Pusha T has been incredibly busy since starting up his solo career. This year was particularly hectic for the rapper, who appeared on one of the year's most successful singles ("Mercy"), released several tracks of his own, and collaborated with several of the most respected musical minds of the past few years.
Complex spoke to Pusha about the studio sessions with Kanye West and G.O.O.D. Music, the Common record that he really wants everyone to hear, and why he loves regional rap.
Interview by David Drake (@somanyshrimp)
Do you have a favorite record from Cruel Summer?
My favorite record was probably records that didnt make the album. People dont know there were records where Common was rapping overlike, we had Common rapping on strip club records. Do you know how great that shyt was? That shyt was so good that it was likeits annoyingthat I dont know if people will ever hear this shyt.
We had Common rapping on strip club records. Do you know how great that shyt was? Its annoying that I dont know if people will ever hear this shyt.
You know me, you know my perspective. You got me, you got Big Sean, and then you have Common whos super conscious. He has a whole nother perspective. He was really rapping and really wanted to get on this record. He heard our verses and was like, "Man, Im laying one to this." Im like, "Are you for real?" Hes like, "Im doing it."
We leave and come backwe were in LAand he laid a monster fukking verse. And I dont think people are going to hear it. Cruel Summer was a collection of verses and raps and songs and it was almost done like Yes album. The biggest thing that shocked me [about My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy was] when I got over there, [Kanye] opened up his album to everybody. Thats how Cruel Summer was. Cruel Summer was a ton of beats and he was like, "Yo, lay verses to this shyt."
Do you think there will be a "lost Cruel Summer sessions" type of record?
Listen, if hes a smart businessman there will be. [Laughs.] If he wants to capitalize off of already-made music, then yeah. I hope so.
Were you happy with how the project turned out?
Hell yeah. I was really excited. I felt like we did a really good job. It sounds like a real G.O.O.D Music project. The different styles, the different attitudes on the projectits all of that. Its really, really good and I believed it came across really well. I think it incorporated everybody who needed to be incorporated at the time. It was like a fair distribution. It was really dope.
Did you expect Mercy to be as big as it was?
Hell yeah. That was dope. When you do great records that are a bit unorthodoxthis hasnt happened to me since Grindinpeople just accept it. When you with Ye, being unorthodox gets that listen. It gets that five-times listen.
If I put some unorthodox shyt out, people would be like, Man, you on some crazy shyt. Not all the time is it given that fair shake. When you do it with [Kanye], it definitely gets that type of attention. When you do things innovative and new, people respond to it so I thought it was going to be huge.
Lets talk about your new single, Pain.
Pain is the beginning of Pusha Ts solo album. Its the set-off for my album. This is no warm-up. This is for the fans. This is for my family. This is for people who understand what it is that I come from and who know and recognize my dynamic to G.O.O.D Music. The theme of it embodies the whole theme of my album. The hook is I dont never feel pain, cause I done felt too much pain. It embodies all in that one statement.
Did you actually work in the studio with Future?
Yeah.
Had you ever been in touch before that or was this the first time you guys connected?
Well, what happened was this. Everyone was away from each other. With everyone, I mean G.O.O.D. Music. We were in our respective homes. I was in Virginia. Ye was somewhere in L.A. or Paris. Somewhere. Who knows. Then everybody was around and we all got together and was like, Whats going on? Whats hot? Whats the deal? We were just discussing shyt and I was like, You know whats crazy? Future is on fire in the club. I said whats so scary is that I knew two of the recordshe had like seven records in the club that were reacting.
Theres an eeriness that I get from Future when I hear his vocals. I said it could be utilized and I would like to use him in a darker fashion.
I just liked them. I liked it a lot. I like Future a lot and I think I hear him differently than other people. A lot of people use him on some club shyt because of his melodies. But theres an eeriness that I get from Future when I hear his vocals. I said it could be utilized and I would like to use him in a darker fashion. I said I think it would still be ill and thats the day we made Pain.
Ye was like, Yo, we got to get in touch with Future. Future was there that night at 9 oclock. He came in the studio with some red pants on, a red T-shirt, red leather jacket, red hat, plaid-red shoes and dark sunglasses. He heard the beat and for like 30 minutes, he started being like, I done felt too much pain. [Laughs.]
