Interview: Kid Ink at Irving Plaza
During his My Own Lane Tour, Kid Ink shared some sound advice for aspiring talent looking to crossover from mixtape to mainstream, his new stage production, his 4/20 plans and more. He was very kind and informative. Delve into our interview and be sure to watch the beautiful video.
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On your album, Iāve noticed that itās very uptempo until the listener gets to āTattoo Of My Nameā, can you talk a little bit about the production and did you do any production on this album?
Kid Ink: As far as the tempo of the records, I think definitely — Iām usually more about energetic records. Iām usually about having energy. Thatās how I perform. I definitely think about when Iām performing [and thinking] how these songs are going to be performed. You know, recording them. When I do slower songs, those are the ones I donāt really like to perform. Not really apart of my show as much so itās a little bit more energy on there but at the same time, Iām learning how to tap into a different zone and really get into more āvibe momentsā where people can really just vibe with the record instead of always having fun and dancing. Definitely getting into that and understanding those songs more and as far as production goes, I donāt make the beats like I used to make beats. I still know how to make beats. Itās not really something you can forget but I do help with the production on stuff that I do now just because you know, itās something that you canāt run from.
On āTattoo Of My Nameā, you talk about having a different kind of trust for a woman who has a tattoo of your name on her body; it being a representation of you. We must know: How many tattoos do you have and are all of your tattoos done in LA?
Kid Ink: My tattoos are not all done in L.A. Of course, thatās where I started but as I started travelling on the road and the different artists I would see here and there. From there, I just ran out of space where I donāt know the number at all. Itās kind of hard to keep up. Including you forget where you have stuff and you canāt see everyday. Like, I canāt see my back tattoos to always remember whatās there. So definitely about 90% of my body is filled with ink.
Do you have a favourite?
Man, itās hard to have favourites too. Because you know, some of my favourites, I forget about them like I said. Itās just stuff that I have under my hairline or just stuff that I canāt really see so I think [my favourites are] just the conversational pieces.
Tell us about tonight, concerning OnesToWatch and Skype. How did that come to be?
Weāre going to have some fun tonight ā MyOwnLane Tour ā Itās sponsored by Reebok. Thank you for doing everything. We also have the meet and greets with Skype and everybody. You know, weāre just having some fun. Itās a new show. Iām excited not only to get across the new songs I have but the new stage production I have now. Now, thereās a bigger DJ booth and lights, you know, boxes to jump on and movies playing in the background so thereās a lot more I can incorporate into the show that keeps the fan entertained. Iām all the way over here and they canāt see me all the way over there. Iām really excited to test those new things out. Itās been such a good tour so far. Thereās nothing bad I can say about it besides itās just a learning experience. Of course certain things donāt go right, the way you want them. Itās all about having fun.
The name of our publication is called GrungeCake, when it comes to mind, what do you think?
GrungeCake? I mean, if you know me, you know I like cake. Period. Like birthday cakes and all kinds of cakes. Iām a fat boy at heart. You know, one of my many flaws is to eat cake whenever I see it but GrungeCake, it makes me hungry. Obviously, at this point I have a sweet tooth. Sounds like me.
Itās 4/20. Do you have any special plans?
I’ll definitely be celebrating the holidays. 4/20, great holiday. I canāt wait to be onstage. Itās definitely cool to be somewhere where I think itās less likely to find someone smoking like just out and about, cause you know, Iām from L.A. so itās just easier to do that. You know, you would expect to be somewhere where I could just be free but I think inside tonight, weāre going to have enough fun. Hopefully, people pass me enough fun and we can celebrate the holidays.
You come from the mixtape circuit and youāve now crossed over to the mainstream, how would advise someone (who might be inspired by you) to take on the same type of lane that you did?
I think, you know, one of the biggest things is the type of music. Not necessarily the genre, more so than just the structure of music. I think mainstream music or radio-friendly music isnāt just because of what people are talking about sometimes… Itās kind of the structure of the song and how to make a song thatās easy listening for people. Itās how the song comes in and goes straight to the hook and just different things that I think as an artist and a musician you have to learn, if thatās the type of route you want to take in the beginning. Itās about learning how to separate mixtape songs and songs that you feel like could be on the radio. You know, and of course, some people will get in between that and sneak those records in that you wouldnāt normally think you would hear on the radio but at the end of the day, the ones that usually last are the ones that sound like they should be on the radio. Itās a certain structure the song has or a certain beat. Itās just a difference.
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Last year was a good one