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We took a trip down to London to spend some time with Kish Kash, talking Sneakers, Music, hard work and more, even taking in some recommended miso with the man himself.
The conversation explores the evolution of cultural influence, particularly in the context of hip hop and sneaker culture. The speakers discuss the term "influencer" and its loaded connotations, contrasting it with "cultural curator." We delve into the history of Aylesbury, highlighting its musical and cultural impact, including figures like Rob Stringer and Silver Bullet. The discussion touches on the influence of Malcolm McLaren and the crossover of music and fashion. The speakers also reflect on the importance of archiving and documenting cultural artifacts, emphasizing the need for future generations to understand the now.
Mentioned in this episode:
Reissued classics from Be With Records
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So Kish, cash, hello, Adam, influencer. Is it okay to
Adam Gow:say influencer?
Kish Kash:It's not a I'm not an influencer.
Adam Gow:It's quite, yeah,
Kish Kash:I was wondering about influencing, right? That whole
Kish Kash:thing started way after. I mean, I've been around a long time, so
Kish Kash:I would say that I think that's a bit of a misnomer,
Adam Gow:yeah, because I'd think of it is kind of what you
Adam Gow:did kind of predated it. And I think if you say influencer now,
Adam Gow:it's quite loaded, yeah, because there's a suggestion of, well,
Adam Gow:yeah,
Kish Kash:because if I get offended with the term
Kish Kash:influencer, and I don't know, I don't know if that's if that's
Kish Kash:correct to be like that, but I'm thinking it's, it's like,
Kish Kash:there's another term that does my head in a little bit as well,
Kish Kash:and it's got a negative sort of connotation, or has it, or is it
Kish Kash:in my head, or is it in the head of everyone else, is
Kish Kash:sneakerhead? Now, the thing is, I think Bobbito came up with the
Kish Kash:term sneakerhead in his article in The Source magazine, or he
Kish Kash:might have even had that as a term before, but it's the first
Kish Kash:time it was in print. But, yeah, I remember, I remember that. So
Kish Kash:then when, when I was at this panel discussion where Bob was
Kish Kash:one of the guests, and somebody was deriding, you know, the term
Kish Kash:sneaker he goes, yo. I came up with that term, and then it
Kish Kash:flipped on its head. It's like, yo. If bobbio said we're sneaker
Kish Kash:heads, then, and he's the one who came up with that term, and
Kish Kash:he's OG, og, yeah, there's no way it can still but the thing
Kish Kash:is, you know, sometimes language evolves right, and what was
Kish Kash:offensive sometimes becomes less offensive, and some things which
Kish Kash:weren't intended to have an offensive sort of nature become
Kish Kash:offensive. So maybe it's a question of that as well. I
Kish Kash:don't know. Adam, we have to write to our local MP to find
Kish Kash:out.
Adam Gow:I think there's two different things with
Adam Gow:influencer, and I think, I think the thing that you can
Adam Gow:potentially get from it, which is why I wondered, I wondered if
Adam Gow:you'd be kind of into it or not, is, do
Kish Kash:you know what I say I am? And this is the wankiest
Kish Kash:term I could ever come up with before we get into that cultural
Kish Kash:curator. That's how I look at that. But anyway, back to what
Kish Kash:you're saying, yeah. So what
Adam Gow:I was gonna say is I think that what you can
Adam Gow:potentially get with influence, influencer is the kind of
Adam Gow:suggestion that someone has thought, I just want to get some
Adam Gow:free stuff. Because there was a time when all of a sudden,
Adam Gow:people it became like a career ambition,
Kish Kash:yeah, yeah. Well, it is, yeah. This is the main
Kish Kash:thing. But the thing is, I've got a thing about being given
Kish Kash:free stuff. It's not free because it's a payoff, because
Kish Kash:if a brand gives someone something, there's a reason why
Kish Kash:they want them to have it, and it's to give it a bit of
Kish Kash:cultural gravitas, maybe, or or basically, a bit of, you know, a
Kish Kash:spotlight, or whatever, a co sign, you know, it puts it on a
Kish Kash:level, that puts it right there, into the zeitgeist. So the thing
Kish Kash:is, then it's a payment. You see, it's a payment for services
Kish Kash:given rendered, because if I put it up on Instagram, then the
Kish Kash:product's been advertised for. How much, in comparison, to,
Kish Kash:say, direct to consumer, direct to your target audience, as
Kish Kash:opposed to, hey, I'm going to put it in a magazine. I'm going
Kish Kash:to put it, you know, on the TV. We don't know what that will do,
Kish Kash:you know, probably be blanket recognition or something, and
Kish Kash:maybe we'll get a few sales out of it, or maybe people are still
Kish Kash:aware that we're in the mix. But yeah, with that, it's like,
Kish Kash:boom.
Adam Gow:It's kind of like a kind of parallel to that is,
Adam Gow:say, if you were DJ and you just get a really well paid gig, you
Adam Gow:can kind of think, I can't believe I'm getting paid so well
Adam Gow:for doing this gig. Doesn't happen to me very often so, but
Adam Gow:you can then think, well, if I balance it out against all these
Adam Gow:things that I've done for free over the years and for Goodwill
Adam Gow:and stuff like, I'm not actually just getting paid this great
Adam Gow:amount for this isolation thing. No,
Kish Kash:you're getting paid for the moment, up until that
Kish Kash:point, all those years of like, graft, you know, accruing
Kish Kash:knowledge, accruing, you know, sort of your points, as it were,
Kish Kash:yeah, you know. And it's, it's a case of, the end result is, this
Kish Kash:is, this is our home. We've done our due diligence, we've we've
Kish Kash:busted our our gut, you know? We've hammered our head. And
Kish Kash:right now, this is, this is what, this is the result. So the
Kish Kash:thing is, you're not paying for the time when it comes to DJing.
Kish Kash:This is the thing. A lot of people get the thing, oh, you
Kish Kash:pay. You get paid for the hour. No, I'm getting paid for the
Kish Kash:everything up until that point that took me to get there all
Kish Kash:those years of digging records, you know, digging for records,
Kish Kash:going in, you know, chatting to people, sharing, music,
Kish Kash:swapping, buying whatever, all those hours, days, weeks,
Kish Kash:months, years spent doing that. Yeah, what is what you're paying
Kish Kash:for. That's
Adam Gow:it. And this is kind of a good point, I think, to
Adam Gow:kind of look at your story and where you started from, and how
Adam Gow:all the kind of cultural cache, I guess you could say, like your
Adam Gow:journey in kind of getting to where you are at the moment. Oh,
Adam Gow:yeah. Um, high Wickham, wasn't
Kish Kash:it? No, no, no, no. Elsbury, which is just, yep,
Kish Kash:that's fine. Ellsbury is where I'm from. And. And high reckon,
Kish Kash:is just down the road, but it's all in Buckinghamshire. But, you
Kish Kash:know, elsby Born and bred and proud of it. I mean, the main
Kish Kash:thing is, the musical history of elsby is quite on the low. It's
Kish Kash:happened and it's and I'll tell you how it's affected culture as
Kish Kash:well. But, you know, I think Marillion, let's go back, you
Kish Kash:know, not hip hop, okay, brilliant from elsbury. And
Kish Kash:loads of people performed in elsby. David Bowie performed in
Kish Kash:elsby. Loads of things clockwork. Part of Clockwork
Kish Kash:Orange was filmed in Aylesbury, the underpass scene. And that's
Kish Kash:filmed the the fryer square underpass. So, yeah, there's a
Kish Kash:lot of things that happened in Ellsbury. Then you've got say.
Kish Kash:So I went to I hated it, but I met a lot of good people there.
Kish Kash:I went to the Ellsbury grammar school. One of the alumni from
Kish Kash:Ellsbury Grammar School older than I is Rob stringer. Now, Rob
Kish Kash:stringer is very high up in Sony, very high up, I think he's
Kish Kash:like at the top, like that, and he's an ex sales student, which
Kish Kash:is quite mad. I only found this out recently, like last year,
Kish Kash:and then there's all the people that come from elsby. So when I
Kish Kash:was growing up, silver bullet was hanging out in the
Kish Kash:McDonald's with a lot of people who subsequently became my good
Kish Kash:friends. And I was, I was, you know, serving them like, you
Kish Kash:know, McDonald's, you know, which is quite mad, which is
Kish Kash:crazy. And for those who don't know who silver bullet is, he's
Kish Kash:hardcore hip hop, late 80s, the whole fast rap thing, influenced
Kish Kash:by Rakim Kane and all that kind of stuff, and big and public
Kish Kash:enemy in terms of sound, and the sort of progenitor of what led
Kish Kash:to the sort of whole, that whole sort of cosmic slop of music
Kish Kash:that was going on back then. So you had hip hop, then you had
Kish Kash:the emergence of acid house, which then sort of morphed into
Kish Kash:hardcore, which morphed into jungle, which morphed into drum
Kish Kash:and bass. All the old jungle heads are ex Hip Hop DJs or the
Kish Kash:originals. So when you chat, when you see DJ hype, the first
Kish Kash:appearance of DJ hype is on the back cover. He's part of a hip
Kish Kash:hop group. I've got the 12 somewhere. I cannot remember
Kish Kash:what it is, but DJ hype is original hip hop. I mean, you
Kish Kash:know. And then we when silver bullet was hanging around, one
Kish Kash:of the guys hanging around with silver bullet was my friend
Kish Kash:who's just recently passed away, MC Conrad. MC Conrad went on to
Kish Kash:partner ltj Bookham, as you know, with good, good looking
Kish Kash:records, and all the releases on logical progression and all the
Kish Kash:live shows that they did, and they were, they ruled Drum and
Kish Kash:Bass throughout the throughout the 90s that it weren't so sir
Kish Kash:Connie, these old friend of mine. He's from elsbury, and one
Kish Kash:of my old school friends, and this is probably got the high
Kish Kash:working reference from is Robbie Lasker, aka the principal, aka
Kish Kash:the producer in caveman, yes, which was the first hip hop
Kish Kash:group in this country to be signed to a major label, which
Kish Kash:is a big deal. Robbie's my schoolmate and I was there when
Kish Kash:he was making, you know, some of the tunes in his bedroom, on his
Kish Kash:bedroom studio. I in fact, even own the Akai s9 100 sampler that
Kish Kash:he made positive reaction on, and the the damn DP for MCD and
Kish Kash:all the other little bits that he did, the down with the king
Kish Kash:remix for Run DMC, all these crazy things. So that's quite
Kish Kash:mad. So just, just on that,
Adam Gow:yeah, because I probably don't know as much as I
Adam Gow:should about that first era of rap, and I think it's kind of
Adam Gow:unrepresented or unproper, like, it's a lot more significant than
Adam Gow:it's kind of given the credit for, like, but as I understand
Adam Gow:it, Caveman were, were the first sort of group over here doing
Adam Gow:like, the sort of jazzy sort of stuff, yeah, yeah, I
Kish Kash:think it's a fair one.
Adam Gow:So was it, was it quite when the guys were doing
Adam Gow:that and you were around that, was it kind of like this, just,
Adam Gow:this is just something different. Well, just
Kish Kash:a mad thing was, is, um, yeah, it was different. The
Kish Kash:whole approach, Robbie's whole ethos, when he was putting me
Kish Kash:onto the tricks that he was doing, to do the beats and
Kish Kash:everything, and we were beat digging. But he was beat digging
Kish Kash:before me, he was, he was going up into London or wherever, you
Kish Kash:know, to get jazz brace with without my good homie still to
Kish Kash:this day, Mark, Mark Priest, who goes by the name of President p
Kish Kash:but his DJ name back then might have been DJ fade. And he was in
Kish Kash:a group called the Academy with MC Conrad and with Robbie,
Kish Kash:before Conrad broke out and and before Conrad became, I'm trying
Kish Kash:to remember, because bullets, silver bullets, original crew
Kish Kash:was called triple element, and Conrad and him with the MCs in
Kish Kash:it, and my mate, les alert, he produced it, and luggy produced
Kish Kash:it. I think they produced bring forth the guillotine in 21
Kish Kash:seconds to comply both classic rap records from that era. So I
Kish Kash:think he may have gone from triple element to the Academy.
Kish Kash:And then, you know, they all went their separate ways. Robbie
Kish Kash:did caveman, and then, and then, and then Connie went off with to
Kish Kash:dreamscape or wherever, and got up. And then bookend was like
Kish Kash:playing it back, going, Who is this guy? We've got to find him.
Kish Kash:And then, before you know it, you have history made, you know,
Kish Kash:but it was a mad one. But yeah, Ellsbury, very fascinating. That
Kish Kash:regard, another school friend of mine in my class still mates to
Kish Kash:this day is my mate, Ted cockle. Ted cockle, he left school and
Kish Kash:he went to start work at CBS at the time, as it was known in
Kish Kash:ravens Lane, the industrial estate in Aylesbury. CBS later
Kish Kash:became was bought by Sony, yeah, right. And then Sony, you know,
Kish Kash:BMG, combined, later, at a later date. So anyway, Ted always on
Kish Kash:about music. He was putting on stuff at the school, the school
Kish Kash:dance. He was putting, you know, he's putting stuff on. He was
Kish Kash:promoting at the well ed in he was well early on his bands. He
Kish Kash:had Oasis, I think, play early at the wellhead, which is a pub
Kish Kash:in window, which no longer exists. He had, I think, blur. I
Kish Kash:think he had all these big, big bands that later went on to
Kish Kash:transform the music scene in this country. He had him on the
Kish Kash:early so, and then he was working at CBS at the time. And
Kish Kash:then he trans, he moved to London, and he started working
Kish Kash:for Sony on great Marlborough Street. He's got, he tell him
Kish Kash:he's got to start writing his memoirs. He's got stories for
Kish Kash:days like, um, like having to help Jennifer Lopez get into a
Kish Kash:dress because, you know, the dress was too small, or
Kish Kash:something like that. I don't know. It's just mad. He's got
Kish Kash:mad stories. So Ted, then he, then he basically left Sony and
Kish Kash:me, he moved to BMG and became co president of no BMG. He
Kish Kash:became co president of Island Records in this country with
Kish Kash:Darkus. So he's had so many people on his watch, you know,
Kish Kash:heading that up. So, yeah, that's quite mad. And then
Kish Kash:another school friend in the year below is Chris Price, who,
Kish Kash:great guy. He's in charge of radio at Radio One, I think, or
Kish Kash:he's in the mix, very high up somewhere in the ether. So elsby
Kish Kash:has a big sort of lineage of music people, not just myself.
