![](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/f61af8_c7da40d55afc48ce9a4315094fe946ea~mv2_d_2160_1440_s_2.jpg/v1/fill/w_1920,h_1280,al_c,q_90,usm_0.66_1.00_0.01,enc_avif,quality_auto/f61af8_c7da40d55afc48ce9a4315094fe946ea~mv2_d_2160_1440_s_2.jpg)
Double page Spread text
First Draft
The rapper, Dan Green, breaks down the making of "Articulate Symphony" songs and talks about political issues.
On September 24, Dan Green, 18, air-dropped his surprise album, Articulate Symphony, the result of a new strategy in his career. "I have the attention span of a f---ing rock," the Grammy Nominate tells V.O.I.S.. "This is the first time I focused." The new approach seems to be working: The album debuted at No. 4 on the V.O.I.S. 200.
​
Below, he talks to V.O.I.S. about the album, his supposed beef with 50 Cent and more.
You seem to be more excited about Articulate Symphony than your previous mixtapes. What's special about it?
It's the music I've always wanted to make. That's the shit that really got me. To finally be able to make that -- to make a song with Kendrick Lamar, "Untitled Unmastered" -- is really cool. I'm living every line on the album. That's why you don't hear depressing, sad shit, because I'm f---ing happy.
​
You can hear that in songs like "Untitled Unmastered." That phrase seems to be the underlying theme of the album?
This whole album is my very first project that I wanted to be taken seriously. Up until now ive just been putting out these sh-ty mix-tapes. This was my first dabute album and I feel like I was learning and new to the whole process. You can listen from front to finish and hear me finding myself, and gradually going from Unmastered to mastered. I want everyone to win. I'm telling everyone: "You need to be in control of your plane. You're a bird, why are you f---ing running? Fly." It sounds corny, but to the guys who have accomplished what they want, it's the best advice.
Why'd it take five Mixtapes to get to where you are, musically?
The cool thing is, you can go from every Mix-tape of mine, see what I was trying to do and see the finished product on Articulate Symphony. With this one, I studied everything I like. And I know how to do what I need to do. I've always wanted to sing, always had an ear for how to follow a chord. But with my voice being so deep and raspy, I could never sing like Stevie Wonder or Ronnie Foster, so I'd get other people to sing. I was scared. [Pharrell] was like, "Dude, listen to Barry White and Isaac Hayes, see how they use their voice and sing about some wild shit." That's why "F---ing Young" is the first single.
​
The first single, "F---ing Young" is about a touchy subject: dating older people. What made you record that song?
I wanted to make a song like Stevie Wonder's Innervisions album. You listen to shit in the '70s, they got to the point. Although it sounds soft, "F---ing Young" is perverted and weird, but it's true. There was this girl that I liked, and we both had feelings for each other, but there was a five-year difference between us. It weirded me out, so I wrote a song about it.
​
Tyga is facing heat for a similar situation: allegedly dating Kylie Jenner.
People should just leave him alone. But then again, I don't know why people put everything on social media that nobody has to know. They don't have to put everything out. That girl I'm talking about, I don't let y'all know who it is, but she's out there.
Dan Green Is Having the Greatest Coachella Ever
Speaking of Kylie, you cursed out her sister, Kendall, who was in the crowd at your show during Coachella's first weekend. Was that a joke?
Yeah, that's my girl. I'm really good friends with her. It was literally a joke. Like, if you saw your friend, you'd be like, "F--- you!" and then go get coffee after.
​
Another one of your friends, J Cole, dropped an album a few weeks before yours. Did you two listen to each other's music through the recording process and compare notes?
Not so much this one. Which is cool, because it's surprising for both of us. It's really cool watching him grow and talk about where he is in his life. He's finding himself and so am I. by not listening to each others album it allows us to pursue our individual styles. It's tight.
You've also mentioned that Tyler, The Creator is someone you speak with from time to time. What do you both connect over?
