know, those are all people with no powers except Dr. Manhattan in Watchmen; but except him, none of the other characters have powers. It just kind of awakened me to that kind of story telling.

Yeah, I think itโ€™s interesting, those normal people and that sort of darker bent to a lot of those comics.ย  They explore that very fine line between moral right and moral wrong.ย  Thatโ€™s very interesting that you mention those as major inspirations for this album.ย  Does this story also sort of toe that line between moral right and moral wrong?

Oh completely, completely it does.ย  I mean thereโ€™s parts where, you know, the character is trying to do the right thing, but heโ€™s not afraid to, like, cut somebody or stab somebody. [laughs] You know, whereas most guys they have that absolute thing, Batman wonโ€™t use a gun, Daredevil wonโ€™t either, he wonโ€™t kill anyone.ย  My character doesnโ€™t really have that.ย  Itโ€™s not necessarily revealed in this thing, in the story, that heโ€™s that guy.ย  Heโ€™ll take it as far as the people who are attempting to harm him will take it.

Aside from the comic books, your work seems to have sort of a juggling of the idea of having a real respect for the art form and a real reverence for the roots of everything and where itโ€™s taken you and a knowledge and some harsh criticisms of how that has affected culture in sometimes negative ways.ย  Does this album fit at all into that idea?

I donโ€™t think so.ย  I think this is kind ofโ€ฆBecause this record, thereโ€™s only like one song that isnโ€™t a complete story.ย  So this record is pretty much a concept record, as much as you can make a concept record.ย  I kind of wanted to really challenge myself to make the record its own thing and not be like anything else in my catalogue.

As far as sound goes, youโ€™ve also had really consistently evolving sounds especially since Adventures in Counter Culture.ย  There was a really ethereal, synth-y sound to that and Respect the Architect ended up with more of a boom-bap thing.ย  What kind of sound influences are gonna come into Vigilante Genesis?

Well this record was produced entirely by Aesop Rock.

Right

That right there just changes the whole feel there.ย  Maybe a feel I wouldnโ€™t have gone for myself for just a standard record.ย  But for a concept record where weโ€™re talking about the darker elements of human behavior and vigilanteism and dealing with people, I think that his production fits it perfectly.ย  Itโ€™s not production that he would have necessarily rhymed on himself.ย  He would send me beats for it and there may be ten beats and I would always pick the one that he didnโ€™t think I would pick.ย  Heโ€™d be like โ€œWhyโ€™d you pick that one?โ€ So he was thinking heโ€™d put the ones he liked the most as the first 5 or 10, and I would pick the 11th one every time. [Laughs]

So youโ€™re saying itโ€™s a whole self contained thing.ย  I donโ€™t know, is this a typical Blueprint record? A typical Aesop record?ย  An Orphanage record?ย  None?ย  All?

I donโ€™t think itโ€™s either.ย  I think itโ€™s gonna be something new unto itself.ย  I think he just put out a new single from his latest record and, I mean, the stuff that weโ€™re doing on this project doesnโ€™t sound like anything on his record.ย  And theres a reason, and the main reason is that when youโ€™re telling stories, you have to make sure that the music is kind of a backdrop.ย  Itโ€™s almost, like, the same philosophy as when people are scoring movies.ย  When they score movies there not choosing the music that bangs, you know?ย  There choosing the music that complements the mood of the narrative and thatโ€™s kind of what I chose in his production every time.ย  I chose pieces that completely complemented the narrative, but they wouldnโ€™t necessarily be beats that you would hear and say โ€œIโ€™m gonna write a rap song talkinโ€™ shitโ€ you know?ย  Itโ€™s perfect for what Iโ€™m doing but it doesnโ€™t necessarily fit anything that weโ€™ve done prior.

Is this the longest full project youโ€™ve worked with Aesop on?

Yes it is.

So what was it like to come together with him on something so highly conceptual and really ambitious?

The production part for him was probablyโ€ฆthat was probably the easiest part.ย  The difficult part was for me to make sure I had the story and the vision and was choosing things that could make the story sound right.ย  Not repetitive, not sounding like his stuff or my stuff, not what people expect from us.ย  That was the biggest challenge.ย  I mean as far as his working attitude, Aesop is the consummate professional.ย  Heโ€™s a guy that wakes up and does music all day.ย  If you call him up and say โ€œHey I need aโ€ฆwhatever for thisโ€ heโ€™ll probably get it back to you within an hour.ย  Thatโ€™s the kind of musician he is.ย  He doesnโ€™t play basketball or play chess, you knowโ€ฆ[laughs] He doesnโ€™t go to the bar, watch MMA, he doesnโ€™t do that shit.ย  He just is into music, heโ€™s that kind of guy.