Kish Kash:That's pretty impressive. Yeah, which is mad I went to school
Adam Gow:with Doctor Who, Doctor Who's Doctor Who? Jody,
Adam Gow:Jody Whitaker, yeah, no way.
Kish Kash:She's amazing. You still mate, no, what? Jodi, you
Kish Kash:better get on this podcast. Seriously, girlfriend, not cool.
Kish Kash:Man, hold it down for the old school. We
Adam Gow:didn't, we didn't fall out. Well, she's
Kish Kash:not been in your podcast. Shock yet.
Adam Gow:Work on it, right? Jodie, if
Kish Kash:you're listening to this, you better be
Adam Gow:was it kind of your community that was around you
Adam Gow:that brought hip hop to you? Then? No, no, I was
Kish Kash:already on hip hop from the from the early, you
Kish Kash:know, growing up in the late 70s, early 80s, uh, hip hop was,
Kish Kash:was the new thing. It was very exciting. We were up. I don't
Kish Kash:really know how I remember the message playing on radio and
Kish Kash:loving it. And also the Green Cross Code, man, because the
Kish Kash:thing is, they took part of that, into that part of that
Kish Kash:rap, into the Green Cross Code thing to get kids to to remember
Kish Kash:not to do certain things. Don't step while you're close to the
Kish Kash:edge, you know. I mean, okay, was in the Green Cross Code
Kish Kash:thing. And, yeah, I mean, at the end of the day, you know, you're
Kish Kash:exposed to everything on TV. You know, three channels back then,
Kish Kash:my God, three channels, BBC One, BBC Two, and ITV. That
Unknown:was it. There's no channel four. When Channel Four
Unknown:happened, it was like, whoa. Well, I
Kish Kash:went to when I went on holiday to America and
Kish Kash:Canada, my mind was blown cable TV. It was like, what's going
Kish Kash:on? But even the basic amount of channels, if you didn't pay for
Kish Kash:cable, was plethora. Yeah, it's just like, wow. You know, CBS,
Kish Kash:NBC and you know, all that ABC and all these ones. Was like,
Kish Kash:whoa. It's just like, crazy. It was just mad. So mine was blown
Kish Kash:they were like, you only got three channels back home? And
Kish Kash:go, Yeah, my God, we got all these. I was like, Whoa, it's
Kish Kash:crazy. So, yeah, so being exposed again, you know, via my
Kish Kash:travels, but also with what's going on at the time, you know,
Kish Kash:it was very exciting. Malcolm McLaren obviously bringing being
Kish Kash:a massive influence on British culture, not just from the punk
Kish Kash:scene, but on the hip hop scene and all of that Blondie rapture
Kish Kash:coming out. I mean, there was, there was certain Rock City crew
Kish Kash:coming out in 84 so the thing is, that was, that was a long
Kish Kash:that was a long time after so we were up on hip hop and also
Kish Kash:Electro. You see, because hip hop and electro were combined,
Kish Kash:it was the whole thing, you know, you know, we know Planet
Kish Kash:Rock, we know all of that stuff, sampling, craft, work and
Kish Kash:everything. So the sounds were morphing into each other from
Kish Kash:the early and then you had the whole influence of punk and the
Kish Kash:whole influence of disco. It was like there was so much more than
Kish Kash:the whole 80 stuff going on in terms of sounds. It was
Kish Kash:incredible, really. Yeah,
Adam Gow:so I suppose an interesting thing to think about
Adam Gow:with you, and your sort of journey is Malcolm McLaren, and
Adam Gow:that crossover of music and fashion and stuff was, was that
Adam Gow:sort of, yeah, isn't it with you? And
Kish Kash:the man of digging was also got to give due
Kish Kash:credence to um two tone scar, you know, and the whole scar
Kish Kash:movement as well, and how that influenced so the things, you
Kish Kash:had the whole Hip Hop look, but then you also had the whole
Kish Kash:football casual look, but then you had the whole mod look, and
Kish Kash:then you had the whole two tone look, and all these things all
Kish Kash:clashing together and having your own interpretation. So
Kish Kash:growing up, you had the fluoro socks. There was a craze for
Kish Kash:fluoro socks. Then there was a craze for stay press. Then after
Kish Kash:the stay press craze, which I think obviously came from the
Kish Kash:two tone thing, was the farres. Yeah, I think. But before, in
Kish Kash:between the farrows and the stay press was the waffle trousers. I
Kish Kash:mean, there was so, so many different things. We had the
Kish Kash:loafers as well. We use wearing loafers. And he also had the
Kish Kash:trainers as well. If you're having a kick about in the
Kish Kash:street, you gotta be wearing trainers. Football casuals
Kish Kash:wearing trainers. Hip hop artists are wearing trainers.
Kish Kash:And you got all that in the mix of the fashion and going to the
Kish Kash:local LSB markets and getting stuff on the cheap there. That's
Kish Kash:how it was. There was no designer stuff. If you, you
Kish Kash:know, you made a Lacoste at school. It was like one Lacoste
Kish Kash:shirt. Whoa. I remember all the bootlegs and the fakes they were
Kish Kash:in the in the market, etc. There was a shark, which was, which I
Kish Kash:remember quite, quite, you know, quite vividly, and all these
Kish Kash:sort of things going on. So star wise, it was like, Yeah, you
Kish Kash:just gotta, you gotta do what you gotta do with those pencil
Kish Kash:thin ties? At one point, there was the tight collars, and,
Kish Kash:yeah, it was a crazy time. And then the whole set, the paninaro
Kish Kash:sort of look, came in. And, I mean, there was, there was so
Kish Kash:many expressions, it was going off, and it was very tribal back
Kish Kash:then. Yeah, so if you was a certain way, you didn't look
Kish Kash:that way, you know what I mean, you had your identity, and it
Kish Kash:was all about identity, being proud of your identity, but
Kish Kash:being proud of that little, little pocket of subculture that
Kish Kash:you occupied, and your friends. But yeah, hip hop, it was the
Kish Kash:one. And you know, you had your Puma Dallas on GV list because I
Kish Kash:wanted to be different. There was no biting your style. Do you
Kish Kash:know what I mean? It's a whole thing, like, if you've got that,
Kish Kash:I'm not having that. It's a thing that's gone out the window
Kish Kash:subsequently due to consumerism. But hey, things evolve, things
Kish Kash:change. You're not gonna, I'm not gonna decry that. But yeah,
Kish Kash:it's a fascinating one.
Adam Gow:Yeah, the tribalism something that I find really
Adam Gow:interesting. Because, yeah, I don't, unless it's there, and I
Adam Gow:just don't know, because I'm that disconnected from the
Adam Gow:younger generation. It feels like you can't really tell very
Adam Gow:easily what music someone might potentially
Kish Kash:be. Yeah, I think everything's a bit more
Kish Kash:democratic, bit more open now, yeah. And it's like you can be
Kish Kash:into that, and you can be into this, you know. So when I was
Kish Kash:hip, when I've always been firmly hip hop. So when my mates
Kish Kash:started getting into, you know, popping pills and all that kind
Kish Kash:of stuff, and going into raves in the in the middle of a field,
Kish Kash:that wasn't my bag, we really stuck steadfast with hip hop.
Kish Kash:But yeah, it was, it was quite interesting, you know, that
Kish Kash:whole thing, because I was around it, I was surrounded by
Kish Kash:it, you know, and what was being played at the time, you couldn't
Kish Kash:get away from it, you know, my mates were going to, like,
Kish Kash:velvet, underground, kinky, galinky, you know, all these,
Kish Kash:all these house nights, they were going to dreamscape,
Kish Kash:they're going to telepathy, they're going to oxygen, they
Kish Kash:were going to all that stuff. I mean, I went to a couple of
Kish Kash:ways. I went to Exodus a couple of times around 94 Yeah, I
Kish Kash:actually, I definitely think it's 94 because I remember I
Kish Kash:messed up my Jordan, my Jordan threes. It's quite funny,
Kish Kash:because I'm wearing a pair of Jordan threes right now, but
Kish Kash:Jordan threes with that mythical shoe. So my friend Robbie, who I
Kish Kash:previously mentioned, from caveman, he went to New York to
Kish Kash:New Music seminar. So he got plugged into what was going on
Kish Kash:in New York and the look and what was what was popping there
Kish Kash:and coming back, I was going to America. I was going to Houston
Kish Kash:and I was going to Winnipeg in Canada. So two different
Kish Kash:expressions there as well. What was taking you there family? So,
Kish Kash:yeah, so my mum's brother was in Winnipeg, and my cousins were
Kish Kash:there. And then in Houston, my auntie was there. So I was going
Kish Kash:to Houston, and I was going to Sugarland, which is later where
Kish Kash:I met Bun B, because he lives in Sugar Land. But anyway, that's a
Kish Kash:whole other story. But the thing is, it's like, so I was going, I
Kish Kash:was going to, I was going to Houston, and seeing all these
Kish Kash:trainers that weren't available over here, and going to Canada
Kish Kash:as well as and coming back to the UK with trainers that
Kish Kash:weren't available because I was skating as well at the time. So
Kish Kash:yeah, and then Robbie was going. He went to New Zealand. He came
Kish Kash:back with the Jordan threes, right? And everyone bugged out
Kish Kash:the black cement Jordan threes. They weren't available in this
Kish Kash:country because Jordan ones were distributed in this country for
Kish Kash:some weird reason, Jordan twos and threes weren't okay. Don't
Kish Kash:know the story behind that. I think Nike was a licensee back
Kish Kash:then. Maybe that was something to do with it. And basketball
Kish Kash:culture wasn't that that prevalent in this, in this, in
Kish Kash:this country. Five years after five, no, six years. Yeah,
Kish Kash:Jordan's coming 88 Yes, this year. So in 1994 that was 10
Kish Kash:years of Michael Jordan being with Nike, right? Jordan Brand
Kish Kash:hadn't quite happened yet. He's offshoot, right? That happened,
Kish Kash:I think, 96 with the Jordan 11. But what happened was, they
Kish Kash:celebrated Michael Jordan being, you know, with Nike for 10
Kish Kash:years. So they retro, the Jordan one and the Jordan two, the
Kish Kash:Jordan three, and I think quite I don't think the Jordan four
Kish Kash:was retro then, can't quite remember. So it's the first time
Kish Kash:that I could actually own a pair of Jordan threes. The only other
Kish Kash:time we ever saw Jordan threes, apart from on Robbie's feet, was
Kish Kash:in this seminal, mythical, fantastic store called four star
Kish Kash:general, which originally started on Carnaby Street by a
Kish Kash:guy called George, who I later get to became friendly with, but
Kish Kash:then he moved it to Camden, which is ironic, because that's
Kish Kash:where I live. But what was mad was they that Jordan and Nike
Kish Kash:retro those shoes, but again, the mythical shoe for me as well
Kish Kash:wasn't just the Jordan three, but it's the. Jordan two as won
Kish Kash:by the skinny boys on their cover, you know, back in the
Kish Kash:day, and couldn't get the Jordan twos. They got retro, but they
Kish Kash:didn't get retroed here. So be subsequently, many, many years
Kish Kash:later, I think in around 2001 or 2002 before I could actually
Kish Kash:first own a pair of Jordan twos. And a Jordan twos were the first
Kish Kash:Nikes, I believe, to be made in Italy, because Michael Jordan
Kish Kash:wanted that luxury look. He wanted a shoe that he could
Kish Kash:wear, you know, to dinner and on the court. Horrendously
Kish Kash:expensive, but they weren't distributed, as said in the UK,
Kish Kash:and it's a theme that he touched upon later with the Jordan 11,
Kish Kash:because that's why they had their patent leather, and they
Kish Kash:looked very decadent and looked, you know, in a certain style
Kish Kash:that you could wear with a suit, or you could wear it on the
Kish Kash:court.
Adam Gow:So for any listeners who hadn't guessed already, you
Adam Gow:know a lot about sneakers, right? A little bit. So who
Adam Gow:wants to know? So who's asking in the 90s, how are you getting
Adam Gow:your information on that? Because obviously, you know. Now
Adam Gow:we can go on digging,
Kish Kash:right? The thing is, right? You're flicking through
Kish Kash:magazines, you're seeing videos, and you're seeing record covers,
Kish Kash:and you've seen 12 inch covers, you've seen the inner sleeve,
Kish Kash:you've read in the notes. You know exactly where this the song
Kish Kash:was made, who the engineer was, you know where it was mastered.
Kish Kash:All this information, bam, bam, bam. It's all going in your
Kish Kash:head. So you know that chunking was, was the place to throw
Kish Kash:down. You know, that's where public enemy made a lot of the
Kish Kash:chunking house of hits. I think it was called, this is where the
Kish Kash:bomb squad made a lot of stuff, you know, that was the, that was
Kish Kash:the first and then, you know, you had battery studios as well,
Kish Kash:where a lot of stuff, you know, and drive Records recorded, and
Kish Kash:stuff like that. And you got to know this stuff. This is before
Kish Kash:DND, before Premier, before that stuff, you know. So it's really
Kish Kash:interesting to see that. And it was, it was the same thing with
Kish Kash:that information, knowing what records were coming out,
Kish Kash:chatting to people, chatting to the people at the record stores,
Kish Kash:what's coming in and and going on your travels. But when I was
Kish Kash:going to London, I was going up from the train on my own, from
Kish Kash:elsbury, on the train, bombing up young person's railcard into
Kish Kash:the center of town. I was potting around. I was just go
Kish Kash:and walk in the streets. And that's how it was. I remember
Kish Kash:going to Camden, because Camden is like, Yo, that's the really
Kish Kash:cool spot to go to. You got to go to Camden. I remember going
Kish Kash:to Camden start digging for records coming across there.
