John and Connie: Hi and welcome
Speaker:to another episode of Celebrating
Speaker:Small Family Businesses.
Speaker:I'm John Kuder.
Speaker:And I'm Connie Kuder.
Speaker:And we are virtually in Los
Speaker:Angeles with Kimeyo Daniels.
Speaker:Hi Kimeyo.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: How's it going?
Speaker:How's it going?
Speaker:John and Connie: Welcome.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: my two sons with
Speaker:me chunky and George made it.
Speaker:You know, you
Speaker:John and Connie: Hi Chunk.
Speaker:Hi George.
Speaker:Welcome to the party.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: in our family
Speaker:business is Kimeyo Records.
Speaker:John and Connie: Like
Speaker:the sign says behind you.
Speaker:Okay, cool.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Exactly.
Speaker:John and Connie: And so for
Speaker:our audience, what kind of music
Speaker:and, how did the business start?
Speaker:What led you to being a recording artist?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Um, it's predominantly
Speaker:hip hop music and uh, what got
Speaker:it started is I wasn't doing it.
Speaker:From the time I was 19 and as of
Speaker:recently in 2021, when the boys came
Speaker:and said, dad, we not going nowhere.
Speaker:We moving in with you.
Speaker:It developed into where we are today.
Speaker:And, um, I got them, uh, uh, a Mac
Speaker:computer with some sounds on it and
Speaker:just let them take over the living
Speaker:room with a dining room at the time.
Speaker:and just keep making music
Speaker:until we came with something.
Speaker:And one day I decided, you know,
Speaker:I'm gonna start making a record with
Speaker:the music that they was making and
Speaker:at the same time show them how to
Speaker:pursue this career in entertainment.
Speaker:But that's my take on it.
Speaker:So you can ask either one of
Speaker:them how it, how it developed.
Speaker:John and Connie: Okay.
Speaker:So, Chunk, what is your, what is your
Speaker:specialty in the, in the business?
Speaker:What, are you musician, technician, what,
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Mainly I just make music
Speaker:mainly
Speaker:John and Connie: and, and how
Speaker:long you been making music?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: realistically since I
Speaker:was like, I don't know, like elementary
Speaker:school, but like seriously, I'd say I'm
Speaker:my dad probably like, like seriously, but
Speaker:John and Connie: Is there, do
Speaker:you play a particular instrument?
Speaker:Is there?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: nah uh, I just
Speaker:play everything like on my,
Speaker:um, my laptop in the studio.
Speaker:like, I kinda creating playing
Speaker:with the piano and stuff.
Speaker:I'm not really serious
Speaker:with it, I don't play.
Speaker:John and Connie: Okay, so like would it
Speaker:be GarageBand or a program like that?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Yeah, I use FL Studio.
Speaker:What do you do?
Speaker:Yeah, he said FL Studio.
Speaker:He talk real low, you
Speaker:gotta, yeah, you know.
Speaker:I need him to speak up.
Speaker:You gotta speak up so
Speaker:he can hear you, chump.
Speaker:I use FL Studio.
Speaker:I'm
Speaker:John and Connie: FL Studio.
Speaker:Okay, I wasn't familiar with that one.
Speaker:I, uh, always looking for new things.
Speaker:I played with, yeah, I played
Speaker:with GarageBand years ago when
Speaker:I was, had a lot more free time.
Speaker:So, uh, George, how about you?
Speaker:What's, what's your specialty?
Speaker:What's your, what's your interest?
Speaker:What, how got, how did you get into this?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: I'm mainly a producer.
Speaker:I just be making beats almost every day.
Speaker:I started when I was like
Speaker:younger, when I was like 12,
Speaker:like he, my brother inspired me.
Speaker:So he's who got me into
Speaker:making beats and stuff.
Speaker:So I just started since then.
Speaker:And then like my sound
Speaker:over time, like evolved.
Speaker:And then, yeah, that's basically it.
Speaker:John and Connie: Okay.
Speaker:And again, is that all electronic?
Speaker:Uh, I mean, I've, you know,
Speaker:I've, I know people do beats
Speaker:with their mouth and stuff, but,
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: yeah,
Speaker:like everything is digital.
Speaker:I do everything like
Speaker:digitally on the computer.
Speaker:Um, yeah.
Speaker:John and Connie: so that's
Speaker:percussion, uh, really, isn't it?
Speaker:Is that right?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Most different sound
Speaker:modules, like you might have a drum pack,
Speaker:keyboard sounds, different elements of
Speaker:sounds, and they just blend it together.
Speaker:Like they, they probably not going to tell
Speaker:you what programs they using, cause that's
Speaker:telling everybody what they secrets are.
Speaker:John and Connie: But fine.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: what they
Speaker:predominantly just, um, they use
Speaker:different sound modules and different,
Speaker:um, programs and that's how
Speaker:they come to create their music.
Speaker:But their same driving force is FL
Speaker:studio, they both work on FL studio.
Speaker:John and Connie: Okay.
Speaker:I'm kind of old.
Speaker:So I've been, you know, listening to
Speaker:rock and roll and synthesizers and all
Speaker:that stuff that I was really in love with
Speaker:synthesizers back in my teenage years.
Speaker:And they had, uh, one of the big
Speaker:developments and I can't remember the
Speaker:name of the company now, but they had
Speaker:tapes that they could plug into the,
Speaker:it was a keyboard, and they had sample
Speaker:tapes, and so they might have a sample
Speaker:of a train whistle, and they'd plug
Speaker:that in, and then the entire keyboard
Speaker:would be that train whistle, you know,
Speaker:over a, you know, multiple octaves.
Speaker:And, and they could, you know, then plug
Speaker:in a different sound, and it'd be, uh,
Speaker:I don't know, seagulls, and, but they
Speaker:could play whatever they could make,
Speaker:capture as a sound, and they could
Speaker:play it on the keyboard, and that, you
Speaker:know, then I think that all evolved
Speaker:into, you know, just, Built in, it's
Speaker:all digital now, but sampling is the
Speaker:only word I can remember about that.
Speaker:But, well Kimeyo, how, how old were
Speaker:you when you got started in all this?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: well, I've been like
Speaker:rapping since I was like 12, maybe even
Speaker:earlier than that, when it first got
Speaker:introduced, like when hip hop first
Speaker:got introduced, I started rapping.
Speaker:So in elementary school, I used to be
Speaker:a battle rapper, junior high school
Speaker:battle rapper, high school battle rapper.
Speaker:And then after my father
Speaker:passed, I started writing.
Speaker:And once I started writing
Speaker:and I became an artist.
Speaker:I started like maybe let's say 19.
Speaker:So at 19, I started writing songs and
Speaker:a lot of the songs that I was writing,
Speaker:it had to have some meaning to it.
Speaker:So I kept doing that.
Speaker:And, uh, my first record that
Speaker:I did was called The Lesson.
