Interviews

Jon Young & J. Cash In Riot Magazine

Posted on Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

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CronikOnline Interview

Posted on Monday, May 11th, 2009

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Jon Young & J. Cash are worldwide known southern rappers from Florida, selling over 10,000 copies (I found that out last year, probably way more now) and still goin strong, they are living proof that an independent artists can become successful without a major record deal. Jon Young & J. Cash make music for everybody! They have at least one song you can relate to because their music is so real and tells positive stories, but they also have a variety of music, so you never get tired of hearing them. If you don’t know them yet then check out the interview and then listen to their music, you will not be disappointed!

By now most people in the South already know your music, but say I got a friend who hasn’t but he wants to see what all the hype is about. Which album and/or song would you guys recommend they hear first?

Jon Young: Man, that’s tough to say. We got so many different types of tracks.

J. Cash: Yeah, its a hard choice because our styles vary from song to song, but that’s a good thing because it brings in all different types of listeners. But on a quick side note… remember we sell nationally, and even internationally to Europe and Japan. I’d say we sell more in the Midwest than the South in all honesty. (Laughs)

Jon Young: I gotta go with “City I Luv” because that track is what took me out the bedroom. It got people talkin and it’s what made my name more than just a road in Orlando and a guy who walked on the moon (laughs). But for real, that kinda sums up why I wanted to make music in the first place. I just love the southern hip hop culture and I wanted to solidify Orlando’s place on the map. As far as me & Cash together, “Post Up” is definitely that shit! We were never into the whole club thing, gettin dressed up, buyin chicks drinks, none of that shit. We were about the cars and showin off in the parkin lot so that track definitely epitomizes our lifestyle. Having Lil Boosie on it is a plus as well (laughs).

J. Cash: Yeah I’d say Post Up is a good track for us, it’s on the more street side. Then you got Just Chill, Listen 2 Ur Heart, more the rhythmic tracks. The newer stuff of us like Rent Money and Dance Floor… I mean really just go on the MySpace pages, and let it ride, we got some old and new on there, there’s gonna be something for everyone.

Yeah City I Luv was a great album. You guys are proof that an independent artist can still be successful without the major deal. Most artist start to slowly fade away and we never hear from them, but you guys are always working on something, What keeps you motivated?

J. Cash: Just the drive man. I thought this the other day, “What if we just STOPPED making music?” And I really think there would be a lot of upset fans. And its cool because its a steady incline, with each day thousands of new people hear about us, so it just keeps growing and growing. So when we do hit that major status we won’t be just some flash-in-the-pan artists that are here today and gone tomorrow.

Jon Young: Man, I couldn’t quit if I wanted to. I’m gettin emails all day long askin for new music. I’m like, “the 100 plus tracks we got out aren’t enough?” I just dropped my new solo album and people are already askin what’s next. The fans definitely motivate me, but at the same time I wont just record for the sake of recording. I have to be in the mood, I gotta feel the beat and actually have something to say.

I don’t think people would be to happy if you guys quit so that’s a good thing (laughs)..I’m sure a lot of people have wondered about this.. is there going to be a J. Cash solo album?

Jon Young: Already! I’ll let J. Cash fill ya in!

J. Cash: Yeah man. It’s called “Dreamin’ a Life” and will be out on iTunes and for sale off our pages like, I dunno, this summer (2009). I’m calling it that because a lot of people say we’re “living the dream”… but really, I’m still dreaming for more man. The single’s called “Come With Me”, really hot dance, club kinda track. It’s probably on iTunes when this interview comes up. I just wanted to do songs to show people a lil more of me. I’m real excited about it, it’s a solid album, mixed bag of sounding tracks, lil different than our usual albums, but still similar, it’s Sky Skrapin Entertainment regardless ya know, so ya know it’s hot.

Hell yeah, I’ll make sure to keep people updated about the album!…When your not in the studio making hits, what are you most likely doing?