Kish Kash:Went to salt soul shop. Wasn't that impressed by the salt of
Kish Kash:soul shop? Actually, maybe that's my petulance back in the
Kish Kash:day, I don't know, but I was just like, Nah, it's not on the
Kish Kash:it's not in the same level as blah blah. And, you know, I
Kish Kash:think there was a short quarter park where there's a shot called
Kish Kash:apartment, called rap, things called Parkway, and just going
Kish Kash:around Camden Market, all those sort of spots, going to
Kish Kash:Portobello Road I was in. I'm still into comics, and I used to
Kish Kash:go to Forbidden Planet, the original one, on Denmark Street,
Kish Kash:and around the corner, around the back alley. There was
Kish Kash:another, there was another there was another spot which is a
Kish Kash:secret comic shop which had everything even cheaper.
Kish Kash:Literally doesn't exist anymore, that Ali, well, it's been
Kish Kash:transformed. You got alternate there now. But, and that's
Kish Kash:before Forbidden Planet moved to St Giles, high street. So he had
Kish Kash:that. He had top 10 comics in Soho, which was all owned by
Kish Kash:Paul Gambaccini and Jonathan Ross, things like that. Yeah.
Kish Kash:And then just going, just going, just going all over the spot.
Kish Kash:Then on Portobello Road, which is what brought me there was two
Kish Kash:things. Slam City skates was on Talbot Road in that area. It's
Kish Kash:really sketchy back then, um, going there, I think it's about
Kish Kash:86 and then fantastic store opened up. Oh, actually, wasn't
Kish Kash:it? Fantastic store was Jonathan Ross, I can't remember, but
Kish Kash:anyway, fantastic store was on Portobello Road, so I'd go there
Kish Kash:to get comics. Do you know what I mean? So it's just going all
Kish Kash:around, just on the dig. So be comics, it'd be records, it'd be
Kish Kash:clothes, it'd be trainers, it'd be everything. I mean, you just,
Kish Kash:if you're in it, you're in it. So a lot of it was just talking
Kish Kash:to people that, or just just just walking around, yeah, just
Kish Kash:walking around. Because the thing is, the thing is, though a
Kish Kash:lot of information was held back, because once you had your
Kish Kash:spot, didn't want it to blow up, because it's only a certain
Kish Kash:amount of stuff to go around. So could go around. So you had your
Kish Kash:secret spots, so you didn't talk about it. I remember going out
Kish Kash:to King's Road, just chippy. And all the French labels, they
Kish Kash:were, they were big. So you had a chippy, just a floral Street
Kish Kash:in Covent Garden. And chippy was the big, big label. You know,
Kish Kash:chippy had a longer moment than, say, NAF. NAF did. NAF NAF got
Kish Kash:played out really quickly, which is another French label. You had
Kish Kash:C 17 in chevignon, and they were there, they were there. But
Kish Kash:chippy was the sort of the piece de resistance. So, I mean, that
Kish Kash:was the one. And then what happened was a chippy open up on
Kish Kash:King's Road, and it's like, Okay, let's go down King's Road,
Kish Kash:and then go, let's go further down King's Road. You see a
Kish Kash:vintage shop called Flip, and there was another flip on long
Kish Kash:acre in Covent Garden, vintage Americana. Vintage Americana is
Kish Kash:Brit big American classics. Was another one as well in in Covent
Kish Kash:Garden, which later opened up at the end of King's Road. Then you
Kish Kash:had a place called bluebird garage. It's still there. Now
Kish Kash:it's Terence Conran. But before that, it was like Kensington
Kish Kash:Market, because high street Ken was another spot to go to. Got a
Kish Kash:shout of Fiona cartilage. She was responsible for that hyper,
Kish Kash:hyper and all these things that were going on really associated
Kish Kash:with club culture. Slick willies. Was a place there as
Kish Kash:well where you could get American baseball hats and all
Kish Kash:American stuff. Because American football was big as well. It
Kish Kash:started to blow up. You know, 84 you had the Chicago Bears when
Kish Kash:it was on Channel Four TV. Channel Four just started. They
Kish Kash:got the rights and William the refrigerator, Perry, what would
Kish Kash:pay? And all these, all these sort of names. So that was big.
Kish Kash:So Willies was there. So he had all these places sort of pulling
Kish Kash:you here, there and there, and here, Mr. USA in Wood Green. I
Kish Kash:was going to Wood Green, and which is crazy when you think
Kish Kash:about it, because that's one of the gnarliest watts in London.
Kish Kash:But from Aylesbury all the way up to Wood Green, I think it
Kish Kash:must have been about 88 No, not 88 about 8990 or something like
Kish Kash:that. And they had, you know, the place that sold the fitted
Kish Kash:hats, New Era hats and all that kind of stuff back then. Start a
Kish Kash:hat. Start was massive. So all these places in play, and it was
Kish Kash:pulling you everywhere. And you sort of dig a swank on swank on
Kish Kash:old Compton Street, mash on Oxford Street. That's a seminal
Kish Kash:spot. Very influential. Kareem and his business partner, maybe
Kish Kash:his brother got be friendly with them later on in life, but he
Kish Kash:had all these things going on, but going down King's Road,
Kish Kash:right? You had the bluebird garage, and it was all market
Kish Kash:stalls, and there was all different people doing different
Kish Kash:things. And this is where I met Simon Porter. Now, Simon Porter
Kish Kash:was very integral to the story, because he had his stall, which
Kish Kash:was selling Stussy. And I remember I was wearing stucce In
Kish Kash:the 80s because he escaped and I discovered it in America. And I
Kish Kash:was wearing it was a little bit after ocean Pacific was cool.
Kish Kash:And then I was where, yeah, we were in that we were in lifesa
Kish Kash:beach. We're wearing Mambo, all these sort of surface surf
Kish Kash:associated brands, because there was no such thing as street
Kish Kash:wear. There was no such thing as skatewear, but surfware was co
Kish Kash:opted by the skaters. So lifesa Beach was another one. There
Kish Kash:was, there was a whole load of other things right in play,
Kish Kash:anarchic adjustment. And, you know, there was all these, all
Kish Kash:these spots, you know, all these wild revolution, all these
Kish Kash:different labels that were insane, which was from over
Kish Kash:here, Jed, Jed wells fully respect him. There was a shop
Kish Kash:called M zone as well, just off Carnaby Street on Loudoun its
Kish Kash:court, all these spots. So I remember going to bluebird
Kish Kash:garage, and I see Simon port there. Didn't know him at the
Kish Kash:time. Got to be mates with him. He's still mates to this day.
Kish Kash:And he said inducing and going, I'm actually charging for this.
Kish Kash:This used to be this much. Yeah. I mean, you know, used to be 18
Kish Kash:quid a t shirt or whatever. And he suddenly jumped up to like,
Kish Kash:2522 25 quid or something like that. It's like, Whoa. What's
Kish Kash:going on here? And I remember buying a couple of bits. I still
Kish Kash:got the denim stuc shirt I bought off him to this day,
Kish Kash:which is quite mad. And you also had flying records in there,
Kish Kash:which is the whole Junior boy's own lot going on. And that was
Kish Kash:at the bottom of King's Road in a massive record store right
Kish Kash:there. And record stores were focal points, really. You know,
Kish Kash:you're meeting other people there. You're meeting DJs.
Kish Kash:You're meeting people into music. And it's a music culture.
Kish Kash:You're buying tickets to go to certain clubs there and all that
Kish Kash:kind of stuff, you know, rather than, you know, you get the
Kish Kash:ticket ahead of time, because it's a little bit cheaper than,
Kish Kash:say, you know, having to queue up on the door at the day, you
Kish Kash:know, trying to get in, and queuing up and not getting in.
Kish Kash:But that didn't happen to me, quite fortunately. But you had
Kish Kash:all that going on. I mean, one of the benefits of Robbie being
Kish Kash:down with Robbie, when he was producing caveman, suddenly he
Kish Kash:was like, Yeah, everyone wanted to know caveman ever wanted to
Kish Kash:be mates with Robbie. And it would be like, Charles Peterson
Kish Kash:hit him up, going, yo, do you want to come to my night? So
Kish Kash:we'd go to Charles's night. Would be guest listed in like
Kish Kash:that. It was all patterned up. Robbie sorted it out. And that
Kish Kash:was like, you know, 1990 onwards, Westwood, Westwood. It
Kish Kash:was on westward So, all that kind of stuff, you know, boom,
Kish Kash:we're wherever that's going down. It was, it was interesting
Kish Kash:times. And just the the music, and just coming across stuff,
Kish Kash:and just, you know, being to the mix. I was buying records
Kish Kash:anyway, from the early, you know, I was buying vinyl
Kish Kash:records, probably from the age of 10 or whatever, with my
Kish Kash:pocket money, you know, yeah, it was, it was about, not, you
Kish Kash:know, and then that, I've never left it. I'm still buying
Kish Kash:records now, and that's how, you know, for me, where I'm at right
Kish Kash:now is shaped by two things, music and football. You having
Kish Kash:to kick him out in the street supporting Manchester, United
Kish Kash:States, you know, thanks to my my older brothers, in a sense,
Kish Kash:they used to hang out with when I was growing up in Elmhurst
Kish Kash:estate in elsby, Robert and Andy and having a kick about in the
Kish Kash:park wearing trainers. You know you're going to the ducks in
Kish Kash:elsby, and you breaking or attempting to break or trying to
Kish Kash:do more, like the robot and popping and locking, to be
Kish Kash:honest. And, you know, you got your trainers on, you know?
Kish Kash:Mean, so it was, is that? So it's hip hop and football. That
Kish Kash:why I am here right now. That's the twin helixes,
Adam Gow:right? Okay, so, would you move to London at one point?
Adam Gow:Yeah, right. Yeah. You know, I
Kish Kash:moved to London and, um, just to be in the middle of
Kish Kash:it. No. Well, it was a happenstance, actually, because
Kish Kash:what happened was, I was in elsby until 97 doing, you know,
Kish Kash:I didn't really have much direction. I, you know, I
Kish Kash:didn't. I was surrounded by all these people making music I was
Kish Kash:in, you know, I remember when I went to Monroe studios with
Kish Kash:Robbie, when he was producing MCD, the damn DP that had been
Kish Kash:around 9293 I come across, I meet MCDs partner at time in the
Kish Kash:group, silent Eclipse, DJ fusion, the original fusion in
Kish Kash:hip hop. And we just got chatting and all that kind of
Kish Kash:stuff. While, while D was doing his bars, and Robbie was in on
Kish Kash:the other side of the glass, and we were in the room with Robbie
Kish Kash:at the back, and we just chatting. And. He's going, Yo,
Kish Kash:you know, this is I was talking about, yeah, I'm collecting
Kish Kash:records, man, yeah, I'm on this thing. Boom, and, you know? And
Kish Kash:I thought I knew Hip Hop records, right? And it was, nah,
Kish Kash:the whole thing, there was a whole thing that just opened up
Kish Kash:from that moment. And it's like, Simon goes, Yo, you should come
Kish Kash:to Liberty. Grooves in, in tooting. And I go, Yeah, I've
Kish Kash:seen that shop, but I've seen it advertised in in hip hop
Kish Kash:connection. All right, I'll come to tooting. I go to tooting.
Kish Kash:It's where I meet Johnny F, a man who later ripped me off, who
Kish Kash:owned it was a life lesson. And that's where I met a lot of
Kish Kash:people. I met Mark I met Mark B there. Rest in peace. He was a
Kish Kash:great friend. I met Julian from the creators and site, and Simon
Kish Kash:from the creators there. And the mad thing was, was Simon from
Kish Kash:the creators. He used to go to high Wickham, right? And I
Kish Kash:didn't know Simon at the time, but I was mates with Brian
Kish Kash:Garvey. Brian Garvey was part of our old crew. He went to this he
Kish Kash:was a year above me, and his his brother, Redmond, was in the
Kish Kash:same year as me at school in St Louis. And then to the grammar
Kish Kash:Brian started a magazine, a fanzine, which is way ahead of
Kish Kash:its time, called Concrete funk. Now, concrete funk, right? It's
Kish Kash:pre Big Daddy, pre wax Poe eggs, pre all of that. It's listing
Kish Kash:all the breaks. It's listing this, this, this, this, and
Kish Kash:having you know little little, it's a fanzine dedicated that,
Kish Kash:aside from your creators, was one half of that, right? So it's
Kish Kash:quite, quite random. And I hadn't met Simon until 1993 94
Kish Kash:when I was hanging out in Liberty grooves and the creators
Kish Kash:were just starting. So, but the actually, I don't think the
Kish Kash:creators had started at that point. But I met Julian, okay,
Kish Kash:and because he was all about dealing records, and Mark B was
Kish Kash:all about dealing records. And that's where I met. That's where
Kish Kash:I met Ty rest in peace. That's where I met shorty Blitz and all
Kish Kash:the guys who worked at Liberty grooves. That's where I met the
Kish Kash:Brotherhood. That's where I met a lot of people, you know. And
Kish Kash:it was a scene we've got. We were getting pulled to get a
Kish Kash:flavor of the month. My flavor of the month was going down
Kish Kash:there. That's where I first saw the roots perform in 19 roots
Kish Kash:perform in 94 when they were living here in Kentish town,
Kish Kash:they were living, which is where I live now, random. So, I mean,
Kish Kash:so all these sort of like things that thread through my narrative
Kish Kash:and the coincidences, etc. It's quite it's quite crazy, but
Kish Kash:yeah, so it's like Liberty grooves. That's where I
Kish Kash:discovered. This is test pressings. This is acetates.