Youโ€™ve both had absurd turnaround times on stuff lately.ย  Like, coming out with consistently one or two projects a year since Adventures in Counter Culture in 2011.ย  What do you think it is about you guys that makes you so able to do that?

If I had to guess I would say that itโ€™s the fact that neither of us drink. [laughs] Thatโ€™s my first guess, I think sobriety.ย  Cause when I was drinking I couldnโ€™t turn around records as fast, Iโ€™d be sitting around second guessing myself for about a year having something great.ย  I thought like โ€œIโ€™ll just do it when Iโ€™m inspired.โ€ย  Now itโ€™s like, โ€œAw, let me just finish this.ย  Let me just dedicate more time to it.โ€ย  That was my turning point.ย  And as far as I know I donโ€™t think [Aesop] has really ever been a drinkerโ€ฆas an artist those things kind of help loosen you up at times, but then they kind of have a diminishing return after a while.

I think itโ€™s interesting you mention second guessing.ย  Is it that youโ€™re more confident with what youโ€™re putting out?ย  Or have you just learned to not second guess and just put it out because thats better than waiting until itโ€™s perfect?

Exactly, because thereโ€™s no such thing as perfect.ย  Iโ€™ve had situations where the music Iโ€™ve worked on for the least amount of time has been the most well received and the music that Iโ€™ve sat on forever trying to make it โ€œperfectโ€ has been the least well received.ย  And in my mind I knew that because Iโ€™d worked on this thing for a long period of time that everyone else would see that or hear it.ย  But thatโ€™s not always the case, you know.ย  I think that as you do it longer and longer you kind of understand that more and more that just because you worked on something forever doesnโ€™t mean its good or itโ€™s gonna hit the people.ย  They donโ€™t necessarily know that backstory, they just know the finished product.

Right.ย  So one of my big questions is that with Aesop handling the production and you taking the MCing, those are not the roles that each of you found notoriety for early in your careers.ย  Twisting that and putting him on production and you on vocals, it seems like it might be a surprise to some.ย  Is that something you were actively thinking about?

I mean, I think for me and Aesop, Iโ€™ve known him for so long that I feel like as a friend and as a fan Iโ€™ve watched him progress as a producer over the years to where I remember when he was afraid to do beats, heโ€™d maybe do one beat.ย  Then he went to where he was like โ€œIโ€™ll maybe do 3 or 4 and let Blockhead do the rest.โ€ย  And then heโ€™s like โ€œYou know what?ย  I actually produced this whole record myself.โ€ย  And heโ€™d send it to me early and Iโ€™m like โ€œYo man, this is great.ย  Youโ€™ve got it.โ€ย  So I think that I always saw his progression from a technical standpoint even though, like youโ€™re saying, he was known as an MC first and foremost and his production was secondary.ย  And my role was different, I started in the background producing Illogic and Greenhouse records, then as an MC I started making a name but people still know me as a producer primarily.ย  So my choice in that sense was, like, seeing how far heโ€™s come and seeing how dope he is as a producer and just what he can create, I thought he could perfectly complement what I was doing.ย  But I knew that technically he was there, and I thought this was kinda of an interesting take on what people know of us.

Yeah, I think itโ€™s a really interesting take, whether you were intentionally trying to step outside of those expectations or not, I think itโ€™s a cool flipping of the script.

Ouais.

And you have the first single out today right?

Yeah, I just posted it about 30 minutes ago.

Awesome, Iโ€™m gonna go check it out right away.ย  I canโ€™t wait to hear what itโ€™s all gonna sound like.

Okay.

Well Iโ€™m sure you are busy getting everything together and probably working on the next thing already.ย  But you know Iโ€™ve got my preorder in and I really canโ€™t wait to hear what you come up with.

Awesome.ย  Thanks man, I appreciate that.ย  And weโ€™re working on a new Soul Position.ย  I mean, itโ€™s pretty much done, I just have to rerecord a couple things.

I canโ€™t wait to hear that too.

Yeah, so this might be another year where I actually get out two big records.

That sounds great.ย  Well thanks for taking the time, man.

No problem, thank you.

Hereย is the first single from Blueprint’s upcoming Vigilante Genesis EP, produced entirely by Aesop Rock. Vigilante Genesisย comes out May 27th.

Photo Sources & Credit: printmatic.net & weightess.net

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