Jon Young: The music stuff takes up most of my time. I’m always updatin my web site, makin a flyer, mixing a track, doing something. Even when I’m out at dinner or somethin’ I’m on the iPhone checkin the twitter or hittin fans back on MySpace. I go to movies a lot too. They’re one thing that takes my mind off the music shit. I’m into cars as well, but I haven’t done much to my car since the music took off. Other than gettin it running like new. I just wanna stack up as much bread as I can in this game while the buzz is strong, then I can enjoy it later on. I’m afraid to spend too much at one time, especially with the recession n what not. But once I’m at a good spot financially y’all won’t even recognize my Cutlass! Believe that! (laughs)

J. Cash: Yeah as for me I keep busy trying to make more money (laughs). I’m not the drinking, partying type. I’d rather just spend a night with a good dinner, play some air hockey, and watch some cartoons or old Twilight Zone episodes. Plus the car stuff, aside from music, Lowriding is my life, that’s me.

I’m not sure how it works for independent artist, but will I ever be hearing Jon Young & J. Cash on the FM radio in my city?

J. Cash: We get spins here and there, but to get that straight radio push, like everywhere at the same time… that’s money right there man, that’s when you need that label money and power behind you. But the best thing to do if you enjoy our music, is to call these radio stations and request us. Even if they don’t play it… it just puts that bug in their ear, and the more and more they hear the want for us, then they’ll pay attention to us, ya feel me?

Jon Young: Yeah you just never know man. I would love for that to happen but the way things are lookin’ at the moment I couldn’t tell you when. Our buzz is as strong as ever but the industry wants no part in it. Why you ask? I wish I could tell you. We’re achieving what artists on labels are hoping to achieve so you would think it would make sense to roll with the sure thing. But I’m not really sweatin it, we are doin good as is. If it aint broke, why fix it?

Yeah it’s messed up how the industry can be like that..but there is a lot producers out there doin’ their own thing, any of them catch your attention?

Jon Young: That dude from Sky Skrapin Ent, Jon Young I think! (laughs) Naw it’s hard to say. There’s so many new producers. The days of relying on The Neptunes or Dre are kind of over. They’re excellent producers but since recording gear is more easily available, there’s a lot of new talent poppin up. I can really only name songs I’m jammin, I haven’t kept up with the producers too much. But on a local level, these dudes The Colleagues are droppin some heat. They just produced a new track for another Orlando artist, Dee Boi, it’s called “Mr. Pyrex.” It’s some crazy shit!

J. Cash: I don’t listen to a lot of new music out now, but if I had to pick someone right now in the industry… Dr. Luke. Shout outs to Jon Young who always does great tracks, and then Pearly Whites, Filthy Beatz, Voice of Da Streetz, Matt Sapp, they all people who worked with me on this solo album and they making good stuff, google their names if you need some solid tracks.

Greatest accomplishment of all time?

Jon Young: Really just gettin to where we’re at. I never saw this shit comin. In the back of my mind I always knew this was what I wanted to do, as young as 13 or 14, but you still never think it could happen. Performing in front of 100s and even 1000s of people, working with a major artist, being signed to a label. It’s just crazy where life can take you. Until I get married and have a kid, the music is definitely my greatest accomplishment.

J. Cash: Yeah I’d have to go with the music. I did a song called Take Time, that was influenced by a friend of mine and my father who have passed away. It’s about saying to take time to remember the ones we’ve lost. Well, his now 11 year old son is a fan of our music, which was crazy in its own, but I met up with him and gave him a CD and told him “That song Take Time is your song” And that makes me feel really good because he’ll grow up with this song to always remember his dad by. That’s an amazing thing, and I thank music for that. No matter how far we go in this industry, we know that we’ll always be a part of millions of people’s lives with this music.

I agree! That’s an amazing thing, music is a great way to reach out and help people and you guys are great at doing that! Thanks for taking time out to answer our questions.. Any shout outs?