Speaker:And it was basically different,
Speaker:um, elements in my life
Speaker:that I experienced that.
Speaker:I wish I could have had my father
Speaker:around to, uh, show me the ropes on.
Speaker:So all of those songs was,
Speaker:was like me figuring it out.
Speaker:And that was the first record
Speaker:that I ever wrote The Lesson.
Speaker:I had like several producers, all
Speaker:the up and coming producers that
Speaker:was in Los Angeles at the time.
Speaker:And that was me rapping.
Speaker:And then, um, when, when everything
Speaker:kind of went haywire with that
Speaker:record, I ended up moving to Miami.
Speaker:And when I moved to Miami, I
Speaker:ended up getting a, MPC 2000 XL,
Speaker:which is a drum machine, a MIDI
Speaker:sequencer, and a KORG Karma keyboard.
Speaker:And I started producing.
Speaker:I started, um, getting sounds
Speaker:from different producers and
Speaker:then I would make my own beats.
Speaker:And then I did another record called
Speaker:The Lesson Part Two, I predominantly
Speaker:did all the production for myself and I
Speaker:started learning how to use the MIDI and
Speaker:then play keys and add elements to it.
Speaker:I was even sampling some records and I was
Speaker:learning how to, and what I would do is I
Speaker:would sample a record and then I'd try to
Speaker:replay it the way that I want to hear it.
Speaker:So I wouldn't really
Speaker:use that record anymore.
Speaker:So after a while.
Speaker:I might start off, let's
Speaker:give you an example.
Speaker:I might've take a Ozzie brothers
Speaker:record and then I'll sample it.
Speaker:Then I'll play the drums the way
Speaker:that I wanted the drums to sound.
Speaker:Then I'll play the keys the way
Speaker:that I feel the keys can sound.
Speaker:And there's some strings.
Speaker:And once I get the beat kind of full,
Speaker:then I'll take the sample all the way out
Speaker:and won't use the sample anymore and just
Speaker:keep building on what I have from there.
Speaker:And that's how I kind of taught
Speaker:myself how to, make beats because
Speaker:copyright infringement if you sample
Speaker:when you don't have the money to
Speaker:pay to get it clear Then, you know,
Speaker:you can't really use that record.
Speaker:And I wasn't one of the artists
Speaker:that wanted to deal with
Speaker:legal issues in that fashion.
Speaker:So that's how I taught myself
Speaker:how to produce records.
Speaker:So let's just say it
Speaker:started about 19 for me.
Speaker:And, um, became passionately serious
Speaker:about it, maybe around about like 24, 25.
Speaker:And then it was off to
Speaker:the races after that.
Speaker:John and Connie: Nice.
Speaker:That is so cool.
Speaker:And at some point you moved from
Speaker:Miami back to, back to LA, I believe.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Yes, because, um,
Speaker:when, well, I lived my whole life
Speaker:in Cali and I went to Miami to get
Speaker:a publishing deal for one of my
Speaker:dear friends that was a producer.
Speaker:And, um, I had an independent record
Speaker:company at that time with my ex girlfriend
Speaker:at the time we was in a relationship.
Speaker:And, uh, Everything didn't kind of pan out
Speaker:and I got real depressed because I spent
Speaker:like almost nine years putting The Lesson
Speaker:together, my own money and everything.
Speaker:And when I had to, uh, separate
Speaker:from that relationship, that record
Speaker:was collateral damage for me.
Speaker:So I didn't really want
Speaker:to, uh, be in California.
Speaker:So I ended up staying in Miami.
Speaker:And when I lived in Miami,
Speaker:I met my buddy, JV, big JV.
Speaker:And, he used to let me come in his house
Speaker:and, and set my equipment up in his patio.
Speaker:And his grandma, she
Speaker:like had to be about 70.
Speaker:His dad was in his 60s, mom's in the 60s,
Speaker:and I would come in that house at 9:30
Speaker:every morning and just start making beats.
Speaker:So I had a whole house shaking and
Speaker:grandma, Abuela, because he killed me,
Speaker:Abuela would be sitting right there
Speaker:in the, uh, in the living room or in
Speaker:the kitchen counter, just chilling,
Speaker:not, not telling to turn it off.
Speaker:Pops would be sitting in the sofa chair
Speaker:watching TV and I got the whole house just
Speaker:rattling and they would just be there.
Speaker:And, uh, so we ended up booking some
Speaker:studio time and I ended up working
Speaker:with an engineer by the name of
Speaker:Frank Socorro, who did a lot of work
Speaker:with some other engineers, a lot
Speaker:of Remy who worked on Amy Winehouse.
Speaker:He also worked on a lot of the bad boy
Speaker:project, but me and Frank Socorro, we
Speaker:set in the studio for like I'm gonna
Speaker:say about five months just working
Speaker:on, on just learning how to really
Speaker:cultivate my production and my writing.
Speaker:Cause I didn't have no friends there.
Speaker:I was in Miami, strictly just me, my
Speaker:keyboard, my drum machine and the studio.
Speaker:And that's when Pro Tools first hit.
Speaker:So I did that whole record on pro tools.
Speaker:And ironically, when I was
Speaker:working, Shakira was working
Speaker:right downstairs from me.
Speaker:So every day I would see Shakira,
Speaker:she would come up to my sessions.
Speaker:And you know, not one time did I ever
Speaker:ask her, could she be on a record?
Speaker:I'm pretty sure she would have
Speaker:did it because she used to
Speaker:come to my sessions every day.
Speaker:I would see her every single day.
Speaker:And, And, um, and, and it was just,
Speaker:It was just that that moment in
Speaker:Miami is when I really knew like
Speaker:my confidence level was was there
Speaker:because I didn't have no friends.
Speaker:All I had was my music And I was working.
Speaker:And from there, me and JV, we
Speaker:used to go like back and forth.
Speaker:Cause I ended up showing him the
Speaker:business and when he got it, he
Speaker:started having his own vision.
Speaker:So our visions did, our
Speaker:visions started splitting ways.
Speaker:So rather than continue to be frustrated,
Speaker:I just, um, came back to Cali.
Speaker:And when I came back to Cali, I started
Speaker:producing my little brother, Cali.
Speaker:And, um, other artists, another
Speaker:artist that was from Florida.
Speaker:And I used to go back and forth to
Speaker:San Francisco producing my cousin
Speaker:Dirty Dane out of, um, the bay.
Speaker:And I was just going around, just doing
Speaker:production for people, you know, I
Speaker:would charge some and some I wouldn't,
Speaker:if you was a friend of mine, I wasn't
Speaker:going to charge you, but if I didn't
Speaker:know you, I was pretty much charging.
Speaker:And then a couple years after
Speaker:that, I met their mom and it
Speaker:was, it was like I paused.