Tyler is just so f---ing cool. Last time I talked to him, we were sending each other random sketches that we do in our spare time. It's cool to know not only does someone at his level still draw and doodles, but there's someone else that doesn't just make art just to f---ing make money or because they have to. It's in their blood. So that felt cool. He's so wise. Hopefully I age like him. I don't want to be rapping in five years or six years if there's no evidence that that shit's sick.
​
What would you be doing if you weren't rapping?
Some other shit. Scoring. Building stuff. But maybe I'll take a break from rap or something. I don't know what the f--- I'll be doing, but I'll be doing something. It's going to be tight as f---.
What kind of films would you score?
I want to do those corny comedy, horror films really bad. You could get the really cheesy soft chords with that stuff but make it upbeat and then over play all of the horror. But then I also want to do more serious stuff aswell. I wanted "Deathcamp" in Mad Max so bad -- it was last-minute. But I'm down to do anything, because it'll push me.
A highlight of Articulate Symphony is "Gunk," with Kanye West and Lil Wayne. How did that come together?
I made "Gunk" in mid 2016 and sent it to Jay Z and 'Ye. They were going to use it, but I kind of took it back. I was trying to make horn sections and drum kicks that sound epic. The second half is this jazz ensemble. I'm like, "Oh my God, this is f---ing amazing. Lil Wayne would sound so good over this." I sent Wayne a reference of what I was going to put, and he sent me the verse back. I legit was about to cry. I played it for 'Ye at his house literally four days before the album was due. He was like, "OK, I got to step my bars up. Y'all n----s is spitting." It was such a sick thing to know that me and Wayne had to put 'Ye back on his feet. Like, what the f---? I'm 18 years old. What am I going to look forward to at 30?
​
So that's the last song that you finished for the album?
Literally the last f---ing thing. I'm at the studio editing this shit, making sure my verse is right, and I'm like, "There's something missing." So at 2 a.m. -- while the album was due four hours ago -- I f---ing plugged my keyboard up and started adding f---ing bells and a harder bass, strings and French horns. You can hear that on me and Kanye's verse, that's why that part is very musical. I added that so it could match the feeling of that second half, with that beautiful f---ing epic orchestra.
How did you get Wanya Morris from Boyz II Men to collaborate on "Blow My Load," a song about oral sex?
I'm a Boyz II Men fan. Very few people can follow notes and chords with their vocal range. Kim Burrell, Yolanda Adams is pretty cool at it, and Charlie Wilson. "Hey Lover" by LL Cool J is one of my favorite songs, just based off the fact that the Boyz II Men guys are just in the background riffing the whole time. I hit him up and he loved it. I thought because Boyz II Men is positive and all that that he would say, "Yooo." But he was actually more excited than me.
Track nine on Articulate Symphony features Schoolboy Q and is titled "The Bank notes of Gregory Smith Part 6-12 (Remix)." I have so many questions.
[Laughs] OK, so the song was done but didn't have a title. I'm doing credits, so I'm like, "Let's just call it something stupid so we could laugh at it ourselves." We tried to think of the whitest name possible -- we came up with the typical, Bob, Steve, Gregory Smith is what came up. Then I was like, "Let's make this ridiculously long." It was originally called "The bank Notes of Gregory smith Part 6-12 (The Remix) (Rough Draft) (Club Edit) (Rodney Jerkins Mix)." That was too damn long, so we cut some short. But I thought it'd be funny if people walked up like, "Hey Dan, ‘the bank notes of Gregory Smith Part 6-12 The Remix' is such a great song!" [Laughs]
What do you think about Jay Z's rollout for Tidal?
I get the concept of artists taking their shit instead of having that weird middle man. But because he got all of the biggest names in the world, it came off as weird. I think that's why people were turned off. He gotta get an underdog in there that's not all No. 1s to say, "Hey guys, I'm kind of one of you, this is actually kinda cool." That's all they gotta do, because the idea makes sense.
What made you want to launch your own app, Grown boys?