J. Cash : To everyone who enjoys the music. Ya’ll made a dream a reality. Jon Young and I truly appreciate the ongoing support. So just stay spreading the word about us and our music to anyone and everyone you come across. And like I said, request us to your radio and club DJs, because its up to ya’ll to show there’s a demand. Stay checkin the MySpace pages periodically for updates, new music. If you wanna buy the music, its on iTunes and Amazon and others. Also mail order CDs through jonyoungmusic.com. And if you downloading our stuff off limewire n stuff, thats cool, but you better be promotin’ the HELL out of us, ya feel me? (Laughs)

Jon Young: Thank you for gettin at us for the interview! We appreciate it a lot. Shout out to all the artists on my new CD, J Mor, Persyce, Cutta Man, $hamrock, Down Bottom, D.A.B., and of course my main homie J. Cash! (laughs) Real recognize real, if y’all fuck with us, we fuck with you. We’re all about honesty in our music and if people see that shit, then they some real people. I’m not about that fake it til you make it shit. Be sure to get at me on twitter http://www.twitter.com/jonyoungmusic, sign up to our youtube channel http://www.youtube.com/skyskrapinent, and ofcourse the myspace! http://www.myspace.com/jonyoungmusic

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Jon Young & J. Cash Interview On CoffeeMag

Posted on Saturday, June 14th, 2008

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YALL ARE FROM ORLANDO FLORIDA WHICH IS KNOWN MAINLY FOR DISNEY AND BOY BANDS, HOW DOES ORLANDO HIP HOP DIFFER FROM OTHER PARTS?

J. Cash: The music has nuttin to do with Disney or anything like that, we just trying to make good music for people from all over to enjoy. We rep Orlando a lot but thats cuz we love our city, we got pride for where we from, and there’s a lot of talent down here that goes overlooked.

Jon Young: Disney is fun as hell, you ever been? And did you see all the chicks N’Sync & Backstreets got? Even the gay one! (Laughs)

OF COURSE I BEEN TO DISNEY LOL! WHO IS YALLS INFLUENCES IN THIS MUSIC?

J. Cash: I don’t really have anyone I style myself after in this rap thing, but my influences in looking at this music stuff like “Wow I wanna do that” goes back to Mo-Town and stuff like that. Everytime I hear a Temptations song it makes me want to make a hit.

Jon Young: I’ve been a fan of music before I can even remember. My parents had crates of old 45′s and LPs. We had everything from Thriller, to Funkytown, to the Top Gun Soundtrack, all the top 40 stuff and I instantly feel in love
with music.

It’s one of those things that can’t be explained. My brother is also a musician, he’s 6 years older than me so I always looked up to him. He was recording and doin shows since he was 14, before Pro Tools & all that. I used
to drop horrible sounding tracks on his Fostex 4-track recorder. He showed me there was more to life than just doin the 9-5 thing, that you could actually live a dream.

HOW DID YALL 2 MEET EACH OTHER?

J. Cash: We had met freshman year in high school waiting for a class. Both of us shared the same interests in cars and music so we just clicked well.

Jon Young: Yea, I was in a new school and knew nobody and him & his boy took me under their wing so to speak. I was into lowriders and No Limit Records & so we
instantly became friends.

YALL HAVE A HUGE FOLLOWING ON MYSPACE AND WE READ THAT YALL SIGNED A MAJOR DEAL WITH DEFIENT ENT/WARNER BROS. HOW DID THAT DEAL TURN OUT?

J. Cash: It didn’t (laughing) I don’t really want to get into that, but we aren’t with them and just doing our own independent thing. And on the MySpace thing… yes we have a lot of listeners and fans on MySpace, but just like any other musician there’s people all across the country with our songs on their mix CDs and MP3 players ya know. We are not just “MySpace artists” as some people like to label us, I dunno what that’s about.

Jon Young: Yea, a lot of it was a big waste of time but we got a bit of a glimpse into the industry and we got some nice equipment out of the deal so it wasn’t a total loss. But we’re doin’ a lot better now. Gettin’ more shows, up on iTunes, and we can make the music we wanna make!

ARE YOU OR WERE YOU GETTING OFFERS FROM OTHER LABELS?

J. Cash: Some, nothing too serious, these labels want you to have a hit already spinning and bumping in the club before they wanna work withcha… n by then, you don’t even need the label really.

Jon Young: Yea, we’re gettin offers but we can pretty much do all the things they’re offering on our own. So kids, if you get offered a deal saying….”we’ll get you on iTunes and all that,” don’t listen because you can do that on your own, you do not NEED a label anymore!

HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THE STATE THE MUSIC INDUSTRY IS IN RIGHT NOW?

J. Cash: It’s flooded. Just like the economy, it’s all messed up. There’s too many people doing it. We’re lucky to have gotten in and known when we did.

Jon Young: Life seems to have a lot to do with timing. Had we jumped in the game right now, I doubt you’d be interviewing us. The industry right now is in
situation where there’s more artists than fans. Everyone wants the spotlight, it’s cool to have dreams and aspirations but I think people & artists forget to be fans. When I was a kid I would literally skip school to go buy
new releases. Now people feel like they’re better than the artists they once looked up to. But I’m sorry, a poorly executed freestyle on a 50 Cent beat on YouTube IS NOT MUSIC!

WHAT PROJECTS YOU GOT OUT NOW AND WHAT DO YOU GOT COMING?

J. Cash: Our albums are for sale on our MySpace pages and
www. jonyoungmusic. com There’s a free MIX CD for download on our pages. Ringtones are being put in all phone providers as we speak so search our names, we’re probably in there or will be soon. Itunes of our classics going up, a whole new album going up there too and we’re pushing too singles, Rent Money and Dance Floor.

Jon Young: Yea, this new album….it’s nutty. The songs were recorded over the span of a year so you get a good amount of range. After sittin’ down to get ‘em
mixed & mastered I realized that this is probably our best release yet. A New Era, comin’ sooner than you think!

IF THERE IS ONE PERSON YOU COULD WORK WITH WHO COULD IT BE?

J. Cash: Timbaland cuz we’d make a hit from that (laughs) and I always wanted to do a song with Weezer, I think that’d be cool.

Jon Young: I hear that! Instant smash! (laughs). I’m gonna have to go with Gym Class Heroes. I know they would put me to shame on the song but that’s okay, they’re amazing.

WORD ASSOCIATION- TEL ME THE FIRST THING THAT COMES TO MIND WHEN YOU SEE THESE NAMES

J. Cash:

LIL WAYNE – Overrated
THE RUNNERS – Hits
SHAMROCK – Grindin
LIL WYTE – Oxycotton
PLIES – Goon

Jon Young:

LIL WAYNE – Uninteresting
THE RUNNERS – Anthem
SHAMROCK – Hustler
LIL WYTE – Crunk
PLIES – Florida

WE THANK YA FOR YOUR RESPONSES, ANYTHING ELSE BEFORE WE ROLL?

J. Cash: Thanks to all our fans for the ongoing support, and please, PLEASE stay requesting us to your radio and club DJs cuz THEY need to see there’s a demand for us if we ever gonna blow up and get the music everywhere.

Jon Young: We realize nobody owes us anything but if you truly enjoy our music and want to see us go further in our career, then please help us spread the word. Whether it’s to the kid sittin next to you in Math class, or the DJ at
the bar or club you go to every weekend, just spread the word about us. We appreciate your support more than we could possibly express, without y’all we would’ve never seen our dream become a reality. And keep checkin’ your iTunes for us, THE LEGACY VOL. 1 is coming, A NEW ERA, and plenty more to come!

Jon Young & J. Cash, 407s Finest!

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Jon Young & J. Cash Interview On SixShot.com

Posted on Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

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Orlando bred rappers Jon Young and J. Cash met each other during their freshman year in high school. Thanks to their love for rap music and custom cars, the two hit it off immediately and began writing and making music as a hobby. Their big break would come in 2006 when Jon Young’s single, “City I Luv”, would become a major underground hit in their hometown. Since then, the duo has been featured in various rap publications and are on the radar of every major label. We recently chopped it up with duo about their career and their future plans.

With people like Wes Fif blowing up, it seems Orlando is getting a lot of attention, where do you guys fit in the picture?

Jon Young: That’s a good question but I’ma put it like this. We’re from Orlando, been here all our lives so how could we not fit in.