Speaker:I was still doing music because
Speaker:when, when we was together, I had a
Speaker:studio in the house and a recording
Speaker:studio in High Point, North Carolina.
Speaker:And, um, I started just continuing
Speaker:to keep producing and then, uh,
Speaker:I ran into some rough times there
Speaker:and I had to come back to Cali.
Speaker:And when I came back to Cali, you
Speaker:know, I had to get a job and all
Speaker:this other stuff, but I kept working.
Speaker:I kept trying to do music,
Speaker:kept trying to finish songs.
Speaker:And then I, um, ended up
Speaker:bearing off to Atlanta again.
Speaker:So I went back to Atlanta
Speaker:and I had to stay in Atlanta
Speaker:for a year and three months.
Speaker:So when I stayed in Atlanta for that
Speaker:year and three months, I met a lot of
Speaker:people, uh, um, was, I wasn't producing
Speaker:now, now I'm strictly just the artist.
Speaker:So now I'm buying beats
Speaker:from other producers.
Speaker:And when I came back to Cali, I was,
Speaker:um, trying to find myself again.
Speaker:So I ended up going to a musician's
Speaker:Institute and took the music business
Speaker:course where I got to be educated by
Speaker:Ken Kerner, the guy that discovered
Speaker:KISS, um, uh, one of my other
Speaker:professors, Bobby Borg, who is, uh,
Speaker:matter of fact, he's a consultant.
Speaker:He's all over YouTube, helping
Speaker:do, do it yourself, DIY,
Speaker:um, um, skills with the music business.
Speaker:And One of my professors was Barry
Speaker:Squire, who was a big A& R for a
Speaker:lot of rock bands back in the day.
Speaker:And that's when I really learned that
Speaker:what I knew for the record business,
Speaker:I kind of understood it because in
Speaker:class I was excelling everywhere, you
Speaker:know, so that was that transition.
Speaker:So I, um, I just kept dealing with
Speaker:music, kept working, kept working.
Speaker:And fast forward.
Speaker:Um, to let's say COVID era, right?
Speaker:My boys moved in like in 2021.
Speaker:So that was two years after COVID.
Speaker:So whenCOVID hit, that's when I first
Speaker:started putting music out on CD Baby.
Speaker:I put my first record
Speaker:out with CD Baby in 2019.
Speaker:And that was a record that I ended
Speaker:up working with one of my peers, but
Speaker:somebody I look up to in the record
Speaker:business by the name of Big Hutch, but
Speaker:He's also known as Cold 187um from a
Speaker:group Above the Law, which was signed
Speaker:to Easy E. So me and him did a whole
Speaker:record together in the studio where
Speaker:he did the majority of the production.
Speaker:And I had a couple of my friends come in.
Speaker:I'm very good at that.
Speaker:Like I will find one producer
Speaker:and work with that one producer.
Speaker:But then I would always
Speaker:bring in other producers.
Speaker:Cause it's like my way of maintaining
Speaker:control and ownership of my projects.
Speaker:So that's how I work.
Speaker:So instead of me just allowing one
Speaker:person to have a monopoly over the
Speaker:project, I would always bring in
Speaker:other people so that I can make sure
Speaker:that I kept the ownership rights
Speaker:and I was the one behind everything.
Speaker:So I was very adamant about that.
Speaker:John and Connie: Yeah, that seems to
Speaker:be a theme that's, you know, in the
Speaker:entertainment industry, whether it's film
Speaker:or music or anything, is that battle for
Speaker:rights and how many artists have signed
Speaker:away their rights somewhere early on in
Speaker:their career when they didn't realize
Speaker:what they were doing because, you know,
Speaker:to try to get to get that break, right?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: And once I was educated
Speaker:on the business now, see, it's like
Speaker:I'm, I sped through a whole lot.
Speaker:I gave you like a good 20
Speaker:years of history, condensed,
Speaker:like maybe seven minutes.
Speaker:But if I,
Speaker:John and Connie: That's fine.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: I broke down each one
Speaker:of those stages, let's just talk about
Speaker:The Lesson, the album, The Lesson.
Speaker:At that time, how The Lesson came about
Speaker:was, uh, I was trying to manage and find
Speaker:other artists and manage those artists.
Speaker:So I had a couple of producers,
Speaker:a couple of artists, but
Speaker:we wasn't in major studios.
Speaker:We was in the house because I was
Speaker:under the impression you make a
Speaker:good quality demo, you shop it.
Speaker:You get somebody to put the money
Speaker:up and then you go do quality music.
Speaker:But I come to learn that,
Speaker:nah, that's just a myth.
Speaker:You know what I'm saying?
Speaker:You really got to know somebody.
Speaker:So you had to invest the money
Speaker:into the quality studio as well.
Speaker:At that time, my childhood friend, who I
Speaker:ended up getting in a relationship with,
Speaker:which is my daughter's mom, Marlene.
Speaker:She had a job where her boss's
Speaker:husband happened to be well
Speaker:known entertainment attorney.
Speaker:And the boss, Miss Leslie Perlstein,
Speaker:introduced me to her husband, and her
Speaker:husband was Michael J. Perlstein of the
Speaker:firm Fischbach, Perlstein Lieberman.
Speaker:And when I walked in his office,
Speaker:he gave me a book on publishing.
Speaker:And I tell everybody this story
Speaker:because this is what changed my life
Speaker:as far as pursuing this business.
Speaker:He gave me a book on publishing
Speaker:and he gave me a meeting.
Speaker:So when I came back, like maybe
Speaker:two weeks after he gave me the
Speaker:book on publishing, he asked me a
Speaker:question that was on the first page
Speaker:of the book and I didn't answer it.
Speaker:And he yelled at me from his office in
Speaker:the back of the firm all the way through
Speaker:the law firm where all the associates,
Speaker:paralegals, receptionist, secretaries,
Speaker:everybody watching him just go off on me.
Speaker:I mean, he was very, very upset with me
Speaker:because it's like he took the time out to
Speaker:teach me something and gave me something
Speaker:and I didn't take the time to read it.
Speaker:So he cussed me out all the
Speaker:way out the office door,
Speaker:you know.
Speaker:I promised myself that he would
Speaker:never have that one on me again.
Speaker:And, and I, I learned the business.
Speaker:I learned, I started reading up.
Speaker:Not only did I read that publishing book,
Speaker:I ended up buying the book, This Business
Speaker:of Music, and I read that cover to cover.
Speaker:So I started learning what the
Speaker:language was and the contracts and
Speaker:what each one of those clauses was.
Speaker:Control composition clauses and
Speaker:transferring of rights and the
Speaker:ownership and mechanical royalty.
Speaker:So I started reading and learning
Speaker:what all of these different things
Speaker:was, because I was not going to allow
Speaker:him to yell at me again for that.
