Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Welcome to Wade's World


Photo Courtesy of thewadecollins.com

If you are a fan hip-hop who appreciates such names like Nas, Andre 3000, 9th Wonder and Just Blaze, I would like to invite you into Wade’s World. Wade’s World consists of skateboards, good music, and a prosperous lifestyle.

 Wade is a talented individual who is a gifted emcee and also a skilled producer. He has already produced for up and coming artists such as Will Brennan and Lamar Adot Thomas; who were openers for superstars like J. Cole, B.o.B., Erykah Badu, Young Jeezy and more. Wade first began sampling and mixing tracks in high school that soon turned into the first produced tracks for his debut album Counter Culture. Along side of some friends who also recorded with Wade, Counter Culture was a hometown favorite in the Tampa area. Just a week after its release, Wade and his friends were performing at local venues in Ybor City.  Since that early start Wade has continued to record and produce new music. His catalogue consists of the popular “In The Water” Mixtape series, the “Smoke and Mirrors EP”, the “Dearly Departed EP” and the recently released “One Day Away EP”. 



The emerging dual threat artist is currently working on his album G.L.O.R.E. (God Living Omnipotent and Redeems Endless) that is scheduled to be ready in January of next year. I had the chance to interview Wade and learn more about Wade’s World.   

Emerging Hip-Hop: What inspired you at an early age to pursue a career in music? 

 Wade: Well, I was enrolled in Performing arts school since 3rd grade, and everyday I was forced to have some sort of art class whether it be dance, music, 2d art, and etc. So music had become part of daily life. In 4th grade I was a drummer for the school steel drum band, and we would performed in Ybor City and at other elementary schools and middle schools so I got used to performing and improvising at a young age. I was in concert band where I played the French horn for 3 years as first chair, I also was in the school chorus, so I learned to read music, and vocalize. I wasn't allowed to listen to cursing music. So I had to listen to music with a message, so Nas became my idol and the beef with Jay Z is what got me into hip-hop. I learned the general idea of sampling, and studied Tribe Called Quest, Gangstarr, Nas, then Madlib, and then Fela Kuti. Music just became all I did and who I was, I wanted to live a better intelligent life because of Nas music. I made my first beat officially in 2005 and let a few people hear, and they were amazed, so I did another one, and another one, and I ended up with an entire album worth of music. So all my friends from high school and me rapped over the beats and I released the Counter Culture album. We sold it across 3 schools, word got round, and we were performing a week after release in Ybor. From then its just been something I know how to do that people respond to and as long as there is a response I'll be here. 

Emerging Hip-Hop: I know one of you hobbies/interests is to go skateboarding. You were on a skateboard before most people started to migrate to the sport and give it a chance. Do you feel that there is a connection between hip-hop music and the sport? (Please don’t say Lil Wayne lol) 

Wade: Hahaha yea I mean I started at 11/12 yrs. old, and I was the ONLY black skater at the school. I would get picked on for wearing the same exact Vans that people wear to the club now day’s hahaha. Skateboarding is a melting pot culture, which included hip-hop, where misfits from all circles migrated and we would have our own lingo, hang out spots, and fashion. It became mainstream at some point I’m not sure when, but there is a connection because hip-hop is a misfit underground culture. It’s crazy though because my first job was working at the Skatepark of Tampa and now I see Wayne skating there on Worldstar when I used to get talked about for the same thing. But if it will make skaters lives easier to be accepted for their culture than its a good thing. 

Emerging Hip-Hop: For those who know and don’t know, you produce all or most of your material; so the question is what do you want to be known as the rapper who is also a beat maker or the beat maker who also raps? 

Wade: At first I wanted to walk in Kanye's footsteps, and be known for the best hip hop songs as a producer and as a rapper. I study them both as if I only produced or only rapped. I give each 100 percent so I would like to be known as a producer rapper who produced himself to the top and was so dope he changed the face of hip-hop. I want to produce for r&b singers, and pop singers, and do movie/video game scores just because I have a love for ALL music. But hip-hop is where I want to reign as king of producers, and innovative lyricist. 