J. Cash: Yep, this our city just as much as its someone else’s city.

Jon Young: We represent a different demographic than Wes Fif and Dee Boi and all the Orlando artists but that’s why we’re respected. We’re not trying to come off like we’re dope boys or anything but at the same time we’ve grown up around all that so we can touch on that aspect of the O. I grew up primar ily on the eastside; Semoran area and J. Cash on the westside; Lockhart, Pine Hills…. so we can reflect on a lot of different things.

J. Cash: We definitely got our place in the Orlando scene, and a lot of Central Florida artists are seeing that now. They know we just about making good music and most the people who really wanna do something in this town and industry are bout the same thing.

Jon Young: Orlando is kinda divided in half. The East has alotta Hispanics and people
from the NorthEeast, so you get a lot of that influence and the West there’s a big influence from the black community. It’s a good mixture throughout so we’re able to absorb all these elements and come out with music that can appeal to a lot of different people.

White rappers from the South are interesting, because cats in the South have such a specific swag, is it hard being White and being in the Southern rap scene?

J. Cash: The white thing something I tried to never look at. We knew it was there, but we were like “Let’s just worry more bout making hot songs.” We did a CD signing in Orlando at the J-Mart and these kids in front of the market saw our poster and that we were there and said “Jon Young and J. Cash… I thought they was black.” cause all they
ever heard of us was from mix CDs.

Jon Young: Yeah, the South is all about your swag. From everything to how you talk to how you drive your car. It all really comes down to confidence. I lacked a lot of that early on ’cause I started making music for fun and it kinda took off without meaning to so I was kinda caught like a deer in headlights when fans would approach me around town and shit. But getting out there and doing these shows and connecting with the fans has helped a lot with being comfortable as an artist.

Lotta folks expect most rappers to be cocky n all that but I guess I’m an exception…I still feel the same as before. But back to your question. Being white I think used to be a big issue but from my personal experience it hasn’t been a problem. I don’t even mention race in my music so that makes it more universal. I get emails from fans that have never seen me telling me they thought I was Asian, or Spanish, or Black and that’s kinda my goal. I want my music to touch as many people as possible.

Do you get the same love as everybody else?

Jon Young: I’d say so. The little bit of hate we get compared to how much love we get is really incomparable. If you make jammin’ music that’s real then people will see that and respect it. If you front about somethin’ you’re gonna get found out sooner or later.

J. Cash: Exactly. When the music wasn’t that good we didn’t get love. And I can’t blame them for hating (Laughs), but that made us work harder to figure out what would work. Now there’s one hate message every couple weeks and its just “You’re wack”… but that’s about all the details I can get out of em.

You recently recorded a track with Lil’ Boosie. What was that like and how did it come about?

Jon Young: Yea, the track is called “Post Up.” Not to brag or nothing, but the track is a banger. It’s gotten a lot of love on XM and Sirius satellite radio and FM radio across the country. It’s slowly spreading around. We actually did the track several months before we got Boosie on it.

J. Cash: Did it and redid it, then redid it again with Boosie. I had even named dropped Boosie in my verse. The buzz is growing on the track, its on a DJ Scream mix CD, a DJ Smallz mix CD, buncha Lil Boosie mix CDs, even on his new Touched Down And Caused Hell DVD which I’m still trying to figure out what exactly is on it cause it says
there’s a video.

Jon Young: Yeah, so when our label asked who we wanted to get as a feature it was a no brainer. We had a connect with this dude A.B. The White Boi and he made it happen. Boosie was coming in to Lauderdale for a show so we got some studio time at Lil Wayne’s spot at the Hit Factory in Miami and banged it out real quick.

J. Cash: Like 4 hours notice… for a 3-hour trip. They told us “Come to Miami” and we stopped everything we were doing and made the trip.

Jon Young: We rerecorded our verses and Boosie wrote his on the way to the studio and knocked it out. It was a cool experience coming from doing songs in my bedroom to
being in a big studio with a major artist.

What plan did you guys use to gain such recognition; did you have a specific marketing plan?

J. Cash: There wasn’t really a plan.

Jon Young: Like I said before, we really didn’t plan on gettin’ to this point. I mean anyone who raps or does music would love to be on the radio & TV n shit but we didn’t really sit down and say, “This is what we wanna do for a living.” We just did songs ’cause it was somethin we liked doin.