Speaker:You know, so, um,
Speaker:John and Connie: Which is a small price
Speaker:compared to, you know, getting caught
Speaker:in one of those, caught not knowing that
Speaker:thing and getting in a business deal and
Speaker:losing the rights to something, you know,
Speaker:much more costly than getting yelled at.
Speaker:So, you know, I understand why
Speaker:you say he did you a favor there.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: so for me, learning
Speaker:for me, learning the business now
Speaker:I'm trying to manage other artists.
Speaker:and while Managing the artists, they not
Speaker:putting forth the effort that you want to
Speaker:see when you're trying to get somewhere.
Speaker:Like they passionate,
Speaker:but they not consistent.
Speaker:They not, you know, aggressive about it.
Speaker:I really got to do a lot of the pushing
Speaker:and motivating to get them to work.
Speaker:And then because I knew the
Speaker:business, they would always feel
Speaker:like I'm trying to steal from them.
Speaker:And it was not to say one day,
Speaker:let me just do it for myself.
Speaker:And that's when I went, put the money
Speaker:down and started producing myself.
Speaker:And I met Mark Palladino at a studio
Speaker:called the edge and Mark Palladino
Speaker:taught me how to make records.
Speaker:He sat me down and showed me what each
Speaker:one of them channels are for the sounds.
Speaker:And at this time I was
Speaker:working on a two inch reel.
Speaker:They don't even use
Speaker:two inch reels no more.
Speaker:So if you made a mistake on a two
Speaker:inch reel, you had to literally go
Speaker:all the way back and start all over.
Speaker:So that's where my foundation comes from.
Speaker:I'm working on two inch reels, reel
Speaker:recorded, 24 track studios, right?
Speaker:So, now, I'mma fast forward to
Speaker:2021, when they come into the
Speaker:John and Connie: Yeah,
Speaker:let's get back to them.
Speaker:We're,
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: So, I, um, I got this
Speaker:old school formula of making records.
Speaker:They totally new school
Speaker:with making records.
Speaker:So, we would clash.
Speaker:And it got to the point to where
Speaker:I would just leave them alone.
Speaker:Like, let me just, I'll come in there
Speaker:and maybe say one or two lines, but
Speaker:I'll, I'll be very passionate about it.
Speaker:So it's kind of like I'm going off
Speaker:on them and I'll leave them alone.
Speaker:But I'll say my two, three, four,
Speaker:fives, you know, which is publishing
Speaker:writers, copyright infringement.
Speaker:Make sure you talking about something.
Speaker:So I would always be on their
Speaker:head about don't use samples.
Speaker:Make sure you did this beat.
Speaker:Try not to use them MIDI loops,
Speaker:learn how to create it yourself.
Speaker:Cause you want to make sure you,
Speaker:you have the rights and nobody
Speaker:can come take what you do.
Speaker:So that was me, right?
Speaker:And, um,
Speaker:John and Connie: So, hard won lessons.
Speaker:Lessons you learned the
Speaker:hard way, and, and, you
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Yes, yes.
Speaker:So after a while, they got so
Speaker:good at it, I just had to respect
Speaker:their methods, their decisions.
Speaker:Like, got to the point to where I couldn't
Speaker:come in there and critique them no more.
Speaker:I could just only tell them, I
Speaker:like this, I don't like this.
Speaker:I give them my opinion,
Speaker:add this, add that.
Speaker:But they was the ones driving the vehicle.
Speaker:They was the ones that understood
Speaker:what they was looking for when
Speaker:they was creating this music.
Speaker:So this is where we are now.
Speaker:And so only thing I do right now is just
Speaker:make sure I teach them how to protect it.
Speaker:and and I'm doing a lot of talking.
Speaker:I mean, you can ask them some questions
Speaker:about how they, how they developed
Speaker:into who they are and what role I play.
Speaker:Cause I would love to hear what they would
Speaker:have to say about my position with them.
Speaker:John and Connie: Me too.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So, who wants to go first?
Speaker:Shall I pick?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: George,
Speaker:John and Connie: Go, George.
Speaker:So, regarding that old school versus
Speaker:new school, what's your take on that?
Speaker:And how, how did you show Kimeyo
Speaker:that you were doing what worked?
Speaker:Is that a fair question?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Well, I feel like some of
Speaker:the old school stuff, we still use it now,
Speaker:like the same techniques, same thinking,
Speaker:same patterns and stuff like that.
Speaker:Like music patterns, basically.
Speaker:we could still, we still
Speaker:use it like at this time.
Speaker:But then also some of the new
Speaker:stuff, it's like, I feel like it
Speaker:helps like amplify what you create.
Speaker:Does that make sense?
Speaker:John and Connie: So how is
Speaker:it working with your dad?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Um,
Speaker:or sometimes he's like, I feel
Speaker:like he, like he said, he's
Speaker:passionate about what he does.
Speaker:So he takes it like seriously.
Speaker:You have to like be serious about what you
Speaker:want to make, how you're going to do it.
Speaker:John and Connie: Well, let me
Speaker:ask a slightly different one.
Speaker:What have you guys figured out about
Speaker:how to manage the business relationship
Speaker:versus the family relationship?
Speaker:Like when you're working What like I don't
Speaker:know what different people do different
Speaker:things some people, you know, they say
Speaker:okay We're you know, that's family stuff.
Speaker:We're going to set that aside This is
Speaker:business and and they even go so far as
Speaker:to call each other by first names instead
Speaker:of dad and you know son or whatever.
Speaker:Other people, you know, maybe you
Speaker:know get hats made there's all kinds.
Speaker:How do you manage that?
Speaker:Like, do you, do you draw lines between
Speaker:the family and the business or, or
Speaker:does it just all work together for you?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: I
Speaker:feel like we do we do draw lines like
Speaker:certain points Like certain times we're
Speaker:talking about like music or talking about
Speaker:like, um, yeah, basically we're talking
Speaker:about music that's like one whole thing
Speaker:and then just like family matters who
Speaker:like Talk about that different time.
Speaker:Not all in the same thing.
Speaker:Basically,
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:John and Connie: Cool,
Speaker:Yeah, keeping it separate.
Speaker:Chunk, what about you?
Speaker:What's coming to mind for you in all this?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: uh, what you mean?
Speaker:John and Connie: Well, I, I
Speaker:mean, you heard, you heard
Speaker:all the stuff your dad said.
Speaker:Did anything, as you're listening to
Speaker:that, did anything like jump up in
Speaker:your mind to say that's a, you know,
Speaker:that's something like a really good
Speaker:point or, you know, well, different
Speaker:way you look at it or whatever.
Speaker:I'm just kind of throwing it out there.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: No, I'm not
Speaker:really make sense, but he has
Speaker:his own, uh, his own vision.
Speaker:I mean, I can't really put on top
Speaker:away, but somebody else's vision.
Speaker:No, I
Speaker:John and Connie: Okay, right there.