Kish Kash:This is the reel to reels that level of collecting, yeah. And
Kish Kash:it was like, okay, because I was already shopping at Mr. Bongo,
Kish Kash:because she would already opened up his section of Mr. Bongo
Kish Kash:after leaving Tower Records, you know, I was already going to all
Kish Kash:the record shops in Soho, you know, groove, you know. And then
Kish Kash:when groove changed, you know, they moved it sounds uh Ben and
Kish Kash:and Christopher long and all these other they moved their
Kish Kash:sort of part of groove to sound source records, I do believe, on
Kish Kash:Monmouth Street and then Neil Street. And then catch a groove
Kish Kash:opened up after with destiny and Matt White and all these other
Kish Kash:spots and unity records where it was Kenny boots and and Ronnie,
Kish Kash:who used to hold it down there. And I later went to work for
Kish Kash:Ronnie at major flavors, which was quite, quite crazy. But
Kish Kash:who'd ever thought back then I was going to end up doing that?
Kish Kash:Whoever thought that when I was working, when I was buying
Kish Kash:records in Lexington Street, where Mr. Bongos was originally
Kish Kash:located, I'd end up working there, you know, just around the
Kish Kash:corner on Poland Street, many years later. But it was, it was
Kish Kash:fascinating, though. But you know, doing that all these
Kish Kash:little moments, all these little sliding doors moments, is quite,
Kish Kash:quite crazy. And then what happened was, so when I'm at the
Kish Kash:studio and I'm going to Liberty cruise, that's where I met
Kish Kash:Johnny F, and Johnny F was going to New York quite a lot on he
Kish Kash:and I found out the story, the back story, and this afterwards
Kish Kash:chatting with Bob and with stretch. But he was going to New
Kish Kash:York. He's a blogger. I gotta give it to him. He's a bloody
Kish Kash:good blogger, because he blagged me. He blagged a lot of people.
Kish Kash:He blag Stretch Armstrong. He black, black barbeto. So he was
Kish Kash:going and going and buying record, buying missions, and
Kish Kash:buying stuff up and coming back, as were the guys at bongos. He
Kish Kash:was going to different spots, but yeah, Johnny had a serious
Kish Kash:Hip Hop collection. I mean, I had a pretty serious one by that
Kish Kash:point, but he had a serious and I had a good breaks one as well,
Kish Kash:but that's when I met some fantastic characters, still to
Kish Kash:this day. But Lee, right, and the he was, he had this wants
Kish Kash:list, and I was looking through this once it's going, what the
Kish Kash:hell is all this? He right. I didn't even know that half this
Kish Kash:stuff existed on wax right in Aylesbury. We weren't getting
Kish Kash:this right. We went getting Mike and Dave records. We weren't
Kish Kash:getting all these sort of pressings and these real low
Kish Kash:presses of Boogie wrap, you know, we were or 12 star
Kish Kash:records. We weren't getting none of that in ellesbury. And also
Kish Kash:the stores in London, if any store did, probably have them
Kish Kash:back in the day, it probably would have been groove. But I
Kish Kash:got to know groove a little bit later, and once stuff was sold
Kish Kash:out, was sold out, right? That's how it was, and it was in
Kish Kash:people's record collections. I. But he So Lee had this list of
Kish Kash:all these Mike and Dave records and this. And I was like, going,
Kish Kash:what the hell is all this? So my mind got blown up, like, Yo,
Kish Kash:there's so much more out there, so much more. And there's all
Kish Kash:these little local presses that you know, that you wouldn't know
Kish Kash:unless she was there in the Bronx or in Queens or wherever,
Kish Kash:and they just hocking out at the back of their car, which I stout
Kish Kash:now and do know? And it was just a flashpoint moment. And then
Kish Kash:that's when I got pulled into funding the gutter snipes EP,
Kish Kash:the trials of life. EP, because I was, I was going up there, I
Kish Kash:was buying records, and then Johnny was, oh, yeah, can you
Kish Kash:give me some money to go get some records, blah, blah, blah,
Kish Kash:and all this kind of stuff. And so all my wages, I'd give to
Kish Kash:Johnny, and then Johnny would go off on to New York and come back
Kish Kash:with a whole back box record. Of records. And it was a bit of a
Kish Kash:pretty twisted arrangement, when you think about it, because I'd
Kish Kash:get first dibs at the records he got back, but I'd be actually,
Kish Kash:I'd actually buy, being buying them back for what he was
Kish Kash:selling them for, right? Maybe a little bit of a discount, but
Kish Kash:I'd actually funded that. Mean, if anyone should be making the
Kish Kash:money off, it should be, yeah, whatever. Yeah, exactly. So it
Kish Kash:was a bit like, it's a bit skewed. So I've got some crazy
Kish Kash:records, crazy records. I got my, you know, my main source,
Kish Kash:Adam, first press off Johnny and all this kind of, all that stuff
Kish Kash:like, you know, but, but, you know, it's a bit of a weird one.
Kish Kash:So I'm at the gut snipes still friends to this day. You've got
Kish Kash:Russell Payne, who was massively influenced, probably by Robbie
Kish Kash:the principal. That is, you had Stuart sell one graffiti artist,
Kish Kash:Top Boy rapper, rapper in the sort of vein of cool G Rap over
Kish Kash:here, and the original DJ for, I didn't know about this scene,
Kish Kash:this whole South London scene extending to the coast of, you
Kish Kash:know, the south coast, but the original DJ was first rate,
Kish Kash:right? Paul, I'd like to become mates with. Paul got bounced
Kish Kash:from the band, the new guy who came in prime cuts I'm still
Kish Kash:friends with to this day. And so Joel was the DJ for gutter
Kish Kash:snipes. And so I ended up funding the trials of life EP,
Kish Kash:and got ripped off because I never saw the money back. Johnny
Kish Kash:pulled the money from that. He put it into the freestyle
Kish Kash:frenzies with Stretch Armstrong, who he blagged. I think he owes
Kish Kash:money to stretch for it, and then it was meant to go into the
Kish Kash:acanelli track. Breaker bitch neck called you rapper thinks on
Kish Kash:it, and it's a classic record. There's test presses. I never
Kish Kash:got the test presses. I never got a single one. They go for
Kish Kash:1000s. Yeah, some
Adam Gow:of the yakinelli ones, that's my money. Johnny roast,
Kish Kash:it's my money. So, yeah, JP has got JP has had a
Kish Kash:couple go his way. And I never got given one. And to me, to me
Kish Kash:to this day, it's like, Yo, if you've got that record, you got
Kish Kash:my record. Now I'm just saying, like that bitter, just the facts
Kish Kash:I paid for those records. Never got the money back from that
Kish Kash:entire deal. That deal went south stretch. Didn't want to
Kish Kash:know. I think there's case too many cooks. He was going to come
Kish Kash:out on liberty grooves, all these leases come on Libby
Kish Kash:grooves. So that went south. So that's a life lesson for me,
Kish Kash:expensive one. I put a lot of money into that. I never got any
Kish Kash:feedback. So, you know it is what it is, but it's a deal with
Kish Kash:between me and Johnny and no one else. So was this when you were
Kish Kash:working at this is when I do. This is when I was working
Kish Kash:right? I hadn't even got into working at record stores at that
Kish Kash:point. I didn't get to work at my first record store until
Kish Kash:about 99 I think it was that's when I worked at Mr. Bongo but
Kish Kash:I'm still going up and buying records and stuff. I was working
Kish Kash:in call centers. I'd work, I'd worked at McDonald's, and I went
Kish Kash:to work at a Mexican restaurant, nailsbury, then I went to work
Kish Kash:in call centers. I mean, yeah, on telesales, which you seen
Kish Kash:Dave Brent the office, Right? Steve, seen the Steve Carell
Kish Kash:version as well. I have to say, nail on the head, right, dart
Kish Kash:right on the bullseye, with that culture that surrounds what goes
Kish Kash:on in offices in the UK and sounds of things in America, and
Kish Kash:the personality types that you get there and or what you
Kish Kash:haven't to deal with to live through that, I've done my call
Kish Kash:centers in offices. Yeah, exactly. So we've survived,
Kish Kash:yeah. I mean, we've done our tours of duty. Adam, come on,
Kish Kash:man. Blood in, blood out, we're out of it, yeah? So Donald fair
Kish Kash:share of shitty jobs. So that's what I was doing at the time.
Kish Kash:Yeah, it was just a crazy time, you know, dealing with that, you
Kish Kash:know, and trying to juggle things and get into and get into
Kish Kash:what we get onto. But it was a moment of serendipity. Guy left,
Kish Kash:Mr. Bongos, and the guys knew me, and I go, Yeah, I can do the
Kish Kash:job. And, and they go, all right, cool, right. Come in,
Kish Kash:come in. And it was that, was it? The dream was to work in a
Kish Kash:record store back then have that thing where, you know, you're
Kish Kash:surrounded by music, you boom, you know, and put people onto
Kish Kash:music. And it was great. And I'm still mates with the guys from
Kish Kash:bongos to this day. How
Adam Gow:does it work in terms of, like, the whole like, don't
Adam Gow:get high on your own supply sort of thing. How do you not just
Adam Gow:burn your entire wage?
Kish Kash:You burn everything. But the thing is, when you look
Kish Kash:at it, though you're not burning anything, you just, it's energy
Kish Kash:transfer. It's like transforming, transferring the
Kish Kash:money from that into something else. And who knew but I.
Kish Kash:They're now assets. They're now our investments. They're our
Kish Kash:bank accounts. These things, not just even fiscally, though
Kish Kash:culturally as well. We're documenting history. And which
Kish Kash:is where I stand right now, is I'm all about, as I said, I say
Kish Kash:I'm a cultural curator. I'm about I like this, like that.
Kish Kash:I'm curating my sort of narrative here, and trying to
Kish Kash:not depict a history solely through my eyes, but apply my
Kish Kash:vision to what I've seen, what's influenced me and what I value,
Kish Kash:but bringing other people into it as well. That's the goal. You
Adam Gow:see, it's collecting always been the kind of mindset
Adam Gow:and a habit of yours.
Kish Kash:I mean, I guess, yeah. I mean, maybe I get it
Kish Kash:from my mom. My mom's the person who just doesn't throw anything
Kish Kash:away. I mean, anything away? Well, there's collecting in this
Kish Kash:hoarding Exactly, exactly. So I think my mom's more more of the
Kish Kash:of the latter, and I'm more of the former. I'd say, yeah. I
Kish Kash:mean, yeah, there's a there's a things have to have a purpose,
Kish Kash:of meaning, you know, apart from just being tapped Jeremy, my
Kish Kash:mom's. But the thing is, it's great, because I was actually
Kish Kash:having a dig through their attic the other day, and I was coming
Kish Kash:across stuff that, you know, the stuff of mine is still there.
Kish Kash:And I was like, Oh my God, what I found, oh shit. I didn't take
Kish Kash:him out of the bloody egg. Okay? What I even found video tapes
Kish Kash:right now. Back in the day, you used to get given promo
Kish Kash:videotapes, if you work for a magazine or whatever, of the
Kish Kash:video by the artist. I've got a few of them. I don't know where
Kish Kash:the hell I got them from. How? Right? I have got them, right? I
Kish Kash:ain't got that many. And I was like, What the Oh, my God, I
Kish Kash:forgot I had these, but where did I get them from? Haven't got
Kish Kash:a clue. So, you know, if you're a music journalist, you probably
Kish Kash:got given you probably got sent the video as well as the track.
Kish Kash:You'd probably get the vinyl sent to you or the CD, right?
Kish Kash:Radio DJs would have got sent the vinyl or CD upon request.
Kish Kash:Wouldn't got sent the tapes, uh, tapes or dats. They were, they
Kish Kash:were currency as well. Do you know? I mean, Westwood probably
Kish Kash:got a whole load of that sent because he had a got it sent
Kish Kash:straight from the studio, played this on the show before they
Kish Kash:even had a chance to mix it down, or, or forget, or they
Kish Kash:might have mixed it down, but haven't even a chance to bounce
Kish Kash:it onto wax or whatever, onto CD. But yeah, it was mad, and
Kish Kash:I'm like, Whoa. I was like, Okay, wow. So yeah, there's our
Kish Kash:other thing that I'm gonna have to suck for pointing out and
Kish Kash:documenting. Because a lot of these music videos, a lot of the
Kish Kash:ones that are broadcast on MTV, they don't have them. The record
Kish Kash:companies didn't keep them. And I don't think director didn't
Kish Kash:keep anything. No one kept this stuff. It's crazy when you think
Kish Kash:about it. Mad. Do you mean, yeah,
Adam Gow:because I suppose you get into the end of the point
Adam Gow:where physical matters, yeah, exactly. But
Kish Kash:also, the video has been played on the show, on the
Kish Kash:shows, right? It's been distributed, right? We don't
Kish Kash:need it anymore, yeah? No one understood the value of
Kish Kash:preservation at the time, and it was a very disposable time. It
Kish Kash:still is, now ever more so, you know, nothing's built to last,
Kish Kash:and it's mad. It really is going through the archive, going
Kish Kash:through no not the archive, going through parents attic,
Kish Kash:coming across a box of magazines. Then inside it
Kish Kash:there's Beat Street records, not the Beat Street records in
Kish Kash:America, but I remember there was a Beat Street records,
Kish Kash:cheeky guy, right? I remember he's Top Boy. Used to ring him
Kish Kash:up. He was based in Abingdon, and he used to have a plug to
Kish Kash:get in promos and all that kind of stuff. I think I bought, um,
Kish Kash:drop a gem on him, off him, or something like that. Go, see, I
Kish Kash:just got this hot record, and he was only able to get huge. I
Kish Kash:mean, you have to hit him up. And you go, you and they send a
Kish Kash:postal order to him. Yeah, right. Post order, boom. And
Kish Kash:then the records are calm, and there's all this kind of stuff.
Kish Kash:And I you see the list sort of thing is, it's like going
Kish Kash:through record collector, or going through blues and soul,
Kish Kash:going through Hip Hop connection, going through
Kish Kash:whatever publication, seeing who's advertising, going there,
Kish Kash:going to record fairs, you know. And it was just absolutely going
Kish Kash:to black music fairs, going and then discovering and continuing
Kish Kash:to do that, going to market stalls, wherever you were,
Kish Kash:whichever country you was in this, where's the record store?