That was it. He heard it and then bodied it. It just embodied what he felt the song was and I thought that was so crazy that thats how he felt without having talked it out.
One of your singles earlier this year was with The-Dream. What was the difference working on Dope bytch versus working on Pain?
What Ive learned about melody is that its about feeling. Both of those two peopleDream especiallyDream is borderline wacko. I say this because he knows how to embody the spirit of people. He knows how to harness all the emotion on a record for 45 seconds.
Its the same thing with Future. Pain was nothing but a feeling thing. Dream always tells me, When you think too long, you lose some of that. Thats the rapper in me. Thats a tug-of-war sometimes with my portion of the record. Im like, That shyts dope...but I wanted to say this! and hes like, Youre thinking for way too long. Dreams super-locked in and zones in on a record. He locks in on the emotion of it and it comes really quickly.
It seems like it comes very naturally to him.
Yeah. Like, really natural. Ill tell you the funniest thing. I was in the studio with him one time and we were just discussing records and people we wanted to put on records. I think I was talking about Missy Elliot or something. From that, he said Missy would be awesome. We were trying to get herit would sort of be her emulating the Total sound from that Bad Boy era. He immediately started singing like Keisha from Total.
We toyed with the idea of Keyshia Cole. We toyed with the idea of Rihanna. We toyed with the idea of a lot of women, and he started singing in all of their [styles]. Hes like, What do you think about this? Im sitting there thinking like, This guy. Youre out your fukking mind. Youre like schizophrenic almost. Thats what I was thinking and Im telling him, Yeah, that could be dope. Im like looking at him like, Yeah...youre different.
There were two strong singles that youve had, but you also had some delays. Has that been frustrating for you?
Nah, man. When I signed to G.O.O.D. Music, people were immediately like, Oh man, you got to come out [with a record]. I was like, Man, Im signed to G.O.O.D. Music as a solo artist." I have to treat this like a brand new solo artist. Hence the features, hence the mixtapes, all the noise and shyt on the records Im putting out. Whether theyre attached to a project or not.
I think people were like, Man, everybody knows you. Come on out. Im like, fukk that. Im about to work this up and
Start from scratch.
Yeah. Im like, this is how my projects going to get built. Im not too worried about dates. Im worried about being in the now and being relevant, and making sure that people know and love what I do. That everybody knows and loves what I do. Im new to some people. Im definitely new to some people. Ive never given a date. There hasnt been lag time in the music. Ive been on projects constantly. But now its time. Now its time for my own project.
Im not too worried about dates. Im worried about being in the now and being relevant, and making sure that people know and love what I do.
It seems you got some inspiration from the current Chicago rap scene, like Chief Keef and all of that. What else have you been listening to that inspires you?
I've been inspired by the new subcultures of rap. I just like it. Its just a matter of me liking the music. Im always going to do what I do. If I hop on a record, I dont even take cadences from people. Even on I Dont Like, I could have easily done Keef, but I still got to throw my spin on everything I do.
I have a lot to say, so there are certain ways I have to rap to get my point across. Yeah, Im into the Chicago movement. Im definitely into Keef, King Louie I did a dope record with him. Lil Durk. Ls Anthem is my shyt.
What is it about that stuff that you find refreshing?
Its authentic. Its the same authenticity I felt with Ha [by Juvenile]. The way they articulate it, theyre really dope. Im a fan of that. There are a lot of things and genres of music that Im not sure I would be into if I didnt go there and see it, i.e., the Oakland culture, that thizz shyt.
These are things that I gravitated to when I had to go there. I didnt know. Then I go there and into the club and I see these girls that are beautiful and theyre making thizz faces and fukking dancing. Im like, Oh, wait a minute, shes really passionate about this shyt. If youre passionate about shyt, it makes it so much easier to appreciate it.
Whats some of the stuff you heard in Oakland that you got into?
Erk Tha Jerk is dope. Just that whole culture. You got Mistah F.A.B. You got a lot of guys out there. There are records that I dont know personally. Its just shyt that Im exposed to and Im like, Wow. Im exposed to it on a major level because Im actually there. I go out to clubs when Im in cities. Its a thing where if youre exposed to it, you can see the level of passion and you can understand it a whole lot better.
