Cherub’s Fun Lifestyle Is Built On Hard Work

Cherub

Finally! It took me quite a while to get this Cherub interview together. Over the past year or so, they’ve been very busy touring full time. By the time, I finally got everything together for this interview, I had a tour of my own! Glad we could finally connect and get this out there. I think a lot of bands and artists can learn a lot from these guys. At least that’s what I plan to do and the reason I reached out to them. Here’s the interview with Jason Huber & Jordan Kelley of Cherub. (pictured above l to r; photo credit Ramiah Branch Photography)


QE: So tell me a little about how you guys came together.

Jordan: We both attended MTSU’s recording industries program. We were both playing in separate groups at the time but eventually decided to get together and work on music. This led to us leaving school to going on the road full time! We are loving every minute of this crazy ride!

Jason: MTSU is supportive of their recording students adventuring out into the industry. School will always be there, but right now we have the opportunity to put in some time on the road and live our dreams.

QE: What was your first instrument?

Jordan: I got my first electric guitar when i was in 3rd grade and we have been in love ever since.

Jason: I had a bass first, but when my little brother got a six string to follow suit, I fell in love and ended up getting my own. I still consider making mixtures on cassettes the first way I shared the music I love with others… even if it was only a carpool of 5 people in a minivan.

QE:  How would you describe your music to someone who has never heard it.

Jordan: Our music has a very strong pop foundation with lots of leaning towards 80′s synths and falsetto vocals. Pop music has gotten a bad wrap lately due to people thinking its all like the radio, but most of our favorite music is pop. There is nothing like a catchy song!

Jason: Our live show is very high energy and all of the drums and basses hit well on large sound systems, so we end up getting associated with a lot of electronic music as well.

QE: Where do you draw inspiration from when your in the studio? What type of things get you excited to make music everyday?

Jordan: anything from sounds, other music, porno videos and efukt.com, and ambiance of my surroundings. Other music and people that we see getting down at our shows are such big inspirations for us to keep working on music daily.

Jason: Jordan tends to make music during the morning after waking up early… It’s a rare occasion he stays up very late making music other than in the studio. (We don’t sleep much in the studio while tracking vocals and mixing the records.) I on the other hand, like to collect my thoughts at the end of the day. Music keeps me up at night.

QE: Is collaboration an important part of your artist-DNA?

Jordan: for sure! me and Jason compliment each other through me building the songs in the studio to him taking them and turning them into an actual live show that can be performed.

Jason: We love to collaborate with other artists. We tend to be in house with our writing and recording process as Cherub, so collaboration is where we get to adventure outside the box. It’s where the magic happens!

Cherub Two Fresh Unplanned Parenthood

Cherub & Two Fresh – Unplanned Parenthood

QE: Who are some artists you guys want to make music with in the future?

Jordan: Pharrell, The Dream, Mariah Carey just to name a few. It would be so dope to have Prince make an appearance on a track with a crazy ass guitar solo. I also want to do a whole album with Jon Brion. I love his compositions so much! Oh, Lapalux would be dope too! I love his production!

Jason: There are a handful of producers I would love to Cherub to knock heads with in the studio… Sebastien Tellier, Calvin Harris… friends like Gramatik, Eliot Lipp, and Adam Deitch… or more off the wall picks like Butch Vig or Josh Homme. Personally, I would be able to die happy after working in the Studio with Dave Grohl and/or Adam Baker (Annuals). Both were a huge inspiration to me in deciding to pursue a life in music.

QE: What were some of the decisions you made to build your live show? 

Jason: We’re a duo simply because it’s simple. We have all the technological tools at our fingertips to go out on the road and perform live music on a large scale with only two people. We write our own music, stay involved the entire way through the mixing process, build and fix our own equipment, and run our own live sound when necessary. Of course we get help along the way but when Jordan and I can do it ourselves, we do. As for Ableton Live… it was an obvious choice for live DAW because of all of the live input processing as well as .wav file playback/manipulation we do. We’re also excited to be working with Livid Instruments on a custom MIDI controller for the Cherub live sets.

QE: Is it more important for you to have a great live show or to have a great album or record? 

Jordan:  They are both so important.  If you have an album that impresses people then they should be excited to see translated live.  If the live performance sucks then a lot of time its a disappointment for fans and they lose interest in the group all together.

Jason: I like it when a band’s live show is different from their delivery on record. As long as they can both stand on their own, it doesn’t matter if the live show isn’t an exact performance of the record in my book.