Speaker:I'm going to ask you to speak,
Speaker:say that again just a little
Speaker:bit louder, but I'm, I'm
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: top away
Speaker:about somebody else's
Speaker:John and Connie: like, wise words here.
Speaker:I don't want, I want
Speaker:everybody to hear that.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Stay
Speaker:John and Connie: Do what?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: You got, he's 16, so
Speaker:you know, you gotta be prepared for him.
Speaker:John and Connie: But, yeah, vision,
Speaker:that is such, you know, especially
Speaker:you're in the creative field, right?
Speaker:You're making music, and
Speaker:you're, and it's important.
Speaker:It seems to be music, again, I'm,
Speaker:I'm a 70's rocker, so, hip hop's
Speaker:is kind of not in my wheelhouse,
Speaker:but it seems like it's really
Speaker:passionate, you know, personal music.
Speaker:I mean, like when they say Taylor
Speaker:Swift, all of her songs are about
Speaker:somebody she used to date or something
Speaker:like that, it's personal that way.
Speaker:But your music just sounded
Speaker:like there's an edge.
Speaker:It's an emotional edge to it.
Speaker:I was getting choked up.
Speaker:So When you talk about vision
Speaker:what well I was listening as far
Speaker:as the music I listened to is
Speaker:what was on the Kimeyo website.
Speaker:But what influenced your
Speaker:vision for what you do?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: I do.
Speaker:Um, I don't know, I just mainly just
Speaker:talk about, I guess I don't know my
Speaker:life or, you know what I'm saying,
Speaker:certain things that I feel about like
Speaker:how I feel about certain situations.
Speaker:I was like, because one thing is
Speaker:like if I make a song about one
Speaker:thing, I will just make a different
Speaker:song about that same thing, but
Speaker:just change like everything else.
Speaker:It's not like a whole different song.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:but majority of them all
Speaker:have the same meaning.
Speaker:It's all about my experiences or stuff
Speaker:that I'm going through, stuff like that.
Speaker:John and Connie: So in, this is so
Speaker:new, I almost don't know what to ask.
Speaker:It's so interesting.
Speaker:I've got a question.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Is it fun working together?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Is it fun?
Speaker:Sometimes.
Speaker:Sometimes.
Speaker:Personally, I just kind
Speaker:of like working by myself.
Speaker:I feel like it's more efficient
Speaker:because I'm trying to do
Speaker:my own stuff, my own thing.
Speaker:Punch it up, he can't hear you..
Speaker:So, uh, personally I kind of like
Speaker:working by myself because I work more
Speaker:efficiently, like doing stuff on my
Speaker:own, like, you know what I'm saying?
Speaker:I like to do my own stuff.
Speaker:I don't really like people who are
Speaker:kind of Trying to take my vision
Speaker:and you know what I'm saying?
Speaker:I mean, I can, I take suggestions,
Speaker:but I don't really like people
Speaker:trying to put their hand in my stuff.
Speaker:John and Connie: Sweetheart,
Speaker:we've worked in family businesses.
Speaker:We understand people in your
Speaker:business that you don't want there
Speaker:and then know nothing about it.
Speaker:do understand that.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Thinking they know better
Speaker:and, and, and with the best of
Speaker:intentions sometimes, right?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: But what we , clash at.
Speaker:That's what me and Chucky clash at.
Speaker:I'll come with a suggestion, I
Speaker:don't just do the suggestion.
Speaker:I actually try to put hands on it and he
Speaker:just like, he don't want to be bothered.
Speaker:So he just, he go on his own little zone.
Speaker:And then it takes me like a week to
Speaker:get something out of him after that.
Speaker:He's mad now.
Speaker:I got to wait for him to calm down before
Speaker:I could go ask him for him for anything.
Speaker:John and Connie: You
Speaker:crossed the line, man, yeah,
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: George is over
Speaker:here, George'll just do it, get
Speaker:it done and get me out the way.
Speaker:And he'll go back to do whatever.
Speaker:George has learned how to let me
Speaker:just get rid of him real quick.
Speaker:I can do what I want to do.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:John and Connie: easier to do what
Speaker:he says, right, and just get it done.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: What is it, George?
Speaker:You ain't got nothing to say?
Speaker:John and Connie: That's cute.
Speaker:Well, you find, you know, you,
Speaker:you, you try stuff, right?
Speaker:You try different things
Speaker:to see what works.
Speaker:And that's, I mean, whether it's
Speaker:Trying a different sound or a
Speaker:different way that you produce that.
Speaker:I think producing is the way you're
Speaker:mixing and putting things together.
Speaker:But you know same with with how you work
Speaker:together, you know Sometimes it's that
Speaker:again That's where we work like what we
Speaker:were talking about from our video being
Speaker:you know Kind of being conscious and
Speaker:intentional about it And, and asking
Speaker:questions, like, so if somebody's
Speaker:getting mad with you, maybe it's time
Speaker:to stop and ask a question, like, what,
Speaker:what's not working about that, you know,
Speaker:and, and try changing things up, put
Speaker:somebody else in charge and let them
Speaker:run with it and let them make mistakes.
Speaker:That's, that would seem like the
Speaker:beauty of what you're doing is that,
Speaker:you know, when you're making a song.
Speaker:I mean, if you're not burning $500 an hour
Speaker:of studio time or something, it's kind
Speaker:of low stakes to just run with something.
Speaker:And if it blows up, what did it cost you?
Speaker:Except a little time.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Um, I respect them.
Speaker:I respect them.
Speaker:So when they, when they working,
Speaker:like I know when I'm getting on their
Speaker:nerves a little bit and sometimes
Speaker:I, I do get, I do get in my own
Speaker:feelings that they kicking me out.
Speaker:You know, it does kind of, cause
Speaker:I be wanting to be all involved.
Speaker:I, I, I, I want to be very hands
Speaker:on in the chemistry of it, but.
Speaker:I could kind of sense when
Speaker:I'm getting on their nerves.
Speaker:So I kind of leave them alone.
Speaker:That's why they both got their own system.
Speaker:George has his own laptop.
Speaker:Chunky has his own laptop.
Speaker:And, uh, they got us a little
Speaker:home studio in the garage.
Speaker:And, uh, it's just, then it's
Speaker:like, who gonna come work and
Speaker:who's not going to come work.
Speaker:George don't want to do no rapping.
Speaker:So George can predominantly be self
Speaker:contained with some headphones and
Speaker:his computer and make the beats.
Speaker:Chunky, he wants to rap.
Speaker:So he'll be in the studio
Speaker:rattling the room and then
Speaker:coming in here and making vocals.
Speaker:But now he done, he done got dusty in
Speaker:here cause he done figured out a way
Speaker:to do it all from his phone and the,
Speaker:and the laptop without coming this way.
Speaker:But I respect him.
Speaker:That's the, that's the biggest,
Speaker:you know, Advantage for me to
Speaker:be dad as well as like a mentor.
