Wax Poetics - Jesse Boykins III
Transcription
Wax Poetics - Jesse Boykins III
Wax Poetics Issue 53 RZA The Delfonics Bryan Ferry Nite Jewel Pleasure Mac Dre Leroy Sibbles Persona Records Miguel Atwood-Ferguson Sinkane Mara Hruby The Gaslamp Killer Karriem Riggins Jesse Boykins III Under the tutelage of Bilal, singer/songwriter Jesse Boykins III learned to embrace the totality of life as a key to unlocking music’s secrets. A leader of the Romantic Movement, he revels in honesty and the female perspective. After quietly releasing a grip of material over the past few years, including his new project Zulu Guru with close collaborator MeLo-X, Jesse has slowed his pace to work on his upcoming magnum opus, Love Apparatus. by Marisa Aveling 70 71 J esse Boykins III was eighteen when he started vocal lessons with Bilal. He arrived at the singer’s Jersey City apartment and was greeted at the door by a diminutive figure, resplendent in a Japanese silk robe that framed a thermal onesie underneath. Bilal’s dreads were styled in twists, and speared into one of his locks was an incense stick, which was burning. As Boykins remembers, his adolescent mind was blown. That first day, Boykins didn’t do any singing. Bilal instead focused the lesson around breathing and meditation. “When you inhale, you inhale the room. When you exhale, you become the room,” he told the mystified younger singer. Over the course of his lessons, Boykins realized that Bilal wasn’t only coaching him vocally, he was delivering life lessons too. As the esoteric Mr. Miyagi of Boykins’s career, Bilal showed the R&B upstart that it was okay to show vulnerability in his music—something that the now twenty-seven-year-old singer/songwriter carries with him today. Jesse Boykins III knows little about the two Jesse Boykins that came before him, with the early life of the Brooklyn-based artist marked by strong female figures instead. Boykins’s grandmother Pearl and her daughters took him to church in Jamaica every other day as a youngster still in single digits, where he learned the difference between right and wrong through song. When Boykins was ten, he returned to his mother, a former track Olympian, who was waiting to heap love upon her son in Miami. He stayed close to her side for a good seven years before leaving for the New School’s jazz program in New York City. Similarly to the way Boykins absorbed Bilal’s willingness to show emotion, the female touch isn’t lost on his music either. He espouses a thoughtful brand of R&B defined by contemplative lyrics informed by an interest in poetry from favorites like James Joyce and Langston Hughes. In addition, Boykins touts himself as the “reawakening of the Romantic Movement” and approaches songwriting accordingly, combining openness and vulnerability with overt sensuality. Boykins’s introduction to the world as a recording artist was the self-released Dopamine: My Life on My Back EP (2008), an offering from the bleeding heart of a twenty-two year-old. While his single “Tabloids” reached number two on the BillboardVideo Monitor, some critics thought his cerebral musings were too deep for a kid who was barely old enough to drink, and he reeled it back only months later with The Beauty Created LP. With sleek production highlighting the aphrodisiac nature of Boykins’s voice, these releases contextualized him in the landscape of urban troubadours as a skilled lyricist and inadvertent panty-dropper. The next major solo project Boykins is sitting on is his magnum opus, Love Apparatus, a collection of songs he’s been working on with friend and producer Machinedrum since 2009. He’s been tweaking and perfecting the songs for so long that he managed to release the collaborative Zulu Guru LP with fellow Romantic Movement member MeLo-X in between. Incorporated into Boykins’s music now is a fascination with countering his male perspective with female vision, which he has been pursuing by piecing together interviews he’s conducted with over two hundred women into a documentary. Until he releases Love Apparatus, it seems that Boykins will continue his research, continue to tour, and continue living what he calls a schwaza life—striving to stay true to himself and influencing the world in a positive light. 72 73 A pivotal point in your earlier years was getting into the Grammy Jazz Ensemble. How did that come about? My mentor at the time—her name is Shenita Hunt and she was my teacher— she taught me so much. My senior year came around, and she was asking me where I wanted to go to school. At first, I didn’t really want to go to college. I was like, “I’m gonna get a record deal, everything’s going to be fine, I’m just going to do my demo when I graduate, that’s what I’m going to do.” But then she put it in my mind that I’m going to go to school, so one of the ways she said was if you audition for this jazz ensemble thing. And at the time, I didn’t know what the fuck jazz was. I knew reggae, R&B, gospel, and listened to some rock. Barely. She put me onto jazz, and then I auditioned and I made it. It was like me and twelve other singers from around the nation. I feel like that was a pivotal moment when I was like, “I don’t wanna just be an R&B singer. I wanna make music.” Before, I wanted to be an R&B singer—literally dance, all that. And then I started listening to all these different genres of music, and I’m like, “Damn, this shit is limitless. I could really do whatever I want to do.” And that’s pretty much why I decided to continue studying jazz. Did you get any feedback from them as to why you got in, seeing as though you had no prior experience in jazz? I have no idea. It was so weird, ’cause I was out of place. I find that usually I’m a black sheep in a lot of situations. When I was home in Jamaica, I was the black sheep— I’m the cousin. Even when I was in Miami. I’m Jamaican, I had an accent, I don’t talk the way everyone else talks. I had to adjust to that. So when I went there, it was the same shit. Your years in Jamaica and feeling like a black sheep seem to inform what you do, even up until now. Definitely. I always look at myself as the underdog, and I write like that. Because I feel like a lot of male artists always write they’re the coolest and everything—the world is great around them, and they walk into a room