J. Cash: We would make a song or two every couple weeks on a Friday night as something fun.

Jon Young: Somebody had told me about MySpace back in like 2004 or 2005 and I decided to make a page. I had this track called “City I Luv” that people I knew were tellin me was tight so I put that on there and maybe 1 or 2 others and it started spreading like
crazy. There was also confusion about the song being by Yung Joc so it was gettin downloaded nonstop on Limewire. So the marketing all kinda developed as we went along. I do graphic design too so I’d make the page as professional as I could so folks thought we were major artists.

J. Cash: Jon Young’s page jumped off first and we had a Jon Young and J. Cash page but MySpace deleted it last November thinking it was a fake Jon Young page, so that’s why we have seperate pages in case ya’ll were wondering.

Do you have specific producers you work with?

Jon Young: We’ve done a few things on other producers’ beats but I do all our production. We do it like that not only for financial reasons but also for our style; I know what will work best. We might not necessarily sound right on someone else’s production.

J. Cash: I love working with Jon Young as the producer. I put my input in on tracks at what can be where and stuff like that, but there hasn’t been a beat Jon Young’s sent that I didn’t like.

Have you ever left your region to do any shows?

Jon Young: We’ve done a couple shows outside of Florida. In Milwaukee and Dallas. They were for the Core DJs retreat. We’re really trying to focus on our area first to make sure we got Florida ridin’ with us.

J. Cash: We got people from everywhere wanting us to come to their city but we know that will come once the buzz is high enough for the radio plays, and the radio will bring the bigger demand for shows.

The Southern fans are very loyal. More so than other regions, why is that?

J. Cash: The South always sticks with the south because we get enough hate from other regions sometimes. And we wanna see us coming up and doing good. The Ssuth always been tight knit, not just in music but in life, it’s love down here.

Jon Young: I think it’s because Southern artists create a whole movement that surrounds them. You’re getting more than just an artist when you listen to someone like T.I. or Chamillionaire. Even back in the No Limit days, bein’ ‘Bout It’ was like a whole lifestyle. They were droppin movies and everything so you could really get wrapped up in the atmosphere they create. Southern artists will make you feel like you riding through their city when you listen to ‘em. We’ve got people all over wearing 407 hats, people that never even been to Orlando.

J. Cash: New Era… we want our cut ya’ll!

Can we expect any more big name collaborations?

Jon Young: Right now we’re just focused on gettin this music out to the masses. Once we get more exposure it’ll make it easier to make those collabs possible.

J. Cash: We’ve done real well being us and people like that.

Anything you’d like to tell the fans?

Jon Young: Just wanna thank everybody that’s been jammin our music over the past couple years. Y’all have changed my life drastically and I appreciate it so much. Things might get a lil rough over the next year or so ’cause we’re making that move into the actual industry. It might seem like we’ve disappeared for a lil while but we just out here tryna make the best moves for us. So the music won’t change or nothing like that, we still going be dropping those type of tracks that made you feel us in the first place.

J. Cash: In one of my new songs I say, “If it wasn’t for the fans. I woulda quit a long time ago” and that’s the God’s honest truth. When the labels, lawyers, DJs, A&Rs, any music industry people get us down, I know I can go on my MySpace and have pages of unread messages of motivation. Ya’ll make all this possible so keep the messages coming
and just tell anybody and everybody about Jon Young and J. Cash, the more people just knowing of us will get this shit bigger and bigger.

It’s a crazy feeling to know how our music has influenced some of ya’lls lives. We’ve had people get song titles of ours tattooed on them because they were that powerful. Thank ya’ll for everything and stay reppin for ya boys, Jon Young and J. Cash!

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Jon Young & J. Cash Ozone Magazine Interview

Posted on Wednesday, July 25th, 2007

ozonead

Tell me a little about yourselves.

J. cash: We’ve been doing music for 11 years now, ever since we met in 9th grade. We didnt really get a lot of exposure until Myspace came along, but weve had songs on pirate radio a little bit, back when Dawgman and themm were doing their thing.