Speaker:Cause even though I know that I know what
Speaker:I'm doing and I got my own understanding
Speaker:of everything, I had to learn how to
Speaker:follow their lead in order for them to
Speaker:get the confidence level that they have.
Speaker:So I started respecting what
Speaker:they was doing individually.
Speaker:Cause it would be one time where
Speaker:was feelin' like Chunky was more
Speaker:developed in production than George.
Speaker:then I learned that because
Speaker:I'm giving so much praise and
Speaker:accolades to Chunky, I'm smothering
Speaker:George from expressing himself.
Speaker:So I started shying away
Speaker:from Chunky a little bit and
Speaker:started acknowledging George.
Speaker:Because I noticed they
Speaker:got two different sounds.
Speaker:George has his sound.
Speaker:Chunky has his sound.
Speaker:But it's rare when you can
Speaker:get them to work together.
Speaker:You know, because like Chunky said, he
Speaker:don't want nobody Interfering with him.
Speaker:He wanted to be by hisself.
Speaker:George is open to it, long as it ain't
Speaker:going to crash what George is looking for.
Speaker:And they, they'll argue all day long.
Speaker:They'll argue all day long
Speaker:about weirdest things on
Speaker:production, or who drums is right.
Speaker:Who's kick is right.
Speaker:Who's playing the sound and the right key.
Speaker:So those little, like bickering, get
Speaker:to sit back and listen and kind of be
Speaker:proud because it's like, they're actually
Speaker:bickering over their creative visions.
Speaker:It's not like one is doing everything
Speaker:and other one is following.
Speaker:No, they both have their own direction
Speaker:and which way they're going to go
Speaker:and they both respect each other's
Speaker:judgment because like George mentioned
Speaker:earlier, see, I didn't know that
Speaker:Chunky started and inspired George.
Speaker:I thought it was the other way around.
Speaker:I thought it was George started and
Speaker:inspired Chunky, but to hear it was
Speaker:Chunky and then George caught on and
Speaker:boom, now I see what it is, because what,
Speaker:as far as both of them and they
Speaker:respect and they, and they respective
Speaker:lanes, I've learned that both of
Speaker:them are very, very in tune to all
Speaker:aspects of the production process.
Speaker:They understand what the plugins are for
Speaker:and the arrangements of the drums and
Speaker:the arrangements of the keys and how to
Speaker:put the sounds here and there and I was
Speaker:extremely impressed with the production.
Speaker:Like I told my engineer Box
Speaker:Cutters, Mike Hernandez.
Speaker:I told him like could have went and
Speaker:paid money and got other producers to
Speaker:create this project, but it would take
Speaker:away from the credit that I want my
Speaker:sons to receive for what they're doing.
Speaker:So I would rather put this record out
Speaker:and let everybody critique it, knowing
Speaker:they're in their development years,
Speaker:than to have somebody else come in and
Speaker:take that credit and rob them of what
Speaker:they rightfully worked and earned.
Speaker:They earned the right to
Speaker:call themselves producers.
Speaker:They earned the right to tell people
Speaker:that they need to be paid for their time.
Speaker:They earned that.
Speaker:They put that work in.
Speaker:They, they developed
Speaker:themselves to be producers.
Speaker:And I, I didn't want to take that away
Speaker:from them by going to other people.
Speaker:I was going to take what they gave me.
Speaker:clean it up with my engineer and
Speaker:make the best possible sound that I
Speaker:could from that and then present it.
Speaker:And, I'm very impressed.
Speaker:I like what we came with.
Speaker:I mean, they collectively, they
Speaker:did nine records on my album
Speaker:and as a dad, I'm so impressed.
Speaker:I'm so proud of my boys.
Speaker:You know what I'm saying?
Speaker:And I spreaded the music out so it's
Speaker:not like you're hearing all Chunky,
Speaker:then you're hearing all George.
Speaker:It's like, it's a sprinkle of
Speaker:Chunky, sprinkle of George,
Speaker:sprinkle of somebody else.
Speaker:Sprinkle of George, sprinkle of
Speaker:Chunky, sprinkle of somebody else.
Speaker:And when I did the writing, I wrote
Speaker:songs in different delivery methods,
Speaker:different cadence, so that I can marry
Speaker:myself to the music rather than the
Speaker:music dictating how it's going to go.
Speaker:And, and I'm, I'm just
Speaker:extremely impressed.
Speaker:And I haven't let anybody hear the record.
Speaker:Like it's only maybe been a handful of
Speaker:people that actually heard the record.
Speaker:I just gave it to my manager today
Speaker:for him to hear because it just got
Speaker:back from mastering and I wanted
Speaker:to get his opinion on the album.
Speaker:And right after I gave it to him,
Speaker:I told Box Cutter, man, why did
Speaker:I even mention that I had it?
Speaker:I want to protect it like this is gold.
Speaker:I feel like it's was it 1843?
Speaker:And I'm in San Francisco,
Speaker:I found me a gold nugget.
Speaker:So I don't want anybody to
Speaker:know about my gold nugget.
Speaker:You know what I'm saying?
Speaker:I got two perfectly pristine
Speaker:gold nuggets right here.
Speaker:And I didn't want to present it to nobody
Speaker:until it was all the way developed.
Speaker:So.
Speaker:I'm, I'm I'm very appreciative that God
Speaker:blessed me with these two young men and
Speaker:their creative vision and their skill set
Speaker:and their methods of creating what they,
Speaker:what they gave me to go do what I'm doing.
Speaker:And I respect them.
Speaker:I respect they, they movement.
Speaker:So sometimes I am, and it's hard for
Speaker:me not to be a dad, you know, it's
Speaker:hard for me not to be a dad because
Speaker:I only want the best for them.
Speaker:But sometimes I kind of get carried away,
Speaker:you know, I go a little overboard because.
Speaker:I want so much for them, you know,
Speaker:so I try to, I try to push them.
Speaker:I push them as hard as I can.
Speaker:And then when they get to that line
Speaker:and they feel like they're going to
Speaker:break, I give them one more push.
Speaker:And when I push them right there,
Speaker:what they come back with, it's like
Speaker:amazing because, uh, George was at the
Speaker:point where he was feeling like, you
Speaker:know, he couldn't figure out nothing.
Speaker:He's like, man, I'm making
Speaker:everything every day.
Speaker:I'm, I'm blocked.
Speaker:I'm blocked.
Speaker:And then I'm like, man, well,
Speaker:just give me what you got.
Speaker:And he went in there and he
Speaker:made something totally different
Speaker:than what he's been doing.
Speaker:And that came and boom.
Speaker:And with Chunky, I just, I stay on Chunky.
Speaker:I stay on him because his ego, Chunky has
Speaker:the ego, he has the confidence, he has
Speaker:the skill set, and he's very, very cocky.
Speaker:So I, I wrestle with him.