Complex spoke to Pusha about the studio sessions with Kanye West and G.O.O.D. Music, the Common record that he really wants everyone to hear, and why he loves regional rap.
Interview by David Drake (@somanyshrimp)
Do you have a favorite record from Cruel Summer?
My favorite record was probably records that didnt make the album. People dont know there were records where Common was rapping overlike, we had Common rapping on strip club records. Do you know how great that shyt was? That shyt was so good that it was likeits annoyingthat I dont know if people will ever hear this shyt.
We had Common rapping on strip club records. Do you know how great that shyt was? Its annoying that I dont know if people will ever hear this shyt.
You know me, you know my perspective. You got me, you got Big Sean, and then you have Common whos super conscious. He has a whole nother perspective. He was really rapping and really wanted to get on this record. He heard our verses and was like, "Man, Im laying one to this." Im like, "Are you for real?" Hes like, "Im doing it."
We leave and come backwe were in LAand he laid a monster fukking verse. And I dont think people are going to hear it. Cruel Summer was a collection of verses and raps and songs and it was almost done like Yes album. The biggest thing that shocked me [about My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy was] when I got over there, [Kanye] opened up his album to everybody. Thats how Cruel Summer was. Cruel Summer was a ton of beats and he was like, "Yo, lay verses to this shyt."
Do you think there will be a "lost Cruel Summer sessions" type of record?
Listen, if hes a smart businessman there will be. [Laughs.] If he wants to capitalize off of already-made music, then yeah. I hope so.
Were you happy with how the project turned out?
Hell yeah. I was really excited. I felt like we did a really good job. It sounds like a real G.O.O.D Music project. The different styles, the different attitudes on the projectits all of that. Its really, really good and I believed it came across really well. I think it incorporated everybody who needed to be incorporated at the time. It was like a fair distribution. It was really dope.
Did you expect Mercy to be as big as it was?
Hell yeah. That was dope. When you do great records that are a bit unorthodoxthis hasnt happened to me since Grindinpeople just accept it. When you with Ye, being unorthodox gets that listen. It gets that five-times listen.
If I put some unorthodox shyt out, people would be like, Man, you on some crazy shyt. Not all the time is it given that fair shake. When you do it with [Kanye], it definitely gets that type of attention. When you do things innovative and new, people respond to it so I thought it was going to be huge.
Lets talk about your new single, Pain.
Pain is the beginning of Pusha Ts solo album. Its the set-off for my album. This is no warm-up. This is for the fans. This is for my family. This is for people who understand what it is that I come from and who know and recognize my dynamic to G.O.O.D Music. The theme of it embodies the whole theme of my album. The hook is I dont never feel pain, cause I done felt too much pain. It embodies all in that one statement.
Did you actually work in the studio with Future?
Yeah.
Had you ever been in touch before that or was this the first time you guys connected?
Well, what happened was this. Everyone was away from each other. With everyone, I mean G.O.O.D. Music. We were in our respective homes. I was in Virginia. Ye was somewhere in L.A. or Paris. Somewhere. Who knows. Then everybody was around and we all got together and was like, Whats going on? Whats hot? Whats the deal? We were just discussing shyt and I was like, You know whats crazy? Future is on fire in the club. I said whats so scary is that I knew two of the recordshe had like seven records in the club that were reacting.
Theres an eeriness that I get from Future when I hear his vocals. I said it could be utilized and I would like to use him in a darker fashion.
I just liked them. I liked it a lot. I like Future a lot and I think I hear him differently than other people. A lot of people use him on some club shyt because of his melodies. But theres an eeriness that I get from Future when I hear his vocals. I said it could be utilized and I would like to use him in a darker fashion. I said I think it would still be ill and thats the day we made Pain.
Ye was like, Yo, we got to get in touch with Future. Future was there that night at 9 oclock. He came in the studio with some red pants on, a red T-shirt, red leather jacket, red hat, plaid-red shoes and dark sunglasses. He heard the beat and for like 30 minutes, he started being like, I done felt too much pain. [Laughs.]
