FLOOD #2

Page 1


BY KYLE MACKINNEL PHOTOS BY TIMOTHY SACCENTI



“I need another lover like I need another hole on the side of my temple,” unloads Antwan Patton—to whom “only the ladies” refer as Antwan and is better known anyway as Big Boi—in the opening moments of Big Grams’ “Run for Your Life.” Urgently delivered over Josh Carter’s jungle-swelled backbeat, the statement assumes a different posture as Sarah Barthel beckons with her choral refrain, “Tell me, where you wanna go?” The irony of the lyric lies in the fact that neither OutKast’s more sizable Boi nor Barthel and Carter’s Phantogram are exactly strangers to collaboration. As it happens, the trio comprising Big Grams were in bed together well before their debut project commenced. Back in 2011, professed Phantogram fan Big Boi invited Barthel and Carter to his Stankonia Studios in Atlanta to work on what would become three of the more successful tracks from his second album untethered to OutKast counterpart André 3000, Vicious Lies and Dangerous Rumors. Despite representing relatively disparate strata of the musical landscape (Phantogram had theretofore released only 2009’s Eyelid Movies and a handful of EPs against Big Boi and OutKast’s extensive back catalog), a mutual respect swiftly formed, and the prospect of deeper collaboration became a foregone conclusion. “We are just huge fans of one another,” says Barthel. “Big expressed how much of a fan he was to us, and obviously we were big fans of him. It’s like, you’re working with your favorite artist, and it’s bound to be really cool.” Hardly the type of emcee to absently fetishize an indie synth line via sampler, Big Boi has long demonstrated his admiration for all walks of musical life. He claims “Jig of Life” as his favorite Kate Bush song, bonded with Barthel and Carter over The Flaming Lips, and once even collaborated on a show with the Atlanta Ballet. But equally essential to the Big Grams recipe is the gusto of Barthel and Carter in their adept willingness to work with a high-profile artist while their own musical identity establishes itself. (The duo released their second full-length, Voices, last year and are currently working on the follow-up.) “There was no fear in the room,” says Big Boi of early Big Grams sessions. “On either side, everybody was willing to do whatever it took to make the jam.” Further crystallizing Big Grams’ chemistry is their communal sense of humor. The rapport among Big Boi, Barthel, and Carter is especially apparent when they are goofing off, quip-cracking about such captivating topics as band lap-dances and psychedelic drugs. Whatever the context, listening to Big Grams is an exercise in how music has the ability to overcome external circumstance. When done right, as it has been here, collaboration can escape the confines of its creators’ individual pasts. There is a dialogue of musical substance present on tracks like “Goldmine Junkie” or “Drum Machine,” and instead of becoming a stilted pissing contest, this collab album is the type that illuminates everyone involved. Speaking of dialogue, FLOOD has the ’gram portion of Big Grams on the line right now. It’s a labor of love and the sheets are drawn. Won’t you jump in?

FLOOD

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How did you all originally meet, and how did the Big Grams

rooms, so once we got it going we’d go off into our separate spaces

collaboration originate?

and just embellish on the ideas and come back and be like, “OK, this is what I got.” Start laying things down like that.

Sarah Barthel: We met each other a long time ago. Around 2012, 2011 maybe? We started collaborating with [Big Boi] on his last

When you guys aren’t discussing music, what do you like to

record—three songs off of his Vicious Lies and Dangerous Rumors.

talk about?

We wanted to keep moving forward, keep releasing things, so this was a good opportunity for us.

Sarah: B-40, usually. [Editor’s note (just in case): B-40 refers to smoking a blunt while drinking a 40 oz. malt liquor beverage.]

Josh Carter: It was something that we planned on doing, where it was talked about a long time ago that we would make a record, and

Big: Yup. Strip clubs.

fortunately, we all kept our word. Sarah: Strip clubs… [Overcoming apparent technical difficulties, Big Boi jumps onto the conference call.]