Speaker:That's like a wild mustang
Speaker:that I got to constantly call
Speaker:me down.
Speaker:John and Connie: Okay.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: And George, on
Speaker:the other hand, is real humble and
Speaker:confident, and he knows what he knows.
Speaker:You're not going to tell
Speaker:George something different.
Speaker:George is already like, alright,
Speaker:you can think what you want.
Speaker:Let me go on and give you what you
Speaker:need so you can let me go back to
Speaker:where I want to be in my position.
Speaker:So if we had to put it in an aspect of,
Speaker:uh, let's say, We had a, um, a warehouse
Speaker:because I worked in the warehouse
Speaker:and I can make this, this parable.
Speaker:Chunky, I could leave chunky
Speaker:alone in the warehouse.
Speaker:And he's going to do the job,
Speaker:but he gonna have fun all day.
Speaker:You gonna have fun and everything is
Speaker:going to be all over the warehouse,
Speaker:but it's going to be organized.
Speaker:So when I get to wondering where
Speaker:this is and why you got this over
Speaker:there, you're going to be mad
Speaker:at me that I'm coming at him.
Speaker:But he knows where everything is in
Speaker:the warehouse and he can and get it
Speaker:all done in his own pace in mind.
Speaker:George is going to already be organized.
Speaker:Everything is going to be where
Speaker:it's supposed to be and organized.
Speaker:And then if I ask him why did he do this?
Speaker:He'll tell me, well, I moved it over here
Speaker:because I needed more space to do this.
Speaker:And I'll do that.
Speaker:And then if I get on his nerves,
Speaker:he'll just move it where I want it.
Speaker:So I won't bother him about it no
Speaker:more, but in his mind, he'll let me
Speaker:see I should have left him alone and
Speaker:did it his way because I actually
Speaker:could have utilized that space
Speaker:that he already allocated for me.
Speaker:But Chunky just gon do
Speaker:Chunky, it's gon be how it is.
Speaker:You just gotta accept it for what it
Speaker:is, but everything's gon be organized.
Speaker:And he's, and he's paying attention.
Speaker:So, I get the best of both worlds
Speaker:with him from that perspective.
Speaker:That's why I have so much respect and
Speaker:appreciation for their work ethic.
Speaker:John and Connie: Yeah.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And it's, it's about, I mean,
Speaker:I'm hearing a lot there, but
Speaker:respecting their differences, right?
Speaker:Their, their uniqueness,
Speaker:each person is unique.
Speaker:And it sounds like from what you talked
Speaker:about the different roles in the business
Speaker:that George not really being interested
Speaker:in doing the rapping and just more of
Speaker:the technical side that really fits his
Speaker:personality and his way of thinking and
Speaker:Chunk is like, he's got to have that
Speaker:that bravado, that self confidence, the
Speaker:little bit of wildness to do the rapping.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:I mean, that's not something, that's
Speaker:not a real quiet, passive thing, is it?
Speaker:So, what's next?
Speaker:Yeah, what's next for the business?
Speaker:Where, where do you see it going?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Well, we're
Speaker:putting out my record, uh,
Speaker:John and Connie: Is that a CD or,
Speaker:or is it, I mean, when you say
Speaker:record, I'm thinking vinyl, so,
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: I'm still,
Speaker:I'm still debating on if I want
Speaker:to make physical copies of it.
Speaker:But the next stage for me, after we
Speaker:put out The Process is to work on
Speaker:getting Chunky on either an EP or a full
Speaker:fledged album and start letting George
Speaker:and Chunky become producers, producing
Speaker:other artists and developing them.
Speaker:And if they don't have the capital,
Speaker:then we can produce them and
Speaker:put them out through our label.
Speaker:If they do have the capital,
Speaker:then we'll show them how to do
Speaker:it themselves, you know, and, and
Speaker:I think that's the next stage.
Speaker:But Chucky has a whole
Speaker:vision, a whole plan.
Speaker:And I'm, and I'm just kind of like,
Speaker:I'm trying to understand it, but I
Speaker:got to show him, let's do this first,
Speaker:so you can see all aspects of it.
Speaker:So when you go on to do your plan, you
Speaker:can already check this off the box.
Speaker:and and with George, George already
Speaker:just knows, I just want to make music.
Speaker:You know what he told me the other day?
Speaker:That was kind of.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:He said, when you go start on the
Speaker:next album, you know what I'm saying?
Speaker:You know what you're going to do?
Speaker:So he's already ready to
Speaker:move to the next project.
Speaker:This project's done, dad.
Speaker:We mixing, we mastering, it's done.
Speaker:Let's, let's, let's start
Speaker:working on the next project.
Speaker:So George is gung ho producer, you
Speaker:know, and, uh, but I'm speaking for them
Speaker:when they could speak for themselves.
Speaker:John and Connie: So,
Speaker:what about the marketing?
Speaker:Who, who does, who handles marketing?
Speaker:I mean, how, how does it go from, we
Speaker:mastered this, It's in some form, whether
Speaker:it's MP4s or pressed on a CD or whatever.
Speaker:Then how does it get in people's
Speaker:hands that the people are paying
Speaker:for it and you're getting paid back?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: well, I'm using CD Baby
Speaker:as my distributor and CD Baby has a lot
Speaker:of affiliate partnerships with different
Speaker:viral companies and they put it in all
Speaker:the DSPs, the digital streaming platforms,
Speaker:the Pandoras, the Instagrams, the Spotify,
Speaker:the iTunes, the Deezer, Amazon Music.
Speaker:So CD Baby gets it everywhere
Speaker:that it needs to be.
Speaker:And then, and I've been working
Speaker:with another social media marketing
Speaker:company to do the awareness
Speaker:campaign and drive traffic.
Speaker:So that was my my main machine is just
Speaker:having the internet company drive the
Speaker:traffic there and because they only got
Speaker:two choices when they once they get there,
Speaker:either they like it or they don't like it.
Speaker:I just need them to get
Speaker:there to make that choice.
Speaker:So, um, that's what I've been utilizing.
Speaker:And then I also hired an independent
Speaker:streaming company that works with a lot
Speaker:of the curators and the playlists to
Speaker:get music put on particular playlists
Speaker:to help you get the streamings up.
Speaker:So, uh, that was my method.
Speaker:Now, Chunky, he has a vision.
Speaker:He has some idea of what he wants to do.
Speaker:We going, we might incorporate some of
Speaker:my ideas, but when he's finally making
Speaker:his decision to rock and roll, of
Speaker:course, I'mma give him the blueprint,
Speaker:but he's gonna have his own vision.
Speaker:Now, with George, it's just a matter
Speaker:of, I don't know, like, that's what
Speaker:I'm saying, they could do, they
Speaker:could tell you what their plans is
Speaker:next.
Speaker:I'm, I'm
Speaker:John and Connie: George,
Speaker:what's next for you?