Kish Kash:Where's the sneaker store, you know, going through the phone
Kish Kash:book, literally, you know, it's like, was it NASS says in the
Kish Kash:break, back to the grill again, remix, um, serial killer working
Kish Kash:through the phone book, which, I mean, it's like, literally, just
Kish Kash:do that. But, you know, with cultural stuff, yeah, you know,
Kish Kash:but
Adam Gow:yeah, just, just on the point of kind of archives
Adam Gow:and stuff. Like I was, I was a big wrestling fan when I was
Adam Gow:little. Oh, come
Kish Kash:on, yes, WWF, when it was called that, yeah. And I
Kish Kash:love the Cogan and
Adam Gow:all that. Like, I don't know if anyone has
Adam Gow:consumed more content about 90s wrestling than I have, certainly
Adam Gow:not in my with the amount of books I've read about Yeah. But
Adam Gow:one really interesting thing is when WCW, which was the rival,
Adam Gow:Rick, folded, yeah. So they they folded after a bit head to head
Adam Gow:competition over the 90s then WCW sold. Us to WWF for $2
Adam Gow:million or something. But what I think Vince McMahon had
Adam Gow:realized, or managed to leverage, was that gave him
Adam Gow:archive footage for a multitude of different independent
Adam Gow:wrestling promotions that have been absorbed in that kind of
Adam Gow:regional network through the seventh WCW
Kish Kash:had done exactly what happened to what ultimately
Kish Kash:happened to WWF. What
Adam Gow:I find interesting with the wrestling is, I think
Adam Gow:you can compare certain wrestlers to rappers in terms of
Adam Gow:Persona, style, things like that. You think about Million
Adam Gow:Dollar Man Ted DiBiase. Think about maybe Slick Rick,
Kish Kash:for example. You know, yeah, you know,
Adam Gow:he's super technical.
Kish Kash:Jake the Snake, yeah. I mean, I
Adam Gow:remember all Jim saying, yeah, he's got the
Adam Gow:psychology gets in people's heads. There's you could spend
Adam Gow:some time drawing parallels between the two things. Totally,
Adam Gow:yeah. But yeah, that, that whole sort of archiving things
Adam Gow:interesting. Like, did you have any sort of mind of thinking
Adam Gow:when you were collecting all these things and all these, all
Adam Gow:these sneakers and things, I
Kish Kash:was just, it's just like, it was just the one and
Kish Kash:things I want to get that want to get that got some money, I
Kish Kash:want to get that at that point now, I realize, you know, it's
Kish Kash:not about what it's not about, for me, it's about what you
Kish Kash:give. It's what you give back, what a future Gen gonna be
Kish Kash:looking at. You see, we've got the VNA, you got the British
Kish Kash:Museum, you got the Natural History Museum, you got the
Kish Kash:design, music, all these fantastic institutions, right?
Kish Kash:What about the now? Who's, who's preserving the now? We are the
Kish Kash:cultural curators, not just myself. I'm a cultural curator,
Kish Kash:people don't realize what they're doing. I mean,
Kish Kash:Greenpeace, he's got the vinyl coming out his test press. His
Kish Kash:test press has gone out insane. And the thing is, it's like one
Kish Kash:of those things he's chosen to discipline, and he's focused on
Kish Kash:it, and very, very well, he's up there with the best, if not the
Kish Kash:best. He's got some crazy stuff that he's paid me, and I'm
Kish Kash:looking at and going, all right, cool. I've got a wider sort of
Kish Kash:net, so I've got the vinyl, I've got the sneakers, I've got the
Kish Kash:some some key clothing, you know, and magazines and videos
Kish Kash:and this and that, you know. So Dan's doing his thing. I'm doing
Kish Kash:my thing, you know, boy James liebens is doing his thing. Um,
Kish Kash:our boy, James liebens is doing his
Adam Gow:thing. Yeah, you know,
Kish Kash:all these different all building up little pieces of
Kish Kash:the jigsaw puzzle. So now it's time to start bringing the
Kish Kash:jigsaw puzzle together. So my sneaker archive is one for is
Kish Kash:the first step for that private for now, but the eventual goal
Kish Kash:is to bring it to the public. You know, we saw the how
Kish Kash:fantastic Roger gassmans Beyond the streets exhibition was
Kish Kash:received at the Saatchi Gallery at the start of last year, and
Kish Kash:it ran for it was, I think, their most successful
Kish Kash:exhibition. Wow, you know, and that just focused on art, and
Kish Kash:only that much of street art and graffiti culture, and done very,
Kish Kash:very well. But, you know, you got everything from cornbread
Kish Kash:all the way to the now, you know, and to people who might
Kish Kash:consider that isn't street art, but it's influenced by that, you
Kish Kash:know. So it goes in, I think Jonathan yo was in it, and
Kish Kash:things like that. So it goes from there, here and everywhere,
Kish Kash:you know, and it was fascinating. You had your pieces
Kish Kash:by moe Goldie and all that kind of stuff there, which was great.
Kish Kash:Adidas was a key, was a key partner in that whole story,
Kish Kash:which is fantastic, but we need something permanent, and we need
Kish Kash:something on a bigger scale, and that will be done, whether it's
Kish Kash:not via me or somebody else, somebody else will do it. If I'm
Kish Kash:not going to do it. So right now, I'm going, I want to do it,
Kish Kash:but if I don't get to do it, I'm just putting the little seed out
Kish Kash:there. Someone will do it. You know, we need to document the
Kish Kash:now for for the future generations. So
Adam Gow:just going back then. So we've kind of looked at the
Adam Gow:90s. What was the 2000s like? Did you move to Brighton for a
Adam Gow:bit? Yeah,
Kish Kash:that's right, yeah. So I moved to Brighton in 97 so
Kish Kash:I was in elsby, and I started seeing a girl, Caroline, who was
Kish Kash:at University of Sussex. So got pulled to Brighton from before
Kish Kash:97 and it was quite mad, because then I I met my friend, still to
Kish Kash:this day, I live with I live one of them signed Kirk twins. I met
Kish Kash:grant and Ed. He ran the 145 store, which is a streetwear
Kish Kash:store in Sydney Street in Brighton at the time, and Joel
Kish Kash:and Josh and all these other people there. Rupert Dom, it was
Kish Kash:great. And then I remember bump into them before I lived in
Kish Kash:London at the Contents Under Pressure exhibition with Lee
Kish Kash:stash and Futura. No, stash wasn't involved. It was Lee blue
Kish Kash:and Futura. And that was one of the first exhibitions I went to
Kish Kash:in Shoreditch. In fact, it was the first one I went to. And it
Kish Kash:was a place that became known as tram shed, which was the state
Kish Kash:place. I don't think it's still there, where they had the Damien
Kish Kash:Hirst up there. I don't. If you remember that, I mean, but they
Kish Kash:had a Damien Hirst in formaldehyde cow suspended from
Kish Kash:the Salem, all that kind of stuff. I always thought was a
Kish Kash:bit overrated, but the concept was fantastic. But yeah, so
Kish Kash:there was that, there was that, and a bump. Remember bumping
Kish Kash:into them there. Then I ended up moving to Brighton, because my
Kish Kash:mate, Joe, was like, Yeah, let's move to Brighton. I want to live
Kish Kash:there. And I was like, well, that works because, and I used
Kish Kash:to be at the I used to be at the I used to work at the Mexican
Kish Kash:restaurant with him, so I was like, Yeah, let's move to
Kish Kash:Brighton. End up moving to Brighton, and that's where I
Kish Kash:first got onto radio with sign Kurt, because sign Kurt knew the
Kish Kash:people who are setting up the record the radio station in
Kish Kash:Brighton at the time, brand new one who helped set up kiss
Kish Kash:Eugene. I think Eugene was one of the partners and but anyway,
Kish Kash:they because, because sign cut, previously been signed to Sony
Kish Kash:BMG with their music, and had also done some tracks on skint
Kish Kash:at the time, which is the one of the labels in this country, skin
Kish Kash:and and wall of sound, which I later ended up working For. And
Kish Kash:so, yeah, so go in there and then grant scratchy, and we got
Kish Kash:the show. We got we and because I was so plugged in with what
Kish Kash:was going on in London, and Kurt was so plugged in with the
Kish Kash:people who were bringing surf 107 to the airwaves, we got the
Kish Kash:show. We've got, we've got the hip hop show. Had no broadcast
Kish Kash:experience before. Did you
Adam Gow:take to it quite easily because of all the kind
Adam Gow:of going around and talking to people, when you've been going
Kish Kash:everywhere and just chatting shit, so you just chat
Kish Kash:in front of you, right? Jeremy, that's all it is. But it was
Kish Kash:interesting because I'd never, never even thought of that, and
Kish Kash:I never even thought of, you know, later on, DJing or
Kish Kash:whatever that came afterwards. But si was the DJ. Kurt was the
Kish Kash:producer, and grant and I were the CO hosts. We interviewed
Kish Kash:some great people. We interviewed some great people.
Kish Kash:What do you highlight? I mean, well, bambata, wow, which was an
Kish Kash:interesting one, considering he had a dude with him who was a
Kish Kash:bit younger, and we know why. Back then, there was only
Kish Kash:rumors, but we had bambar, gracious guy, fantastic guy. I
Kish Kash:subsequently met cool Herk and Grandmaster Flash and not so
Kish Kash:cool, but bam, was really safe. Had them, had Jungle Brothers,
Kish Kash:great guys. No, bam, baby, bam. Now you know, who else did we
Kish Kash:interview? Do we interview dilla? Think we interviewed JD,
Kish Kash:yeah. We interviewed a lot. Mark B came on the show. He played
Kish Kash:his remix of the of a creator's track, which never came out
Kish Kash:until recently, and it was the only time it ever got played on
Kish Kash:anything. It was dope. Killer. Keller's first radio appearance
Kish Kash:as part of the 360 physicals. With the 360 physicals was on
Kish Kash:our radio show. I'd already met Keller by then. I learned Keller
Kish Kash:since he was called pot CP, when his beatboxing outside of
Kish Kash:bongos, and he goes, What's this? What's this? And
Kish Kash:beatboxing track, go, Oh, it's this. Go, yeah, that's right.
Kish Kash:Go, Yeah, you're good mate, you know? I mean, so, so, so, yeah,
Kish Kash:Kells is still my bro to this day. Yeah, we had so many, I
Kish Kash:mean, Jurassic five. We played Jurassic five the first on the
Kish Kash:show. If our show was in London, we would have got a lot more
Kish Kash:props. Our props would have, would have been bigger. We
Kish Kash:played Dilated Peoples first. We played Luke pack first. We
Kish Kash:played everything first. I had access to the tracks because of
Kish Kash:my relationship with bongos and because radio pluggers started
Kish Kash:getting I got to give a big shout out to Harvey Jones and
Kish Kash:Sally from zont, which is a music promo company based in
Kish Kash:Stratford Ackland, workshops. They did all raucous they did
Kish Kash:gorillas. They did so much stuff, you know, lemon jelly.
Kish Kash:They were all over the place. And they were, you know, Harry
Kish Kash:was super plugged in. And so, yeah, we played a lot of stuff
Kish Kash:first. And I think Kurt's lost a lot of the dats. I don't know
Kish Kash:where they are. Everyone's moved around so many times they don't
Kish Kash:know where things are. But, yeah, yeah, we had a lot of, we
Kish Kash:had a lot of great, great moments on that show how long it
Kish Kash:ran for. And then what happened was, I spoke with my girlfriend,
Kish Kash:and then I started hearing this voice every time I ring up,
Kish Kash:zonked. I started hearing this voice going, what the hell's
Kish Kash:going on as a voice, as girls voices, not Sally, who is this
Kish Kash:girl? So anyway, this girl had started working at zonked, so I
Kish Kash:didn't think nothing of it. And then my boy, Ziggy, who was
Kish Kash:still one of my best mates to this day, he started his record
Kish Kash:label called blue juice, with his partner called Graham, who I
Kish Kash:ended up later living in his flat with for a minute. And what
Kish Kash:happened was he was going like, let's go up to zonked. We've got
Kish Kash:to deliver the records hand, you know, to zonked. I was like,
Kish Kash:right, fine. End up going to zonked for the first time. Never
Kish Kash:been there before. Everything before that had been voices on
Kish Kash:the phone. That's where I met Harvey. That's where I met. I
Kish Kash:think actually had already met Harvey in town at the record
Kish Kash:store. Actually, I hadn't been to the office because in
Kish Kash:Stratford, bit of a mission, especially coming from Brighton.
Kish Kash:So we drove, we drove Ziggy. Ziggy drove to Ackland, going in
Kish Kash:there, and then I see Sarah, and I'm like, Dang man, she's fine,
Kish Kash:yo, and she's a leads lass. Anyway, we ended up, you know,
Kish Kash:she came down a couple of times to Brighton, and then then we
Kish Kash:ended up getting together. And then she was living in
Kish Kash:Stratford, so then I ended up going visiting. Stratford quite
Kish Kash:a lot, and ended up moving up to Stratford. So that was around
Kish Kash:2000 and then I started continuing to do the radio show
Kish Kash:without the guys, because they we got moved around on the
Kish Kash:schedule so much. But I was still adamant that you needed to
Kish Kash:do a radio show then it's a bit of a bit of a good thing to be
Kish Kash:doing it. So I maintained doing the show. I had Mex come in
Kish Kash:DJing at one point, and so that people, but then they all
Kish Kash:dropped out. So I ended up having to do the DJ and the
Kish Kash:presenting So, and then got bounced off the show, you know,
Kish Kash:scheduling changes and all this kind of stuff. So it was what it
Kish Kash:was. The station didn't really invest in the show. Yeah, I
Kish Kash:didn't it, didn't talk about it, and didn't understand the value
Kish Kash:of what we brought and the connections that we had to bring
Kish Kash:what we did to the table. So then I was, I was moved up to
Kish Kash:London. I'd work. I started work at Mr. Bongos. I was commuting
Kish Kash:to Mr. Bongos from Brighton to London, and then I ended up
Kish Kash:moving from that to bad magic, because Greenpeace brought me
Kish Kash:in. He goes, Yo, I need a label manager for bad magic, because
Kish Kash:he was at A and R so I was working in West London. And I
Kish Kash:was commuting up from Brighton to West London. And then that
Kish Kash:got a bit untenable. So then I started, you know, staying more
Kish Kash:over in Stratford. And then eventually it became a, you
Kish Kash:know, Stratford on the on the central to Notting Hill, and
Kish Kash:then walking up mad finger man, this is one of your face power
Kish Kash:moments, you it's like so wall of sound. Mark Jones, fantastic
Kish Kash:guy, not in good shape right now. My prayers are with him,
Kish Kash:but I learned a lot of him. Wall of Sound was the other big label
Kish Kash:at the time. His skin a wall of sound. The whole big beat sounds
Kish Kash:was popping off like crazy. Wise Guys to Shay in that I'd already
Kish Kash:had that big hit based off the Budweiser. I think it was the
Kish Kash:ULA LA. And I didn't realize, though, but freaking bloody
Kish Kash:fear, Wise Guys, was snatched the guy that used to see written
Kish Kash:up on the fucking side of the train lines as I was going on
Kish Kash:the train from Aylesbury to London, all them years ago. He
Kish Kash:was bombing it. A lot of the guys that I now know who are up,
Kish Kash:sort of teach being put up. I saw coma. Saw diet, all these,
Kish Kash:all these names up, and I got to meet him later on, which is kind
Kish Kash:of Drax. Got to see him all later on. It's mad, but, uh,
Kish Kash:yeah, so Greenpeace pulls me in, and I met Greenpeace in Mr.