Were there any strip club outings?

Big Boi: Man, what’s going on with these bogus-ass calls, man?

Big: Yeah, we had a couple. In Atlanta, we went to Diamonds [of

[Laughs.] How are y’all doing today?

Atlanta] on several occasions.

Sarah: Good, how are you?

Sarah: Dave Chappelle?

Big: Good, man, just got to Virginia Beach, just looking at the

Big: Oh yeah, we went to the Blue Flame with Dave Chappelle

waves splash. It’s dope.

after the Dave Chappelle comedy show. We had a good time.

Did you all work together in person much on this project, or did

Is there an inherent sexuality wrapped into artistic collaboration?

it involve lots of passing files back and forth? Big: I think everything, to me, has got some sexuality to it, for the Sarah: We did a lot of both. We went down to Atlanta and camped out

fact that the music is freaky. I like to make records that you can

for about a week a couple of times, and then Big came out to LA a few

have fun to, you know what I’m saying? That’s what creates that

times, and then the rest was great because we could do it via e-mail,

vibe when you get somebody loose.

because we had other things to do as well. We were separated, so it worked great. It’s definitely more fun to be in the same room, though.

Sarah: Yeah, it’s, um…you have to take a bunch of mushrooms first, though. [All laugh.] Then you figure it out.

Big: It was pretty unorthodox. Sometimes, Josh would come up with a beat, or we might start saying something back and forth. He

Josh: I just think that it’s a record that’s good for making love, it’s

might make a joke, and that shit might turn into a line in a song.

good for driving to, it’s fun to skateboard to, it’s fun to shoot hoops

It was just the chemistry, just being in the same room and having

to. It’s sexy, it’s fun, it’s thoughtful, provocative…

music on that enabled us to pour all that creativity into one space. In LA, we had two rooms, and in Atlanta, we had two or three

Big: It’s a good soundtrack to your life.




Do you find that you have challenged each other’s creative limits

across state lines, you’d get fifty years for the same thing that you

in a certain way?

don’t get no time for if you were in seattle or los angeles, which is kind of crazy. It’s not like we’re in different countries; this is

All: yeah, definitely.

the same country.

Josh: a lot of the project was us pushing our boundaries as artists

Sarah: What else?

and getting out of our comfort zone, and doing something brand new for all of us. and that’s what made it so fun for me; it’s not a

Big: oh, yeah: eliminate the income tax. how about that? Because

Big Boi record, it’s not a phantogram record.

that income tax is really…there’s no need for that. I just don’t like my tax dollars going to create weapons and things that kill people,

Sarah: It’s a Big Grams record, which is something completely

and babies, and innocent folks. yeah. I’m a humanitarian, by the way.

different. We just wanted to put a bunch of music out that we might not necessarily put on our own records. you know, there

Was there a certain moment when you realized that Big Grams

are songs that I rap on, which I never thought that I would do, but

would be a successful collaboration?

it’s fucking fun and it sounded really cool when the end came out. Josh: I think that when Big had us come down to stankonia, we Big: right. Break down the barriers.

really hit it off right away. When we started working on songs it just kind of clicked. I knew deep down that we were destined to

If we manage to elect Big Grams for President in 2016, what will

make something really cool.

be its first order in office? Big: In the studio when we were all working on Vicious Lies, we Big: Um…legalize marijuana, I think. might as well.

came up with the whole concept to do a record. people were really excited about the collaboration that we did. to see everything

Josh: yeah.

coming to fruition is amazing; it’s the brainchild of us just sitting in a room. and then now, the focus is done, the video’s done,

Sarah: yup.

people are excited and loving the songs, and it’s like fate. I feel good about it, man. these are two really cool people that I’ve been

Big: that’s the only thing left to do, really. We have to think,

blessed to be put with, you know what I’m saying? and I think this

we’re all on the same land mass, but if you go a couple of miles

is how things are supposed to be going right now.


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