Emerging Hip-Hop: At the early age of 17 you released your first album “The Counterculture” which was completely self-produced/self-recorded by you, and over the next few years you released a couple of mixtapes and EPs. Now that you released the “One Day Away EP” yesterday and your latest album G.L.O.R.E. is to be released next year, how would you describe your growth so far as an artist and producer? 

Wade: It is wild because I didn’t even have a copy of the Counter Culture until I recently ran into someone from high school who still had the disc I burned in my mama house and wrote the title on haha, but when I heard it I was shocking. I didn’t know I had so much talent back then, untapped and not influence by the trends at all. So I see how organic I was, then with In The Water it was more like a feel good get high album you know, and then I did ITWM2 which was a bunch of singles, not really a personal album. Smoke and Mirrors was me returning to an organic style and I started smoking weed again and I had moved to Dallas at that point so I wanted release a personal EP about what I had been through to still be making music. Dearly Departed EP was an anthem to the old way of life, as in I will no longer settle for local success, and no longer allow anything to stop me from reaching my full potential. So they are all separate expressions, it’s not like the same type of music only newer, but rather a new project with a whole new style of music almost. So I have watched myself try different things since high school, One Day Away EP is letting you all know that I'm as close as being One Day Away from my dreams, because I have already decided never to quit. But I have gotten better lyrically, and production wise thanks to Yums Shoes in Dallas who took me in and taught me how to make studio music, in my house. Shout out Young Yoda. So the music got better solely because i acquired the knowledge to clean up the sounds, filter things, etc. 

Emerging Hip-Hop: Like I mentioned before your next album G.L.O.R.E is due to be released next year, what is the concept behind this project and what message are you trying to portray to the listeners? 

Wade: God Living Omnipotent and Redeems Endless. The album at this point is still in production stage. I had actually completed the album, but it all got deleted permanently in a freak accident, which is where One Day Away EP came from, the left over surviving tracks after the purge. So I am going back to the drawing board and reproducing it. It is a tale of victory! It’s the climax of the movement. I have been working with new artists, and I plan to start signing specific artists by the end of 2012 to my label One True Music, and perhaps make GLORE a slight compilation album, written and produced by me, slated for iTunes release late Jan. 2013. 

Emerging Hip-Hop: I know every artist wants to have and develop his or her own personal sound. But if any, what MC or MC’s do believe had the most influence on you while you were developing your sound/style? 

Wade: 9th Wonder's baselines', Just Blaze's drums and loops. Kanye's creativity and free spirited concepts. Tribe Called Quest dedication to make hip-hop music only with a message. Nas is my father figure. Jay-Z and his business mind. Then I look at Outkast a lot as role models I had a chance to speak with Big Boi in 2010 just general about music and how to go about the industry. Andre 3000 is like the idea of don’t worry about what others think and do you. So all those guys are what I look at every single time I make a beat or song. I think about those influences the most daily. 

Emerging Hip-Hop: Who are some of the artists in today’s hip-hop industry that you believe are a positive entity to bringing real “feel good” music back into the genre? 

Wade: I like Ab-Soul a lot. I like Curren$y he's so nostalgic he is everything we miss about 90's rap. Wiz is good super innovative. I am a HUGE K.R.I.T. fan. I would like to sit down with him one day. Big Sean always entertains me, I like his lines and delivery is dope. I want to see more "I Get Up" from J. Cole.  

Emerging Hip-Hop: You exit stage left, and it will be the last time you touch a microphone and produce a beat. At that time, what kind of legacy do you want to leave behind? What do you want to be known for? 

Wade: After its all said and done, I want people to know that we all have the power to acquire whatever it is we desire in this life, and no one can stop you but yourself. I want people to know that love and life is what it is all about and not hoes and cars and cloths. I want people to always look at me as the model for how to go from single parent home, no father, not much support in life, and make it through your battles. I may not change hip-hop or the industry, but I will influence many minds to live better lives. One True Music.

0 comments:

Post a Comment