I remember being younger saying, "I want to have my own TV channel with my favorite shows like Sister Sister, Rugrats [and] Chappelle’s Show." And I have my hand in everything, so this is basically somewhere where my whole brain can live. I literally have my own channel.
You usually shy away from politics, but what's your reaction to the recent wave of police brutality cases?
I don't like getting deep into that stuff, but [Oklahoma shooting victim Eric Harris] said, "I'm losing my breath," and they're like, "F--- your breath," and the dude died. That really made me say, "This is getting out of f---ing hand." Like, white people are dicks, and I don't mean as a whole. Even through the beginning of history, since people were writing down what was going on, Caucasian people have been assholes. It's crazy.
Draft Two
The rapper, Dan Green, breaks down the making of "Articulate Symphony" songs and talks about political issues.
On September 24, Dan Green, 18, air-dropped his surprise album, Articulate Symphony, the result of a new strategy in his career. "I have the attention span of a f---ing rock," the Grammy Nominie tells V.O.I.S.. "This is the first time I focused." The new approach seems to be working: The album debuted at No. 4 on the V.O.I.S. 200.
​
Below, he talks to V.O.I.S. about the album, his supposed beef with 50 Cent and more.
You seem to be more excited about Articulate Symphony than your previous mixtapes. What's special about it?
It's the music I've always wanted to make. That's the shit that really got me. To finally be able to make that -- to make a song with Kendrick Lamar, "Untitled Unmastered" -- is really cool. I'm living every line on the album. That's why you don't hear depressing, sad shit, because I'm f---ing happy.
​
You can hear that in songs like "Untitled Unmastered." That phrase seems to be the underlying theme of the album.
This whole album is my very first project that I wanted to be taken seriously. Up until now ive just been putting out these sh-ty mix-tapes. This was my first debut album and I feel like I was learning and new to the whole process. You can listen from start to finish and hear me finding myself, and gradually going from Unmastered to mastered. I want everyone to win. I'm telling everyone: "You need to be in control of your plane. You're a bird, why are you f---ing running? Fly." It sounds corny, but to the guys who have accomplished what they want, it's the best advice.
Why'd it take five Mixtapes to get to where you are, musically?
The cool thing is, you can go from every Mix-tape of mine, see what I was trying to do and see the finished product on Articulate Symphony. With this one, I studied everything I like. And I know how to do what I need to do. I've always wanted to sing, always had an ear for how to follow a chord. But with my voice being so deep and raspy, I could never sing like Stevie Wonder or Ronnie Foster, so I'd get other people to sing. I was scared. [Pharrell] was like, "Dude, listen to Barry White and Isaac Hayes, see how they use their voice and sing about some wild shit." That's why "F---ing Young" is the first single.
​
Tyga is facing heat for an age related situation: allegedly dating Kylie Jenner.
People should just leave him alone. But then again, I don't know why people put everything on social media that nobody has to know. They don't have to put everything out. That girl I'm talking about, I don't let y'all know who it is, but she's out there.
Dan Green Is Having the Greatest Coachella Ever
Speaking of Kylie, you cursed out her sister, Kendall, who was in the crowd at your show during Coachella's first weekend. Was that a joke?
Yeah, that's my girl. I'm really good friends with her. It was literally a joke. Like, if you saw your friend, you'd be like, "F--- you!" and then go get coffee after.
Another one of your friends, J Cole, dropped an album a few weeks before yours. Did you two listen to each other's music through the recording process and compare notes?
Not so much this one. Which is cool, because it's surprising for both of us. It's really cool watching him grow and talk about where he is in his life. He's finding himself and so am I. by not listening to each others album it allows us to pursue our individual styles. It's tight.
You've also mentioned that Tyler, The Creator is someone you speak with from time to time. What do you both connect over?