Speaker:Where do you want to go next
Speaker:with the, your business, their
Speaker:business, uh, independent artist
Speaker:or, or teamwork or whatever?
Speaker:What's your vision?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: George,
Speaker:John and Connie: Yeah, George.
Speaker:Sorry.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: um, I don't know.
Speaker:I just kind of want to make
Speaker:beats for like more known people.
Speaker:So I could like build my credibility
Speaker:up so more people like know what I could
Speaker:do and then, yes, I could like have
Speaker:better connections with more people
Speaker:that I could like make music in general,
Speaker:like more music, like more known people.
Speaker:So I can work with more people that
Speaker:are like already at that level.
Speaker:So I can work with them as well.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:John and Connie: Cool.
Speaker:Chunk,
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Ooh,
Speaker:John and Connie: what's your big dream?
Speaker:If you can, if you don't mind
Speaker:sharing, like where do you want to
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: dreams.
Speaker:Uh, I just want to be able to make
Speaker:music without any distractions.
Speaker:That's all I really do.
Speaker:I don't really like, I gotta play
Speaker:sports and stuff for like fun, but I
Speaker:don't really take it seriously because
Speaker:I think it's a waste of time and stuff.
Speaker:I just want to be able to make
Speaker:music, but I ain't gonna lie.
Speaker:You know what I'm saying?
Speaker:I ain't gonna lie.
Speaker:Lately, I've been making
Speaker:more songs than beats.
Speaker:Uh, I've been making songs like everyday,
Speaker:but I just haven't recorded them yet.
Speaker:I just been writing them, so, that's
Speaker:John and Connie: Oh,
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: just, that's what
Speaker:I want, I just want to make me a bit
Speaker:calmer and care about what I'm getting
Speaker:paid from the most significant lesson.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:does it have
Speaker:John and Connie: Wonderful.
Speaker:What?
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:I'm gonna wind it up with
Speaker:one question for each of you.
Speaker:What?
Speaker:And I'm gonna stick with you,
Speaker:Chunk, since we're talking to you.
Speaker:What is the most significant lesson
Speaker:you've learned from watching your dad?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Does it
Speaker:have to be like music wise?
Speaker:John and Connie: No, I'm
Speaker:thinking life lesson.
Speaker:Like, he's done a lot of living.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: significant,
Speaker:uh, I say like how do you like
Speaker:if I'm gonna do something like at
Speaker:least to think ahead about it.
Speaker:Just whatever I do,
Speaker:make sure I do it right.
Speaker:You know what I'm saying?
Speaker:Like think ahead, basically, put more
Speaker:John and Connie: Solid.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Put more thought into
Speaker:stuff is probably the significant,
Speaker:I'll say, cause that really playing
Speaker:different situations, other stuff or like.
Speaker:Kind of strictly for certain
Speaker:situations, but I guess that could
Speaker:play out for everything that you do.
Speaker:John and Connie: Cool.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:George, what about you?
Speaker:You had time to think.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Uh, um, I feel
Speaker:like a life, like a life lesson
Speaker:that I, like, picked up my dad.
Speaker:I'ma just go with him always telling
Speaker:us to, do something that we're,
Speaker:like, actually passionate about.
Speaker:Don't do something just because
Speaker:you see somebody else doing it.
Speaker:Just to be passionate about what,
Speaker:what we do to like, make sure we're
Speaker:doing something that will help
Speaker:benefit us in the future, basically.
Speaker:John and Connie: Thank you very much.
Speaker:Nice.
Speaker:Nice.
Speaker:Kimeyo, last words of wisdom from you.
Speaker:Thank you guys all so much for being here
Speaker:with us, but Kimeyo, anything to add?
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Well, I could just
Speaker:say I appreciate you and Miss Connie
Speaker:for allowing us to be on your platform.
Speaker:I'm very appreciative of that.
Speaker:It was really enlightening
Speaker:hear what they had to say.
Speaker:But I could tell you what life
Speaker:lessons I learned from both of them.
Speaker:Like what I what I learned about
Speaker:George is feelings, emotions,
Speaker:like, learning how to curb them.
Speaker:Like every, every emotion don't
Speaker:need to be exposed, you know?
Speaker:Some things you can
Speaker:hold together, you know?
Speaker:And I learned that from him.
Speaker:And with Chunky, it's like
Speaker:life isn't necessarily over.
Speaker:You still can do some more living.
Speaker:still going.
Speaker:They still going to need me in a
Speaker:way like don't just think that they
Speaker:done because they getting older now.
Speaker:They still can come and ask me
Speaker:little things and this and that.
Speaker:They still gonna want to be around me.
Speaker:They still watching and learning.
Speaker:So I learned that from Chunky.
Speaker:I enjoy being their dad right
Speaker:now and working with them.
Speaker:This is the best dream come true
Speaker:to be able to work with my two
Speaker:boys doing music to where I know
Speaker:I don't have to babysit them.
Speaker:I could just let them do it
Speaker:themselves and they'll figure it out.
Speaker:And then if they do have an issue, I'm
Speaker:pretty confident they'll come back and
Speaker:ask me for my advice, but for the most
Speaker:part, I don't have to babysit them.
Speaker:That's like anybody that helped anyone
Speaker:in life, taught anybody how to fish,
Speaker:anybody how to do anything where you
Speaker:don't have to babysit or micromanage.
Speaker:I love the fact that I do not have
Speaker:to babysit or micromanage them.
Speaker:And I can, I can tell them something
Speaker:one time and they'll catch on.
Speaker:You know?
Speaker:John and Connie: Nice!
Speaker:Smart dad.
Speaker:Good job on all of you.
Speaker:It gets better from here.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:Well, thank you again so much for
Speaker:taking the time and for you guys
Speaker:coming on together and sharing
Speaker:your life and your passion with us.
Speaker:And your wisdom.
Speaker:We'll, look forward to,
Speaker:following your story, ongoing.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: No problem, man.
Speaker:The Process is coming out December 2024.
Speaker:I was about to call it The Lesson,
Speaker:but "The Process", 2024 on Kimeo
Speaker:Records, distributed by CD Baby,
Speaker:produced by Chunky on the track, and
Speaker:George made it, and we hope you like
Speaker:the presentation that we give you.
Speaker:John and Connie: Great.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:We will make sure to put that in the show
Speaker:notes in the description on YouTube, and
Speaker:we'll let you know when we publish it.
Speaker:It's going to be a few weeks.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: No problem, no problem.
Speaker:And it's Kimeyo.Com.
Speaker:K I
Speaker:John and Connie: com.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Great.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: E O. com.
Speaker:Yes, ma'am.
Speaker:Yes, sir.
Speaker:John and Connie: Thank you so much again,
Speaker:and you guys enjoy the rest of your,
Speaker:well, it's still almost afternoon there.
Speaker:Kimeyo and Sons: Yes,