and the lights just start strobing, and it’s like, “No, motherfucker, that’s not reality.” I fantasize about a lot of things, but I always try to fantasize and bring it back to reality as well. 74 75 So much of being a male singer in R&B and soul is about being an alpha male. Do you consider yourself to be an alpha male? I mean, definitely, I consider myself to be an alpha male in the sense that I know to submit to the omega. [laughs] What does that mean? The omega is the female. If you look at it from a wolf kind of view, the omega wolf leads the pack and she’s a female. The alpha male is her lover, and he’s under her; he’s not as strong as she is. You feel like you’re always deferring to the female? I feel so, yeah. I’ve learned more from females. You guys are better at sharing and wanting to better things, period. And more sensitive, so you’re more aware of things and talk different. Dudes are like, “Yeah, I’m good.” They don’t really express things in the depth that things can be expressed. Listening to you talk makes me understand your position in music more. Yeah. I’m a little emo. [laughs] Not emo, but in the sense that some of the interviews I’ve read about you portray you as a ladies’ man. I don’t like those interviews. I was just talking to someone about that, because I was in a magazine and they wrote, “When Jesse’s not traveling the world, he’s wooing women.” I’m like, “Whoa, when did I say that?” Just because I express my appreciation, and I want to connect with the depths of a woman’s living? How you guys perceive life is different from how we do, and I find it interesting. It’s something I’m curious about, but that doesn’t mean that I’m going around wiling out, acting crazy. How mindful are you of this when you cultivate your image? It’s hard to balance everything, because I feel like the past three years of my life, I’ve been researching things that you would think I’m trying to be this sex [symbol]. Reading up on Kama Sutra and tantric sex—I’m serious though, ’cause I’m interested in sexuality, and I’m interested in the spirituality in sexuality and the connection with those two things. But it’s not because I’m trying to go outside and be like,“Women, come to me, right now.” I just feel like it’s an aspect that when I grew up, it wasn’t talked about 76 77 like a mind frame and a state of being that I was in that was different from how I am now, and how I was before. Like, I can go back and I can sing how I did on my first two albums, and I can sing like I sang on Zulu Guru, but I still haven’t been able to grasp why I did Love App, or why I’ve been processing or creating Love App the way that I have, especially with my writing. You talk about Love Apparatus in a really interesting way, very removed from the rest of your discography. What kind of mental space does it take up for you? The rest of my work, anyone can understand it. But the way I wrote Love Apparatus was like, some songs are understandable and it’s cool, it’s natural, but then some songs I don’t even know what I’m talking about yet. But I feel there’s power in that, because the music lasts the longest. ’Cause when someone writes a song, it’s like you come up with a different reasoning or feeling every time you listen to the same song. And I don’t feel like that’s really done anymore, or I don’t know many artists that can create music like that. You said that you like to make sure all your projects are conceptual. What’s the concept behind Love App? in a light that it should have been talked about. So I’m relearning what I felt like I learned wrong and actually conveying my point of view on those aspects of life, ’cause I feel like it’s important. How do your experiences inform the music you’re making? A lot, actually. Way of a Wayfarer [2011], that EP that I did when I took those Gold Panda tracks and sang over them, my writing is so different on those compared to The Beauty Created [2009] and Dopamine. It was just because the way that I look at things is from so many different points of view and perspectives, but I used to always just write from one. Now I can write from all of them. Like, every emotion, I can write from it. And every point of view that I see, I can write from it. In a previous interview, you said that your music acts as a life time line as 78 you continue to learn and grow. Can you tell me about this aspect of your songwriting? I try to write for the moment as much as I can. ’Cause people write future [tense], they like to speak things into existence in the music or fantasize about something and write about it. Or [write about] the past. I always try to blend all of those things all together. I feel like it’s important to see the movement, especially if I can do that in one album where I write about five years ago and then write about what’s going on now and write about how I look at life, or how life’s going to be for me in the next two, three years. I try to do that in my music. Is that one of the objectives for Love Apparatus? Yeah. But that happened naturally though. I didn’t do it on purpose. How I wrote on that album and the way I’m singing on that album—I haven’t been able to match it, it’s Balance. Balance between yourself and another human being, balance between yourself and the environment, balance between yourself and your subconscious, finding that shit in all of those things. Acknowledging it. There are love songs on there, but they’re about balance. There are songs about life—they’re about balance. Balance in between these two people. Balance between yourself and the world. Trying to find that shit. The whole album, that’s what it’s about. So on a personal note, how have you managed to find balance for yourself? Acknowledge my mistakes. Unlearn things that I thought was right when I grew up. Like on a super, super personal level, it’s like as a man growing up in America, we’re raised to be masculine, we’re raised to be not vulnerable. Always showing strength, and emotionless in a sense. So I had to unlearn that shit. The people that I care about the most are the people I am most open with, and most honest with. If I don’t give anybody else reality, I give the people that I love reality. Mistakes, flaws, and all—it doesn’t matter. . Photos shot exclusively for Wax Poetics by Kwesi Abbensetts.