Before you heard Ric Wilson, you might have retweeted him. Last year, the twenty-two-year-old rapper, artist, and prison abolitionist posted a mash-up of Earth, Wind & Fireâs âSeptemberâ and Migosâs âBad and Boujee,â set to footage from an old Soul Train performance. The result broke 2.8 million views on Twitter.
Through itâs a fun cut in its own right, the mash-up also speaks to the worlds Wilson glues together: he describes last yearâs excellent Negrow Disco EP as âan ode to the queer Black and brown folks that started disco,â and the 2016 hip-house Soul Bounce EP as doing similar work. But after two steps back into the South Sideâs rich musical traditions, BANBA (âBlack Art Not Bad Artâ)âhis most personal release to dateâleaps forward. As Wilson told the Weekly before the EPâs release last week, âI think itâs more just about me talking about where Iâm at now […] People are just getting to know me more.â
Not that youâd forget Wilsonâs South Side roots. Before BANBA even hits the minute mark, we hear DJ Pharrisâs iconic âThis Chicagoâ tag. But earlier still, we hear Wilsonâs own ad-lib for the first time: âBanba!â
The six tracks that follow consolidate Wilsonâs (many) strengths. The synths bounce and uptalk (a la Soulection), calling to mind âLost Soulâ from his 2015 The Sun Was Out EP and Negrow Discoâs outstanding âeverybodystay.â But from the lilt and swing of âSplitâ to the wistful minor drop in âKiddie Cocktail,â BANBA tweaks with the formula to great effect.
âI hate hi-hatsâI feel like when people have creative blocks, they put hi-hats on a track [to] make it sound familiar to other people,â Wilson said, lifting a phone on and off the receiver and listening for the click it made. In the same spirit, BANBA employs sounds familiar (crumpled foil, chalk on a chalkboard) and strange (rewinds, bleeps, gulps and chirps). The result is equal parts Monte Booker and Timbaland: lavish, generous, imaginative. Rarely do Yo Gabba Gabba! and Quasimoto come to mind when describing a rapperâbut when Wilson namedrops both on album centerpiece âSinner,â you donât doubt it for a moment.
On the covers of Soul Bounce, Negrow Disco, and The Sun Was Out, Wilson gazed out from behind round-frame sunglasses, looking a little like the Hebru Brantley Flyboys he namechecked. On BANBA, heâs making eye contact, frames hanging from his right hand. Front and center. Â
Oh, and about that Soul Train edit? It earned Wilson a slot at Mamby on the Beach this summer, where heâll be spinning his debut DJ set. Itâs anyoneâs guess whether Migosâ new music video for âWalk It Talk Itââan exacting homage to Soul Trainâtook inspiration from Wilsonâs mash-up. But as he tells us on BANBA: âI cannot be late if Iâm timeless.â
We saw that BANBA is actually the patron saint of Ireland, but I imagine thatâs not what youâre going forâŠ
No, thatâs actually exactly what I meant! [laughs]
I was just listening to [your lyrics] on the title trackâthereâs âBlack art not bad art,â which stands for itself, but also âBlack art not sad art.â Could you talk about that?
You know, Black art is just not this thing…Black artists donât have to represent one emotion; Black artists can represent multiple emotions.
How did the sound of BANBAÂ come together?
My friend Joey Hirsh, I met through a fellow engineer named Darwin from Classics Studios, and we clickedânot in real life, but virtually, on FaceTime, sending stuff back and forth. He really likes weird sounds; I really like weird sounds. But for BANBA, this project was a little differentâI wanted a knock on every beat, so every beat has those weird sounds but also has 808s under it. Except âLove Awayâ has no drums, and thereâs a reason for that.
Could you tell us more about the cover of BANBA?
The cover was inspired by Jean-Michel Basquiatânot a specific painting, but the specific pictures that Richard [Corman] took of him… I thought it was really cool to see this artist in front of all his work and just loved the setup. Also, a lot of the beats sound really abstract, because Basquiat kind of inspired the feel and vibe of most of the project.
Who did the paintings on the cover?