QE: Any wild tour stories?

Jordan: So many that I DONT want to tell. Wait, Jason got shingles on one tour. That shit cray

Jason: Shingles… wow. Awful time… great shows though… especially Oxford, MS at Proud Larry’s. I puked before going on stage. The crowd was intimate, but gave a lot of energy and that was the night I started getting better. I guess I’ve had a handful of puking-almost-on-stage incidents and hospital adventures on out tours. (none of which were due to intoxication) I got my first IV in Mexico!

Cherub in Mexico

QE: I’ve seen Cherub play as Live PA and as a DJ set. What are the main differences between those two performances?

Jason: Our live set is Cherub. We sing. We play guitar. It’s sweaty. It’s a live rock’n'roll show with a pop punch and some electro bass. We have been known to perform DJ sets and under secret names mainly because we just love sharing music with people… LOUD! Our DJ sets are normally pretty ridiculous. We play Cherub remixes, unreleased originals, our favorite tracks, and everything in between… while Jordan rips on the talkbox.

Jordan: the live show consists of me and jason and all original cherub material performed with our guitars and live vocals. the dj set is jason just doing his thing with tracks we love. there is really no original material in the dj sets except for some cherub remixes

QE: What would a band or a DJ need to do first in order to begin touring full time?

Jason: Don’t get frustrated if things are slow to get rolling. Take everything you do seriously along the way, but don’t forget why you started this in the first place. (Hopefully it’s because it’s what you love… if not, you might want to reconsider, unless you happen to like sleeping in cars.)

Jordan: realize you are going to be broke as shit and fully believing that your project is something you can make a living off of. Being able to tour requires a lot of money for gas, food, hotels, etc. bands and DJs need to realize they need to have shows properly set up to where they can make money or at least break even.

Cherub Quiet Entertainer

QE: What is something you do either every day or regularly that most people don’t know that contribute to your success?

Jason: We’ve on a really solid weird-health-drink kick for a while… Kombucha, fresh juice, yerbe mate. We feel it balances other extracurricular activities quite nicely. Laura Reed also taught us about many mumbling mice. They make music in the moonlight.

QE: What are your immediate goals, musically?

Jason: Because we do use so much modern technology in our writing and live performance, I want to always push us to stay on the cutting edge of what’s going on in the tech world. The first challenge was building out a live rig that suited all of our needs with live performance and studio-style processing/mixing/playback from on stage. Now the new challenge is slimming down our live rig for more frequent fly dates and upcoming overseas adventures, while we also incorporate new instrumentation and performance parts.

Jordan: Just continue to build upon our foundation that has already been started and keep having fun doing this. So many factors go into actually being a working musician that sometimes you forget making music is fun. I always want to be able to go onstage and love what I do!

Cherub New EP 100 Bottles


Thanks again to Cherub for taking some time out for the interview. Check them out at Cherublmusica.com. They will have a new EP out called 100 Bottles. Plus Like Cherub on Facebook & Follow Cherub on Twitter.

Ducko McFli Defines Hustle and the Artist Lifestyle

It seems like I always see Ducko McFli’s name when I’m taking a look at who’s doing something in the Nashville Hip Hop scene. I felt like I could learn a lot from him to help me get my work done and to hustle. Then I realized that we could all learn something. So I asked him a few questions. I’m so glad he had some time to spare. Here’s the result. 


QE: I first heard of you because of your project with Chancellor Warhol called N.O.B.O.T.S ? How has collaboration helped your career as an artist?

Ducko McFli: Collaborations have played a huge part in my career. From the project that kinda put me out in the open with Chance & The Nobots, to My project with Openmic, to doing production/songs with artist ranging from Dee Goodz, Young Buck, Ofishal, Rio, and more.. More than just a tool for promotion all the stuff I have learned from watching how these artist work has def played a greater role in the way I have been trying to structure my own project.

QE: You were heavily involved with dropping 4 albums last year. How were you able to get that much work done? 

DM:  I am a hermit, its really that simple. I never leave the house unless its something i really want to see or some where where i want to show support. Other than that i spend 90% of my time on my computer, mixing,writing, producing, sending emails, networking, editing video/pictures. I always tell everybody I speak to that I might not be the best but I def will be known as one of the hardest working. That and this is what I love to do. Its easy to just buckle down and get projects done when you have as much fun as I do making them.

QE: What tools are the most useful for you to stay organized?