Kish Kash:Bongo. He'd started fat lace magazine him and drew swear. I
Kish Kash:met Rob Percy's, where I met James Lebens. It's where I met a
Kish Kash:lot of those guys. And we're still firm friends to this day.
Kish Kash:And then Greenpeace was, you know, and Andrew were writing
Kish Kash:for hip hop connection. You've got crazy stories. Yeah, that's
Kish Kash:how they're able to do fat lace, actually, because they were on
Kish Kash:assignment with HHC, they do their stuff with fat lace as
Kish Kash:well, which is brilliant. And they were getting flown by, you
Kish Kash:know, the record companies at the time, however, come
Kish Kash:interview this size, come interview this size, blah, blah,
Kish Kash:blah, like that. And that Sal Greenpeace and that met
Kish Kash:Rosenberg and all that sort of stuff, the whole Eminem early
Kish Kash:thing and all this kind of stuff. So, yeah, it was
Kish Kash:interesting. I mean, I remember, before I even worked at bongos,
Kish Kash:and Harvey from zongton, I were in in bongos before, before it
Kish Kash:was open, because Eminem was recording just about, Eminem was
Kish Kash:just about to blow Slim Shady, you know, Slim Shady was, was
Kish Kash:the hot topic. And he was doing a thing for Channel Four. And it
Kish Kash:was like, you know, you know, we were going, okay, look, we, you
Kish Kash:know, we want to get some drops and some time with you for, you
Kish Kash:know, to promote my radio show. And the manager at the time,
Kish Kash:this dude used to work at stress magazines, like, yeah, sure,
Kish Kash:we'll get you after, after we've done our thing with Channel
Kish Kash:Four. Afterwards, they're like, no, no, no, we're going now. And
Kish Kash:we nearly kicked off. We nearly got into a fight with MLM and
Kish Kash:his manager, and it was just like, and we're just thinking,
Kish Kash:why he's being such a dicks man in the time that we've just been
Kish Kash:wasted doing this, arguing this, we could have done what we
Kish Kash:wanted to do with you. Jeremy, so don't really have a lot of
Kish Kash:respect for that side of things. I mean, greenie and that lot are
Kish Kash:well plugged in with that. So is what it is, you know what I
Kish Kash:mean? But, you know, it's one of those things little bit salty
Kish Kash:for me. But anyway, so basically, right there, bongos.
Kish Kash:This is all going off, you know, Greenpeace is there. And then
Kish Kash:he's going, Yeah, I'm going to pull you into bad magic. And all
Kish Kash:right, cool. Let's do it. And then the creators come out on
Kish Kash:bad magic, which is Julian. Oh, I'd already been buying records
Kish Kash:off for years and SI, and that's when I actually met si done
Kish Kash:concrete funk with him. Years ago. I hadn't met before, then
Kish Kash:hadn't met at Liberty grooves, and they were there. Vinyl
Kish Kash:dialects were doing their thing as well. And those guys are
Kish Kash:absolutely great. Still. Chat to Ezra to this day. Yeah, it was a
Kish Kash:great time around there. I remember being on the phone a
Kish Kash:cage. And, I mean, seriously, one of the, you know, not, not
Kish Kash:cage, actually, not cage was cool. I feel the agony. Feel
Kish Kash:that agony was an agony. Let's just say, anyway, too. I mean,
Kish Kash:you know, because he had a track came out on bad magic, and it's
Kish Kash:just like, dude, just like, Come on, man. But then black twang
Kish Kash:got signed, and that was an astute move. Always rated twang,
Kish Kash:and, yeah, that was a great moment. But the thing is, now
Kish Kash:this is something right, Adam, right? The bad magic office,
Kish Kash:right? The wall of sound. If it's all under the West way, and
Kish Kash:Portobello, the bad the Wall of Sound office is there. Right
Kish Kash:next to it is sainted PR. I'll talk to you about that in a
Kish Kash:second. About the saintly PR, because there's a little thing
Kish Kash:on that one you go along a little bit. And Ackland
Kish Kash:workshops is just there under the West way. So that's where my
Kish Kash:office is meant to be, and that's where a lot of the stock
Kish Kash:of water sound was also stored. I couldn't occupy that office,
Kish Kash:because there's a certain artist in that office that you see
Kish Kash:every day go, called Banksy, right? So the office, the water
Kish Kash:sound office, we had OG original banksies surrounded by them,
Kish Kash:right? And I see Banksy every day, and I'd be like, oh man.
Kish Kash:And I'd already, we'd already seen banksys work on just off
Kish Kash:Poland street, on top of great Marlborough, or whatever was at
Kish Kash:the bottom of Knoll, and it was on the side of the building over
Kish Kash:there. And when it appeared, we're like, what the hell's
Kish Kash:going on there? That's not graffiti, but it's like,
Kish Kash:graffiti. Oh, stencil work. So we would be questioning the the
Kish Kash:validity of it all. Are still getting questioned to this day,
Kish Kash:in fact. But anyway, I used to see him every day, and I'd be
Kish Kash:like, I gotta buy one of these off. He goes, Yeah, I'll sort
Kish Kash:you out proper, right? We're not talking prints or anything.
Kish Kash:We're talking the original paintings, right? And
Kish Kash:I never did get one. I was, I wasn't being paid a proper wage.
Kish Kash:I was on expenses there for whatever reason. It was a real,
Kish Kash:real, you know, you know, it was like the label couldn't afford.
Kish Kash:I don't know, there's a lot of whatever going on. I think water
Kish Kash:sounds sort of subsidized it. But anyway, I mean, I was there.
Kish Kash:I was going to the XL office around the corner. I was seeing
Kish Kash:my boy, Nick, that used to work with at bongos. And then that's
Kish Kash:where I met Toby. Felt well before he started cavent. And,
Kish Kash:you know he was working for James, and I'd already met James
Kish Kash:in bongos. And Lavelle, that is, sorry. And because he's come in
Kish Kash:and buy records, they all the DJs used to come in, yeah, that
Kish Kash:was going on. I think actually, they might, I might actually
Kish Kash:gone from Mr. Bongo to major flavors, actually, and then to
Kish Kash:water sound, don't quote me, and I'm trying to remember how it
Kish Kash:went down. Or I might have been doing both jobs at this I might
Kish Kash:do major flavors and all of bad magic at the same time. Can't
Kish Kash:quite remember. And then after that, went to scenario records,
Kish Kash:but yeah, there was all that going on. And I'd see Banksy
Kish Kash:every day. To this day, I didn't buy a single plane
Adam Gow:painting of him. Well, that's what I was gonna ask him
Adam Gow:before
Kish Kash:I was even mad, right? I remember I've been in
Kish Kash:the office one day, right? He comes in, he goes, Yo Kish. I
Kish Kash:go, all right. He goes, Uh, he goes, I need a pair of hip hop
Kish Kash:looking trainers. I'm designing this cover. And I was like, Huh?
Kish Kash:Goes, Yeah, do you know one? And I'm wearing Adidas rivalries on
Kish Kash:my on my feet. Uh, no. Metro attitudes, sorry, they're
Kish Kash:slightly different to a rivalry. So anyone who's is a real
Kish Kash:sticker for this, I've got to be very 100 with this. I had my
Kish Kash:metro attitude loads in the Knicks colorway, which is, which
Kish Kash:is as worn by the great Patrick Ewing the Center for the New
Kish Kash:York Knicks, for those who don't know. And I go, and I take him
Kish Kash:off. I go, all these do? He goes, yes, they're perfect, like
Kish Kash:that. And he so my trainers were actually painted by Banksy on
Kish Kash:the bad, bad meaning good series on one of the ones he does a
Kish Kash:howitzer, cannon or missile launch, or whatever you call it.
Kish Kash:And the sneakers on the feet, on the feet of that are my shoes,
Kish Kash:the original artwork of that was originally given away by Tim
Kish Kash:westward on a competition. But I can't remember who's got the
Kish Kash:story about that. It might be my music partner, Turkish to my who
Kish Kash:knows the full provenance of that, of how, where that no, it
Kish Kash:was for skits is right? It's for skits is mix for I think it's
Kish Kash:fabric, and it was the bad meaning good series, right? And
Kish Kash:anyone who DJ that fabric was did their own compilation.
Kish Kash:Scratch perverts did their own one, and so on and so forth. I
Kish Kash:think it was skits is one. And then slightly
Adam Gow:different series, isn't it? Because you've got
Adam Gow:fabric live, is the one, yeah, but yeah, the bad meaning goods,
Adam Gow:yeah, the four off compilation series, that's right. They were
Adam Gow:all done by Banksy, or the artwork. That's right, yeah. So
Kish Kash:that's the artwork for one of those. I think it's
Kish Kash:skits. Is one, and it was going to be given away on westward
Kish Kash:show. It didn't. And then I think it suddenly Sun some the
Kish Kash:artwork ended up with someone, might have been skits, and then
Kish Kash:he gave it to someone, and then, boom, I don't know, I don't know
Kish Kash:where it is, but whoever's got that, yo, they're my shoes. So
Kish Kash:there's another one. It's like, Yo, come on. Yeah,
Adam Gow:the retirement fund you've missed out on, yeah, your
Adam Gow:mind's got a bank see that that's probably worth 10s of
Adam Gow:1000s. Doesn't even particularly like it. I was like, why don't
Adam Gow:you get rid of that and get some art, some kind of high value art
Adam Gow:that you love, because it's going up and up and up. Is it?
Adam Gow:Is it gonna consistently? I think now
Kish Kash:where it is, where he where his sort of story is,
Kish Kash:within the entire tapestry of art and history, and where it
Kish Kash:is, and the commentary that he gives, whether you agree with it
Kish Kash:or not, whether you give it validity, or if you think it's
Kish Kash:clever or not. I mean, it's a point of debate, which is,
Kish Kash:again, makes it very relevant. There you go. It's there. Yeah,
Kish Kash:and it's going to keep on going up, you know? And that's how it
Kish Kash:is. And so if I had it, I wouldn't give it up unless I
Kish Kash:would only cash it in, unless I was destitute. That's the only
Kish Kash:time, if not, if you don't need, I'm always in the advocate,
Kish Kash:right? If you don't need to sell, don't sell, you know, if
Kish Kash:you've got the room for it, if you've got if you if you're not
Kish Kash:sure, if you're not sure, if you're not sure, if you're very
Kish Kash:privileged and not in a short, you know, short of a bob or two,
Kish Kash:what are you getting rid of it for? Keep hold of it.
Adam Gow:I just think, could you find something else of that
Adam Gow:value that get you get more joy out of that's, that's the thing
Adam Gow:you
Kish Kash:could but, I mean, we're banks position financially
Kish Kash:in comparison to say, I mean, I'd love to have a Rothko. I'd
Kish Kash:have a Rothko over a bank. See, yeah, I'd have a basket over a
Kish Kash:Banksy, but you go in another stratosphere up, yeah, yeah, no,
Kish Kash:in terms of them, because they're no longer with us, and
Kish Kash:as we know, hip hop's littered with them as well, characters
Kish Kash:who were who are bigger in death than they were in life. So
Adam Gow:this time, then, when did you start because, you've
Adam Gow:got these relationships with brands and that sort of thing.
Adam Gow:Now, when did that sort of side of your story start to develop?
Kish Kash:Well, the thing is, right, at bongos, we'd get given
Kish Kash:some things to wear by Gimme five. Michael koppman used to
Kish Kash:shop in the store. Fraser Cook is another one who's now at
Kish Kash:Nike. Used to shop in the store. Michael still got Gimme five.