Julian Gilliam did the paintings, those are unreleased paintings by him that no one has ever seen beforeâexcept for on that picture. And theyâre really good…Shout out to Julian.
I think itâs cool that the glasses are off this time around.
Yeah, yeah, and I had pictures with the glasses onâit was a decision. I kind of want people to see my face more, itâs a little more grown up, this project. And Iâm just more comfortable with my face. Especially since I was just in this Bonobos commercial.
How did that happen?
Bonobos found me, actually! Through the internet… Bonobos wanted me, but I had no idea I was going to be the first frame! I didnât know it was that deep, but it was, so they flew me out to LA and styled me up! They had the âChicago Influencers,â quote-unquoteâso me, Kevin Coval, Kweku Collins, Keven Stonewall, whoâs really well-known for his cancer research⊠Â
I canât believe I missed Kweku Collins in the ad! But heâs also on BANBAâhow was it working with him?
It was great, I been on Kweku for like four years. Both of us kind of live furthest away from everyone in the Chicago music scene, on polar opposites of the city. So we kind of have this connection goingâI was always talking about a track and he was always talking about a track, so I said: âI have the track, letâs do it.â And he fits really perfect on that spot on âSinner.â
You also [talk about] Chicago multi-instrumentalist Sen Morimoto on that track. How did he get involved?
Me and Sen been homies since 2014; heâs actually on Soul Bounce, too, playing sax. I like instruments a whole lot, I miss having instrumental parts in songsâI feel like Stevie Wonderâs really good at that, and heâs one of my favorite artists. I wanted to do that; I just hate having a bunch of vocal features for no reason…just let the song breathe a little, let people vibe out.
Listen to the full version of this interview that aired on the May 15 episode of #SSWRadio, the Weekly’s radio hour on WHPK:
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In addition to being a rapper, youâre also an activistâwould you call yourself an activist?
No, not really âactiveââbut Iâm a prison abolitionist.
Well, youâve done so many different things, including being a restorative justice researcher in Cambodia and South Korea. Tell us about being a prison abolitionist, what you do with it, and how it influences the music you do.
Oh, man, soâprison abolition has become a more popular phrase than when I first heard of it. Mariame Kaba is a mentor of mine, and thatâs where I first heard the phrase. I researched, read booksâand a prison abolitionist is someone that wants to get at the root of everyoneâs societal suffering. Thatâs what a prison abolitionist isâalong with wanting to get rid of jails and prisons, and seeing things in a more transformative, restorative way. But itâs deeper than that, because you can get rid of [jails]…but whatâs next?
[As for] Cambodia and KoreaâI got hired or accepted into this program to do restorative justice research in Cambodia, because of what happened with the Khmer Rouge genocide. We were living on the province, pretty much just getting a feel and asking folks questionsâbecause folks that were part of the Khmer Rouge went back into the communities, the province areas, and we were just doing research on what that process was like.
It seems like your interest in community activism has been as long as your interest in music.
Yeah, itâs hand in hand.
Is there any taste of that in the EP?
Kind of. I think âBANBAâ is the most political song, political quote-unquote. Every other song Iâm talking about some more personal stuff. Â I also went through a breakup before the project, soâa little bit more personal. But thereâs one sad song on the project, and thatâs it. I never make any sad music.
But thereâs still some joy to it, even in the sad.
Even when I think Iâm sad it doesnât sound sad! I canât do sad music.
But that probably rings true for some people who feel that wayâtheir sadness doesnât look the same as othersâ.
Yeah, exactly! Sadness is complex. Emotions are complex.
Ric Wilson will debut BANBA live at Lincoln Hall on June 2. Heâll also DJ as Disco Ric at Mamby on the Beach, June 23â24.
Christopher Good is the Weeklyâs music editor, and can be found with his headphones on. He last covered Daleyâs Restaurant and its impending move across the street earlier this month.
Olivia Obineme is a host of SSW Radio. Listen in on WHPK Tuesdays, 3pmâ4pm. She last contributed an interview with The Chi creator Lena Waithe in March.