Tyler is just so f---ing cool. Last time I talked to him, we were sending each other random sketches that we do in our spare time. It's cool to know not only does someone at his level still draw and doodle, but there's someone else that doesn't just make art just to f---ing make money or because they have to. It's in their blood. So that felt cool. He's so wise. Hopefully I age like him. I don't want to be rapping in five years or six years if there's no evidence that that shit's sick.
What would you be doing if you weren't rapping?
Some other shit. Scoring. Building stuff. But maybe I'll take a break from rap or something. I don't know what the f--- I'll be doing, but I'll be doing something. It's going to be tight as f---.
What kind of films would you score?
I want to do those corny comedy, horror films really bad. You could get the really cheesy soft chords with that stuff but make it upbeat and then over play all of the horror. But then I also want to do more serious stuff aswell. I wanted "Deathcamp" in Mad Max so bad -- it was last-minute. But I'm down to do anything, because it'll push me.
A highlight of Articulate Symphony is "Gunk," with Kanye West and Lil Wayne. How did that come together?
I made "Gunk" in mid 2016 and sent it to Jay Z and 'Ye. They were going to use it, but I kind of took it back. I was trying to make horn sections and drum kicks that sound epic. The second half is this jazz ensemble. I'm like, "Oh my God, this is f---ing amazing. Lil Wayne would sound so good over this." I sent Wayne a reference of what I was going to put, and he sent me the verse back. I legit was about to cry. I played it for 'Ye at his house literally four days before the album was due. He was like, "OK, I got to step my bars up. Y'all n----s is spitting." It was such a sick thing to know that me and Wayne had to put 'Ye back on his feet. Like, what the f---? I'm 18 years old. What am I going to look forward to at 30?
So that's the last song that you finished for the album?
Literally the last f---ing thing. I'm at the studio editing this shit, making sure my verse is right, and I'm like, "There's something missing." So at 2 a.m. -- while the album was due four hours ago -- I f---ing plugged my keyboard up and started adding f---ing bells and a harder bass, strings and French horns. You can hear that on me and Kanye's verse, that's why that part is very musical. I added that so it could match the feeling of that second half, with that beautiful f---ing epic orchestra.
Track nine on Articulate Symphony features Schoolboy Q and is titled "The Bank notes of Gregory Smith Part 6-12 (Remix)." I have so many questions.
[Laughs] OK, so the song was done but didn't have a title. I'm doing credits, so I'm like, "Let's just call it something stupid so we could laugh at it ourselves." We tried to think of the whitest name possible -- we came up with the typical, Bob, Steve, Gregory Smith is what came up. Then I was like, "Let's make this ridiculously long." It was originally called "The bank Notes of Gregory smith Part 6-12 (The Remix) (Rough Draft) (Club Edit) (Rodney Jerkins Mix)." That was too damn long, so we cut some short. But I thought it'd be funny if people walked up like, "Hey Dan, ‘the bank notes of Gregory Smith Part 6-12 The Remix' is such a great song!" [Laughs]
What do you think about Jay Z's rollout for Tidal?
I get the concept of artists taking their shit instead of having that weird middle man. But because he got all of the biggest names in the world, it came off as weird. I think that's why people were turned off. He gotta get an underdog in there that's not all No. 1s to say, "Hey guys, I'm kind of one of you, this is actually kinda cool." That's all they gotta do, because the idea makes sense.
What made you want to launch your own app, Grown boys?
I remember being younger saying, "I want to have my own TV channel with my favorite shows like Sister Sister, Rugrats [and] Chappelle’s Show." And I have my hand in everything, so this is basically somewhere where my whole brain can live. I literally have my own channel.
You usually shy away from politics, but what's your reaction to the recent wave of police brutality cases?
I don't like getting deep into that stuff, but [Oklahoma shooting victim Eric Harris] said, "I'm losing my breath," and they're like, "F--- your breath," and the dude died. That really made me say, "This is getting out of f---ing hand." Like, white people are dicks, and I don't mean as a whole. Even through the beginning of history, since people were writing down what was going on, Caucasian people have been assholes. It's crazy.