Kish Kash:And for those who don't understand what gimme five is
Kish Kash:the reason why, right the price of Stacy clothing shot up in the
Kish Kash:late 80s, like I said earlier, is because Michael Kaufman comes
Kish Kash:into the story and becomes the distributor for Stacy. That's
Kish Kash:why. And so he's got to get his gut and, you know, all that kind
Kish Kash:of stuff in it, and it just went up, and the cost of production
Kish Kash:went up, loads of things, loads of factors went up. So he's the
Kish Kash:guy responsible for that. And it was mirrored as well across
Kish Kash:Europe and wherever else. So there's no thing, but he's a
Kish Kash:mate to this day. And yeah, and we used to get given stuff to
Kish Kash:where there there was a thing like mates used to look after
Kish Kash:mates. And if you want to build something, you hook up your
Kish Kash:mates first, and they're all wearing it. And everyone's
Kish Kash:going, Dave, guys are really cool. These girls are really
Kish Kash:cool. Oh, I want to wear it. And then, you know, that's how it
Kish Kash:sort of percolates. That's the story of supreme. That's that
Kish Kash:supreme got, got so big, you know, James was like, Okay, I'm
Kish Kash:going to give this away to this, this and this, right? You give
Kish Kash:it to your friends. I want everyone wearing it in the
Kish Kash:scene. And once everyone's wearing it in the scene, it
Kish Kash:becomes the most desirable thing. But then what he did was,
Kish Kash:if I can sell 20 of them, I'm going to make 10. Gonna short
Kish Kash:the supply, right? You know, that's, that's, you know,
Kish Kash:that's, that's what he did. He, he sort of, he brought it to the
Kish Kash:it's what the Japanese did. It's like, it's like, it's like, it's
Kish Kash:all of that, you know, supply and demand. If you control the
Kish Kash:market, you're good. You know you have, you know your
Kish Kash:characters, like Michael, Michael koppman, going, Hey, you
Kish Kash:got this. Then, when working at water sound, had close
Kish Kash:relationships with Puma. They had close relationship with
Kish Kash:Rizla, who did clothing as well. They had close relationships
Kish Kash:with Griffin as well, with Jeff, with Jeffrey and karina's brand
Kish Kash:Griffin, which started up on Portobello, right? Well, it
Kish Kash:started up before that. Sorry, but their first ever store was
Kish Kash:on Portobello Road, and I later subsequently did a collaboration
Kish Kash:jacket with them. So I've gone from, you know, going into their
Kish Kash:store, not knowing about the history of the brand, but
Kish Kash:finding out that Jeff, Jeff's graduate collection, I can't
Kish Kash:remember if you went to Central Saint Martins on London College
Kish Kash:of Fashion, was the clothing that was bought in its entirety
Kish Kash:by Jazzy B and worn in the early soul to soul videos, back to
Kish Kash:life and all that stuff. So Griffin is closer in there. So
Kish Kash:his story starts back then, and then my story starts back then,
Kish Kash:over there and over here, and it all intertwines at a later date,
Kish Kash:which is quite crazy. But I remember going into the Griffin
Kish Kash:store, very conceptual. It's brilliant. And my friend Remy
Kish Kash:kabaka worked in there. And Remy used to come into bongos after
Kish Kash:hours, you know, on a Friday or whatever. And, you know, we used
Kish Kash:to drink and whatever and just listen to records and stuff. It
Kish Kash:was a Hangout. And yeah, Remy, then he sort of navigated his
Kish Kash:in. He was like, working APC. He was working years, working at
Kish Kash:Griffin. Remy is now in the gorillas, right, okay. And I
Kish Kash:actually have, right, another bit of music equipment. I have
Kish Kash:that Remy wants back, but I'm not ready to give it up, because
Kish Kash:I've just started music production. I have, I have Remy
Kish Kash:kabakas MPC 60, right? He sold it to me years ago because I was
Kish Kash:going to start making music. I didn't get round hit back then,
Kish Kash:but now I am doing it now, Remy. So anyway, he's, he's, he's,
Kish Kash:he's one of the gorillas. So when you see the gorillas
Kish Kash:performing, he's performing Damon Auburn, and I don't think
Kish Kash:Jamie performs, or maybe he does. Now he got a clue, but
Kish Kash:yeah, that that's going on. Germane, so yeah, it's quite,
Kish Kash:quite fascinating, really. You know how that sort of story is
Kish Kash:going on. So there was these moments where I always saw the.
Kish Kash:Collision of music and fashion ever since Run DMC and added us,
Kish Kash:right? It was evident, right? And the fact that, Yo, you get
Kish Kash:these people to wear that stuff, sales are going to go like that.
Kish Kash:People are going to want it. It was evident to me from the early
Kish Kash:right, for wearing this stuff. We're looking fly, you know,
Kish Kash:people want to be down with us. You know, a superficial thing. I
Kish Kash:don't know. Do you know? I mean, hey, I'm not here to discuss
Kish Kash:that, but what I'm saying is, that's what happens. So it's
Kish Kash:very fascinating. And these sort of relationships started
Kish Kash:building up, building up. The Americans were way on it from
Kish Kash:early as case point with the Run DMC, Adidas Association, without
Kish Kash:that, you have no Travis, Scott Nikes. You have no Kanye Yeezys,
Kish Kash:you you don't have any Drake Jordans, you know, and all this
Kish Kash:kind of stuff that doesn't happen, right? You know, this is
Kish Kash:the now. You don't have Rihanna doing Fenty with Puma. You don't
Kish Kash:have any of that, you see. And you don't have Missy Elliott,
Kish Kash:you know, doing her stuff with adidas many, many years ago, at
Kish Kash:the height of her powers, and doing a fantastic job as well.
Kish Kash:Do you remember when, like, Mr. Elliot was wearing all Adidas
Kish Kash:and stuff. She had her own line with him. I mean, which is
Kish Kash:great. This is before Beyonce and Ivy Park, you know, this is,
Kish Kash:this is these little sort of things coming into play. And so
Kish Kash:it sort of started happening. And then, you know, you, you
Kish Kash:know, people started, you know, hooking stuff up and wanting,
Kish Kash:you know, people to earn certain things and all that kind of
Kish Kash:stuff. And it just sort of happened. There's no sort of key
Kish Kash:Flashpoint moment. It's just a little it's an evolution into
Kish Kash:that, really, and understanding the value of that is very acute
Kish Kash:to me. You know, it's like when Puma wanted, you know, when Puma
Kish Kash:wanted black twang to wear, you know, their product on stage
Kish Kash:when he's doing, you know, the kickoff tour and all that kind
Kish Kash:of stuff. It's all these sort of things that come into play, and
Kish Kash:it's the development of that. And now we stand where we stand
Kish Kash:now. Things that have really helped propel it, though, are
Kish Kash:when you can visually get a sort of a window into and into the
Kish Kash:behavior and the the effects, the consequences of doing it. So
Kish Kash:Facebook, not so much, but you had groups that set up. It
Kish Kash:started up in Facebook, though. Prior to that, you had forums.
Kish Kash:You had forums such as crooked tongues, as Nike talk and all
Kish Kash:that kind of stuff, where people are looking doing that. And then
Kish Kash:you had magazines, etc, you know, sneaker freaker and all
Kish Kash:these kind of things which are still in the mix now, doing
Kish Kash:that. Then, I think, then you had riff Trooper, he did his
Kish Kash:blog, which was great. And it was blogs as well. Blogs were
Kish Kash:very, very key in this. Then you had blogs that developed into
Kish Kash:big media beam offs that they are now Hypebeast, yeah, you
Kish Kash:know freshness. But freshness was the first, I think, out of
Kish Kash:that lot. And then freshness is now, I think it's nice kicks. I
Kish Kash:think it's morphed into nice kicks complex. Complex started
Kish Kash:off by Mark echo, based off the back of the magazine, right? And
Kish Kash:now it's a media conglomerate, hype beast, as I said in high
Kish Kash:synobility. You had, he had another one at the time, slam X
Kish Kash:hype, which just started off by Adam Bryce. I don't know where
Kish Kash:that sits now. I think he does New Order magazine. Now, think
Kish Kash:that's where that sits. But you got all these things in play. I
Kish Kash:don't. I wouldn't really attest vice to be part of it, but vice,
Kish Kash:at that time, did have a cultural sort of cachet, as it
Kish Kash:were,
Adam Gow:same sort of model, though, isn't it? Is like the
Adam Gow:complex and stuff, I
Kish Kash:guess. Yeah, that's more subversive. More
Kish Kash:subversive. The story of vice, though, is a tragedy, really,
Kish Kash:when you think about it, especially when you think that
Kish Kash:Gavin McGinnis is the founder of the proud boys from Vice. So
Kish Kash:yes, are you gone from that to this? You're going from very low
Kish Kash:and he, you know, establishment, into becoming super right wing.
Kish Kash:Just, you know, it's an interesting evolution, shall we
Kish Kash:say? Yeah. So yeah, you see all these things, but yeah. And
Kish Kash:then, so the one of the flashpoints has to be the advent
Kish Kash:of Instagram, yeah, literally, you know. And then, you know,
Kish Kash:it's absorbing all the other technologies that came out, you
Kish Kash:know, subsequently vine, vine, you know, Instagram did its own
Kish Kash:version, and Twitter to a point, but no, it's Instagram. You can
Kish Kash:actually visualize everything, and then you haven't looked
Kish Kash:back. You've got Snapchat now you've got tick tock, and you
Kish Kash:got a Myra, of other ones. I'm sure do you,
Adam Gow:because in Instagram's the only one that's weird. I
Adam Gow:don't have time for more. Do you do? Do you kind of maintain,
Adam Gow:because for the listeners that aren't aware you've you kind of
Adam Gow:do the sort of sneakers in the fashion stuff, but then you've
Adam Gow:also got your kiss sheets, yeah,
Kish Kash:there as well. Yeah. Got all the, all the sort of
Kish Kash:dimensions, as much as I can handle. At the moment, I haven't
Kish Kash:got a team to help me do it. I mean, I got a manager,
Kish Kash:obviously, you know, shout outs to Colleen, but you know,
Kish Kash:generally, all the content, everything I've got to help
Kish Kash:create or call in favors to. Yo, can you take a photograph of me
Kish Kash:and all this kind of stuff, all these things going into play?
Kish Kash:Yeah,
Adam Gow:it must be really time consuming, and it must take a
Adam Gow:lot of headspace. Yeah,
Kish Kash:I guess, I guess you just got to do it when you can
Kish Kash:do it, you know. But you got the kids out there, yo, they just do
Kish Kash:add it all the time, and they make. Will help, and they just
Kish Kash:do all together. I don't have that. My mates got kids, or they
Kish Kash:got jobs or whatever, and all this kind of stuff. So it's a
Kish Kash:case of, well, not jobs. I say they've got more traditional,
Kish Kash:you know, vocations in life. So, you know, it's like sometimes
Kish Kash:calling the neighbors or going down to the coffee shop and
Kish Kash:asking one of them to take photos or whatever, all that
Kish Kash:kind of stuff. So, yeah, it's quite do. You can be a bit
Kish Kash:challenging. Do you
Adam Gow:occupy a different space? Would you say, then, to,
Adam Gow:like a lot of the kids that are doing similar stuff, do you
Adam Gow:think your audience? You've, you've got your own sort of
Adam Gow:audience?
Kish Kash:I don't know. I mean, there's it intersects, that's
Kish Kash:for sure. But the thing is, the some of the people following me
Kish Kash:aren't looking to follow it like I'm not looking. I don't know. I
Kish Kash:don't I wouldn't want to say, actually, I think it'd be
Kish Kash:incorrect of me to say what, what people are getting from me.
Kish Kash:I think it's best to talk to them, because I think whatever I
Kish Kash:say would be a skewed perspective, and I don't think
Kish Kash:it'd be truthful. I
Adam Gow:wonder if so in my in my career, if you want to call
Adam Gow:it, that my line of jobs I've done and things I think I
Adam Gow:probably got to a point, say, mid 30s, where I kind of felt
Adam Gow:like getting a little bit older can have a benefit, because
Adam Gow:there's almost like a and maybe, maybe you could call it an
Adam Gow:unconscious bias, that People might be ready to trust you a
Adam Gow:bit more in a different way, yeah, than if you're saying the
Adam Gow:same thing and you say, Yeah, 21 Yeah. So you, it'd be
Adam Gow:interesting to know if maybe people, because you're not a 21
Adam Gow:year old, if there's a different type of trust there because of
Adam Gow:that's,
Kish Kash:yeah, that's a very good point. I can't answer that,
Kish Kash:but yeah, I mean, maybe we got to apply it to people that we
Kish Kash:look at, you know, growing up,
Adam Gow:yeah, because I wouldn't, I wonder if the kids
Adam Gow:saying the fashion stuff, yeah. I
Kish Kash:mean, who knows, but I do know, you know. So yeah, we
Kish Kash:look at, I look at the I look at the insights into who's
Kish Kash:following me in the age groups and the age brackets than that,
Kish Kash:across, across quite a my route of of key people,
Adam Gow:I guess what you might get with kids is that things
Adam Gow:will be So potentially, kind of quickly taken up and quickly
Adam Gow:dropped. Yeah, there's not kind of like a loyalty in the length
Adam Gow:of time of like nurturing, no, no, the relationship between a
Adam Gow:brand and a consumer and stuff, right?
Kish Kash:Yeah, no, totally. Things are getting more fickle.
Kish Kash:Or are they getting fickle? Or are our is our perspective not
Kish Kash:recognizing that what might be a quick moment in time to us is
Kish Kash:actually quite a long time to the people who are in that mix,
Kish Kash:but they can just process and deal with it quicker. I don't
Kish Kash:know, there's an argument for both ways.
Adam Gow:That's it. So just going on to the food, then onto
Adam Gow:the case sheets. How did that come about? Is it always, have
Adam Gow:you always been kind of just wanting to check every sort of
Adam Gow:different spot? Yeah,
Kish Kash:exactly the same, same thing, right? I'm just an
Kish Kash:idiot, right? It goes around just wanting to try new shit. I
Kish Kash:mean, I'm literally like, you know, I've got my spots, great.
Kish Kash:And then I'm like, Yeah, let's, let's see, you know, I mean, for
Kish Kash:me, right? We've got a finite time in this universe, right? I
Kish Kash:want to explore as much of infinity as possible in my
Kish Kash:finite time. So that's what it comes down to, and food, right?
Kish Kash:I mean, on this planet, we are the only species that can
Kish Kash:transform our raw materials and process it in the manner that we
Kish Kash:do. You know, no one else cooks. I mean, there's some fantastic,
Kish Kash:you know, natural processes that go and on, the ways that bees,
Kish Kash:you know, you know, metabolize, you know, pollen into honey, you
Kish Kash:know, and how beavers will build dams and all sorts of things.