DM: Man I live and die by my 17” Macbook Pro and Ableton Live. That’s really all I use. I have recently got a couple upgrades that im excited about but ultimately I always end up back on the OG set up.

QE: You often tell everyone that they can find you duckomcfli at everything. How important is it for you to be everywhere and why? 

DM: Its not so much about being everywhere for me but being where i need to be when somebody interested in my product wants to find it. I know that there is a strong cast of artist/producers coming up in the ville right now and I have always had a great appreciation for anybody who rocks with me. I know that there is plenty other things you could be doing with your time so if you take the time to check me out I want to make it as easy as possible for you.

QE: Tell me about your latest release?

DM:  KINGDUCK was my latest release, my 1st official release as a rapper. I love the project it was a great start for me as far as letting people know I rap and what I actually stand for as person. Its an E.P. I tried to keep it short and sweet its only 10 songs. Produced entirely by the homie Chris King (www.twitter.com/lifelovekicks

What a lot of people don’t know is that the entire project was wrote/recorded in 1 day. It really was crazy how it kinda happened. I sat down to write and didn’t get up till I had wrote all the songs, They all sounded good so I ran with it. Recorded it up at the big homie Matic Lee‘s spot in 2 hours and then he mixed it and we put it out. Its different, I don’t feel like there is anybody else really making music like I do, its got a different feel. I don’t do swag rap, I don’t do cool kid stuff.. The motto here is The Return of The Real and thats what I try and bring out.

QE: What are you currently working on?

DM: I am currently working on the next E.P. “The Return Of The Real” I have gotten together some new material that I am currently finishing up for the new project. We are really excited about it. I was reached out to by a couple producers after I dropped the KINGDUCK project and I have been blessed to have some crazy records and features from some super talented people. I am currently in the progress of shooting videos and about to start recording the last batch of songs for it and we are hoping for a May Release right in time for summer..

QE: Tell me about any other project you’re a part of.

DM: The other projects I am really on right now is the rest of the P.U.S.H. crew I have put together a strong cast of rappers and we are about to start putting out music really soon that is gonna get a good response we hope. Sofa Brown is in the final stages of finishing his tape “The Wonders” which is crazy, he is sending me songs as he gets them wrapped up and everyone is better than the last. We are about to start shooting his promo material here in the next week or so. There are also new projects being put together by Evan Blocker, and Karl Marx as well.

QE: If another artist wanted to collaborate with you, what would they need to do first? what do you look for when you want to work with someone? 

DM: I really just wanna know that you are working. I love good music, as long as you make good music and your business is on the up and up then lets work. I am not any better than anybody. I work a regular job and pay my bills just like anybody else. I hate when people tell me that they waited to hit me up or didn’t want to at first cause they thought I wouldn’t mess with them.. I make my self so openly available because i want to work. If you got an idea, HIT ME UP. Lets make some dope shit.

QE: How do you define “hustle” or “grind”? Meaning what are some tangible things that you actually do every day to make sure you’re successful? 

DM:  Hustle to me is just doing everything you can to get what you want. I don’t know if what im doing is the right thing, the good thing, whatever but its all I know and all I can do. I just make sure i know going into anything that i have put my best foot forward and whatever happens from that happens. All you can do is do you and keep putting out product, If its good and you are dedicated it will work. You just cant expect it over night and stay patient and humble.

QE: 2011 was a great year for Nashville hip hop. What would you like to see happen locally in 2012?

DM: Truthfully, Nashville is moving better than I have ever seen it. There used to be a problem with clicks not supporting other clicks and causing this unnecessary blockage of nashville talent but thats not happening any more. People are reaching out and linking up and making stuff happen. I love where we are right now.

QE: What artists do you see “doing it right” in Nashville and what are they doing? 

DM: There is so many artist right now im really messing with, Openmic, Petty, P.A. Lit, Stan, Kaby, Ofishal, Chancellor Warhol, and it goes on. People have their plans together and are making things happen for the city and I really have a crazy amount of respect for the people that are making noise in a city where the Hip Hop community has been silenced for so long.



Thanks so much to Ducko for a great interview! Please check out everything he’s up to on all of his various channels below.

www.duckomcfli.com

www.twitter.com/duckomcfli

duckomcfli@gmail.com

www.soundcloud.com/thepushlife

www.soundcloud.com/duckomcfli

Pics by ShotByShante Photography, Ramiah Branch Photography, & Kelly Hite Photo.