That was it. He heard it and then bodied it. It just embodied what he felt the song was and I thought that was so crazy that thats how he felt without having talked it out.
One of your singles earlier this year was with The-Dream. What was the difference working on Dope bytch versus working on Pain?
What Ive learned about melody is that its about feeling. Both of those two peopleDream especiallyDream is borderline wacko. I say this because he knows how to embody the spirit of people. He knows how to harness all the emotion on a record for 45 seconds.
Its the same thing with Future. Pain was nothing but a feeling thing. Dream always tells me, When you think too long, you lose some of that. Thats the rapper in me. Thats a tug-of-war sometimes with my portion of the record. Im like, That shyts dope...but I wanted to say this! and hes like, Youre thinking for way too long. Dreams super-locked in and zones in on a record. He locks in on the emotion of it and it comes really quickly.
It seems like it comes very naturally to him.
Yeah. Like, really natural. Ill tell you the funniest thing. I was in the studio with him one time and we were just discussing records and people we wanted to put on records. I think I was talking about Missy Elliot or something. From that, he said Missy would be awesome. We were trying to get herit would sort of be her emulating the Total sound from that Bad Boy era. He immediately started singing like Keisha from Total.
We toyed with the idea of Keyshia Cole. We toyed with the idea of Rihanna. We toyed with the idea of a lot of women, and he started singing in all of their [styles]. Hes like, What do you think about this? Im sitting there thinking like, This guy. Youre out your fukking mind. Youre like schizophrenic almost. Thats what I was thinking and Im telling him, Yeah, that could be dope. Im like looking at him like, Yeah...youre different.
There were two strong singles that youve had, but you also had some delays. Has that been frustrating for you?
Nah, man. When I signed to G.O.O.D. Music, people were immediately like, Oh man, you got to come out [with a record]. I was like, Man, Im signed to G.O.O.D. Music as a solo artist." I have to treat this like a brand new solo artist. Hence the features, hence the mixtapes, all the noise and shyt on the records Im putting out. Whether theyre attached to a project or not.
I think people were like, Man, everybody knows you. Come on out. Im like, fukk that. Im about to work this up and
Start from scratch.
Yeah. Im like, this is how my projects going to get built. Im not too worried about dates. Im worried about being in the now and being relevant, and making sure that people know and love what I do. That everybody knows and loves what I do. Im new to some people. Im definitely new to some people. Ive never given a date. There hasnt been lag time in the music. Ive been on projects constantly. But now its time. Now its time for my own project.
Im not too worried about dates. Im worried about being in the now and being relevant, and making sure that people know and love what I do.
It seems you got some inspiration from the current Chicago rap scene, like Chief Keef and all of that. What else have you been listening to that inspires you?
I've been inspired by the new subcultures of rap. I just like it. Its just a matter of me liking the music. Im always going to do what I do. If I hop on a record, I dont even take cadences from people. Even on I Dont Like, I could have easily done Keef, but I still got to throw my spin on everything I do.
I have a lot to say, so there are certain ways I have to rap to get my point across. Yeah, Im into the Chicago movement. Im definitely into Keef, King Louie I did a dope record with him. Lil Durk. Ls Anthem is my shyt.
What is it about that stuff that you find refreshing?
Its authentic. Its the same authenticity I felt with Ha [by Juvenile]. The way they articulate it, theyre really dope. Im a fan of that. There are a lot of things and genres of music that Im not sure I would be into if I didnt go there and see it, i.e., the Oakland culture, that thizz shyt.
These are things that I gravitated to when I had to go there. I didnt know. Then I go there and into the club and I see these girls that are beautiful and theyre making thizz faces and fukking dancing. Im like, Oh, wait a minute, shes really passionate about this shyt. If youre passionate about shyt, it makes it so much easier to appreciate it.
Whats some of the stuff you heard in Oakland that you got into?
Erk Tha Jerk is dope. Just that whole culture. You got Mistah F.A.B. You got a lot of guys out there. There are records that I dont know personally. Its just shyt that Im exposed to and Im like, Wow. Im exposed to it on a major level because Im actually there. I go out to clubs when Im in cities. Its a thing where if youre exposed to it, you can see the level of passion and you can understand it a whole lot better.