Kish Kash:You know what I mean, fantastic. But the way that we do it, we
Kish Kash:the only ones that cook. We're the only ones that have found
Kish Kash:different ways to cook, you know, the techniques, and keep
Kish Kash:on evolving that and developing things, you know, challenging
Kish Kash:the flavors and the compositions and the contrast, the textures
Kish Kash:and all this kind of stuff presenting Well, my friend
Kish Kash:Justin, who I met years ago at Mr. Bongo buying records,
Kish Kash:fantastic, lovely man. He's the head chef at Arts Club Dover
Kish Kash:Street, right? And when you see the creations he make, I'm
Kish Kash:going, Dude, I don't want to eat that. It looks beautiful, yeah?
Kish Kash:It's like, it's like a sculpture. It's like, the
Kish Kash:colors, the everything about it is just phenomenal. Justin
Adam Gow:IP, yeah, I think you mentioned him on Keller's
Adam Gow:podcast, yeah, brakes head, isn't he? Yeah, Justin.
Kish Kash:He likes, He just likes, he just likes really cool
Kish Kash:stuff. He's in his trainers. He's into his food. Obviously,
Kish Kash:he's a chef and, you know, all that kind of stuff. So, yeah, he
Kish Kash:hit me up the other day, when are these coming out? And I was
Kish Kash:going, Yeah, I was going, these, you know, we chat. I don't get
Kish Kash:we don't, you know, he's, it's hard. He's working crazy hours.
Kish Kash:He's got family as well. But you know, it's really hard to make
Kish Kash:time to see some of the people that you care about these days.
Adam Gow:Yeah, I guess something I'm getting from you
Adam Gow:with this conversation is something kind of around you
Adam Gow:want to experience these things, but then you share it with the
Adam Gow:world. Yeah, exactly, all these different
Kish Kash:things. Totally. I'm not not trying to gatekeep. I'm
Kish Kash:not trying to do the Secret Shop stuffing. Game. Do you know what
Kish Kash:I mean, it's like beyond that now, you know, we've really got
Kish Kash:to celebrate and champion good talent when given the, you know,
Kish Kash:the opportunity and the platform to do so,
Adam Gow:yeah, and even, like the archive as well, what you're
Adam Gow:wanting to do with that?
Kish Kash:Yeah? Yeah. It's about celebrating, you know,
Kish Kash:designers. It's about celebrating technology. It's
Kish Kash:about celebrating all these stories that surround it. I
Kish Kash:mean, I've done the podcast series with Jason Coles talking
Kish Kash:about it. We've only got two series. We've got to do some
Kish Kash:more where we talk to key people within the footwear industry
Kish Kash:from a different perspective. So I've interviewed some fantastic
Kish Kash:people behind the scenes. You know, Stephen Smith, legendary
Kish Kash:shoe designer, started cut his teeth at New Balance in the late
Kish Kash:80s, fresh out of uni design school, his story then
Kish Kash:gravitated to Adidas. Then after Adidas, he went to Reebok, then
Kish Kash:after Reebok, I think after Reebok, I can't remember he went
Kish Kash:after he but then he went to Nike, and he has designed some
Kish Kash:of the key serendipitously, just purely by happenstance, as well
Kish Kash:some of the key moments like the New Balance 990 he designed it,
Kish Kash:and it's now one of the biggest shoes the New Balance have all
Kish Kash:them. Years ago, Adidas, he designed the torsion artillery,
Kish Kash:a shoe that I wore religiously when it dropped. It was such an
Kish Kash:incredible Adonis basketball shoe. Was dope. It was
Kish Kash:brilliant. So much so that when Jeremy Scott got his chance to
Kish Kash:collaborate with Adidas, it's one of the silhouettes that he
Kish Kash:chose actually to mess around with, which was quite
Adam Gow:cool that Jeremy Scott stuff's crazy, though, the big
Adam Gow:wings go all that
Kish Kash:stuff, yeah, Lil Wayne warrior and all that kind
Kish Kash:of stuff. Yeah, it's mad in the teddy bears and all that kind of
Kish Kash:stuff. It's crazy. It's very, very pop culture, really, if you
Kish Kash:think about it, you know, how you do you think it's tasteful?
Kish Kash:Do you think it's distasteful? I don't know. He's making a
Kish Kash:conversation out of it. I think it's brilliant. He's poking fun.
Kish Kash:But you know, you see these sort of little moments. And then,
Kish Kash:then Stevens designed the Reebok into the pump fury in 1994 which
Kish Kash:is still one of the most incredible running shoes ever,
Kish Kash:and it still looks batshit crazy and futuristic to now. So he did
Kish Kash:that. He designed Paula Radcliffe's zoom streak, which
Kish Kash:he won the marathon in in the world record time at the time.
Kish Kash:So he's had some fantastic stories. And then now he's
Kish Kash:heading up all the design at Donda, you know, Yeezys, all
Kish Kash:that. Stephen Smith, so his story is phenomenal. So we've
Kish Kash:had him on the podcast, but trying to explore all these, you
Kish Kash:know, with the archive, as you say, you know, look, when you
Kish Kash:look at the box, the design of the box, the artwork, the
Kish Kash:graphics. I mean, you're just talking about people who are
Kish Kash:applying their, their touch to this, their their creativity to
Kish Kash:this, this whole process, you know, videos that advertising
Kish Kash:that goes with the shoes, everything the content that's
Kish Kash:been created about them to to build up this story around these
Kish Kash:shoes, is fantastic. It really is, yeah,
Adam Gow:and it's something that always gets thought about
Adam Gow:with Apple products packaging, but yeah, maybe doesn't get kind
Adam Gow:of thought of in the same way with footwear. Yeah. I mean,
Kish Kash:you got to give it to Steve Jobs, visionary, ever
Kish Kash:since day one. Story starts, obviously, in the to us in the
Kish Kash:80s. I remember when I went to Winnipeg and my cousin had the
Kish Kash:apple 2c computer. I was very proud about it. And that's
Kish Kash:probably worth quite a quite a bit. Now, actually, when you
Kish Kash:think about it, I bet you they haven't got it still, but, um,
Kish Kash:when you think about that story, and then, you know, then, then
Kish Kash:you got booted out the company, then comes back and just like,
Kish Kash:yeah, we're going to do it like this. And haven't looked back
Kish Kash:since. Obviously, they don't have Steve Jobs. May the rest in
Kish Kash:peace at the helm. There comes a point where innovation and how
Kish Kash:do you push it forward, and who you got in play, if you've got a
Kish Kash:lot of bean counters in play, gets really hard to be
Kish Kash:innovative, doesn't it, really so we'll see what the story
Kish Kash:holds for for a lot of these companies moving forward. But
Kish Kash:yeah, in terms of innovation, in terms of how things get pushed
Kish Kash:and evolve, etc, it never gets it never gets it never stops
Kish Kash:being exciting. Yeah,
Adam Gow:just because you mentioned Donder, something I
Adam Gow:thought about that we haven't touched upon is kind of Kanye is
Adam Gow:impacting on on reissue and throwback and dead stock
Adam Gow:sneakers, because he was, like, wearing a lot of Jordan fours
Adam Gow:and things like that. Wasn't me
Kish Kash:when he was even before, even before Kanye. Gotta
Kish Kash:give it to Pharrell. Okay, you know, because Pharrell is a
Kish Kash:style icon, you know predates, predates in some respects. You
Kish Kash:know his, his star started before Kanye. I mean, his start,
Kish Kash:his star started all the way from assistant Teddy Riley back
Kish Kash:in the day, which is kind of crazy, with rump shaker. You
Kish Kash:ever knew this right as a young kid,
Adam Gow:I guess he integrated the skate culture side of it. He
Adam Gow:did.
Kish Kash:He did. He did. And he got onto bathing ape. I still
Kish Kash:remember of this story here. I'll say I'll say it again and
Kish Kash:again, because basically it all stems back from when Greenpeace
Kish Kash:had all city music. He's still got it now, but one of the
Kish Kash:rappers that he brought out on all city i. Was Cormega. So he
Kish Kash:had the license to distribute certain releases in Europe via
Kish Kash:all city music, via through land speed, or, can't remember who
Kish Kash:call Mega? Yeah, I think land speed was what Cormega
Kish Kash:originally came out on true meaning and all that kind of
Kish Kash:stuff, right? So Cormega is over, and he tasked me with
Kish Kash:looking after kormega, to take him to Westwood and then bring
Kish Kash:him to the all city show after for the guest appearance. So
Kish Kash:what happened was, I picked Cormega up. We go to Westwood on
Kish Kash:Radio One, I'm wearing head to toe bathing ape. I was one. I
Kish Kash:was the first one in hip hop in this country to be wearing
Kish Kash:bathing ape. Traditionally, hip hop people were in bathing it
Kish Kash:before me, but they weren't so hip hop, you know me, James
Kish Kash:Lavelle and all those kind of people bathing it was really
Kish Kash:hard to get hold of as well. And back then, it's before Haida
Kish Kash:even stocked it, and then before the bathing ape store opened.
Kish Kash:But anyways, right somewhere in head to toe, camo Bay bathing
Kish Kash:ape, right screen camo, and the other guest on Westwood show was
Kish Kash:Pharrell. And Pharrell was already in the studio when we
Kish Kash:turned up, so Pharrell was doing his talk, blah, blah, blah, like
Kish Kash:that. Then Cormega goes in, and Pharrell was like, bowing down,
Kish Kash:because there's Cormega, right, and talking about blah, blah
Kish Kash:blah. Then Pharrell leaves and for Cormega to have his solo
Kish Kash:chat. He comes out, he looks me up and down, going, What the
Kish Kash:hell am I wearing? He was he didn't know what that he was
Kish Kash:like. What's going on here? Like that. I could see it was one of
Kish Kash:them once, because he was, he was he was not saying anything,
Kish Kash:and he was looking like that. I didn't say anything to him. I've
Kish Kash:met him subsequently, since a couple of times, but, um, he
Kish Kash:didn't know anything about bathing ape at that point. So
Kish Kash:what happened was, I'm not saying from, I don't know how. I
Kish Kash:mean, for us, a interesting one. I mean, he's got to be a savon
Kish Kash:on another level. He's He's plugged in. He's like us. He,
Kish Kash:um, picks up on things. He's a man of details. And if you see
Kish Kash:something you know, you want to know. It's like I'd see a pair
Kish Kash:of trainers on a record cover. And I go, what kind of way is
Kish Kash:that? Where can I get them from? That kind of thing? What are
Kish Kash:they wearing, you know? What are they wearing in this video? Why
Kish Kash:are they wearing it? Where do you get it, that kind of stuff,
Kish Kash:right? He may have done that, I don't know. But anyway, what
Kish Kash:happens is, he ends up meeting Nego, you know, and boom, he's
Kish Kash:there's Bape, and then BBC happens off the back of it,
Kish Kash:billionaires, boys club with them, collaborating, doing the
Kish Kash:ice cream shoes, all that kind of stuff. Fantastic moments.
Kish Kash:Fantastic moment in music culture, in pop culture, in
Kish Kash:fashion culture, and in contemporary culture at the
Kish Kash:time. So yeah, I'm just like, yeah. I'm just thinking, that is
Kish Kash:a key moment. But then, when you look at Kanye and college
Kish Kash:dropout, what's Kanye wearing? He's prepped out. If you're
Kish Kash:prepped out in America, there's only one brand you're wearing.
Kish Kash:But also, if you're on the street in New York, right? And
Kish Kash:you want to look money, there's only one brand you're wearing,
Kish Kash:and it is the brand is polo, right? You're wearing the bear,
Kish Kash:the college bear that Kanye has on the cover, etc. It's his
Kish Kash:version of the Polo bear, right? So the colors, everything, what
Kish Kash:he's wearing, that's all low. And we all know the inspiration
Kish Kash:for polo obviously extends all the way back to over here, and
Kish Kash:the universities, etc, and the colleges and what the rowers are
Kish Kash:wearing, and what the hockey players and the and the polo
Kish Kash:players are paying, and all that kind of stuff, right? That whole
Kish Kash:aspirational upper class thing that extends all the way through
Kish Kash:to the Ivy League over in America. But Kanye is wearing
Kish Kash:polo, and he's wearing it in a way that the traditional that
Kish Kash:your snow beach jacket at Rae Juan's wearing, you know, it's
Kish Kash:not that, it's not that stuff, right? It's not what Graham
Kish Kash:Grand Poobah is wearing. It's not or was wearing. It's not
Kish Kash:that, but he's wearing a different way. But Kanye, you
Kish Kash:got to give him credit, you know, he's, he's like us. I
Kish Kash:mean, I remember interviewing Kanye exactly like this in 2003
Kish Kash:the interviews on Dan green pieces on Dan green pieces,
Kish Kash:SoundCloud. So for you guys want to check it out, and we touch on
Kish Kash:so many subjects that are now still so relevant, tragically to
Kish Kash:this day. But have a look at that. But I'm having a chat with
Kish Kash:him. And you know, I was thinking, I, you know, this is
Kish Kash:just before college dropout came out. I knew the album was going
Kish Kash:to be big. I knew it would be an album that would set them apart
Kish Kash:from Rockefeller, from that I already knew that. I've always
Kish Kash:had this thing where you had to, if you working in a record
Kish Kash:store, you have to be able to know what's going to be the
Kish Kash:thing, right? You know, when we had grinding on our shelves in
Kish Kash:major flavors, boom, like that. It was like, What the fuck is
Kish Kash:this? This is weird, but this could be a thing, you know? I
Kish Kash:mean, those sort of moments, right? You know, when you get
Kish Kash:given the Pussycat Dolls record, but before you get the Pussycat
Kish Kash:Dolls record, you get the toriella maze version, which,
Kish Kash:which is the original, right? And then, then gotcha comes out,
Kish Kash:Jimmy, all these sort of moments, right? I. And, and
Kish Kash:you've seen, you're seeing this happen. So you got, you got an
Kish Kash:instinct of what's, what's going to be big. I remember when we
Kish Kash:interviewed Rihanna. And I interviewed Rihanna before her
Kish Kash:first album came out, and we sat around here, Turkish, my bro,
Kish Kash:who and Semtex. They were, you know, she's on Def Jam, so they
Kish Kash:were looking after it. And it's mad because, you know, Turkish
Kish Kash:is now music partners, these lords.