Jon Young: We kinda just kept working on the songs and getting better and learning from each song so we could make the next song better.

Speaking of MySpace, that outlet has been huge for you guys. I was on your site earlier today and you guys had over 10,000 plays this morning alone.

Jon Young: Yeah, we average around 30,000 to 40,000 per day, and we got almost 15 million total plays. Weve onlly been on there maybe a year and a half.

J. Cash: And thats all from word of mouth and people just coming through the page and telling their friends. We dont do any spamming on peoples pages or anything like that; its all from word of mouth and people putting our songs on their profiles. We have people in Indiana adding our songs to their profile. its growing all across the country.

Yea, but you have a bigger Myspace buzz than artists with a top ten single. I know you said its from word of mouth, but there has to be an element that attracted the word of mouth.

Jon Young: When I first signed up on Myspace, I added like the first 500 people, and they just started spreading. I just think it has to do with the music.

J. Cash: People can easily relate to it. Its universal music.
Jon Young: And also we made our page look really professional, even though we arent major artists. People though we were signed already.

J. Cash: Its a lot in the presentation, with Jon Young doing all of the graphic work that made it look alot more official before it even got to that point. A lot of people dont realize the importance of the presentation. Its not just the music, the marketing is almost equally important.

Orlando is a pretty diverse city. How has that affected your music?

J. Cash: I was born and raised in Orlando – born in Florida Hospital. And growing up in the Pine Hills, Lockhart area its a good mix of different kinds of people and different lifestyles and everything. You kinda just absorb that, and take that in, from the cars to the streets, to everything. it all just plays in to the sound of the music.

Jon Young: Its a mixture of people from up North living here, from Cali, and a while variety of people, but its still mainly a southern influence living in Orlando,, but you get a little bit of everything.

It seems like you get a lot of hometown love in Orlando. Do you think the fact that you are minorities in a black -dominated industry has hindered your or work to your advantage?

Jon Young: Id say in the beginning when we first started recording it was a problem, but in the past few years its gotten more accepted its more about the actual music. If you make a hot track people dont care what race you are.

J. Cash: Thats another thing about the internet. People were haring our songs on downloaded mix CDs and not even knowing that we were white,, so to add to what Jon said, it really is about the music.

You just did a song with Lil Boosie, right? What else are you guys working on right now?

J. Cash: We just signed with Defient Entertainment under Warner music,, and were trying to make big things pop with that. We put out a couple of underground CDs, a few on our own, and were gonna be putting together a major project pretty soon that will be in stores and all that. Its gonna be kind of a combination of song of the songs from the albums along with some new songs too.

Jon Young: We’ve been hitting all the DJ crews and everything, like the CORE Djs and all that. We’re trying to get some more exposure in the industry.

John Young Parkway is a major street in Orlando. Is that where your name came from?

Jon Young: Yeah, me and Wes Fif used to work together and we kinda came up with our names at the same time. His name is based on Colonial and West 50. We thought it would be a good way to put the city on the map

Speaking of Wes Fif, how is your current relationship with him, are you guys still cool?

Jon Young: Yeah, we’re cool. He’s just kinda going in a different direction musically. But we still talk everyday, so we’re cool.

What are you most looking forward to in terms of your career? What keeps you doing this rap thing for going on 11 plus years?

J. Cash: Me, personally, I just want to keep getting out there. THe music inspires me. Its such a good feeling to hear our song played in a club, or to perform in from of a crowd that doesn’t even know us, and have them fans by the end of the show. We just got from Milwaukee, and we performed in front of a crowd of 2,000 people who didnt know us. By the second night,, they wanted us back to perform again.

Jon Young: Yeah, thats a real good feeling, and also we want to help out Orlando. There is so much talent that’s overlooked. There’s Treal, Dee Boi, and all these people who are struggling to make it, and if one of us can help someone else out, that’s really what it’s all about.

Does Orlando have what it takes to become the next big Hip Hop hub, like an Atlanta or Houston?

Jon Young: There’s no reason for it not to be .

J. Cash: It’s like any other city that doesn’t have any major artists that are really reppin’ hard for it. in Miami, they’re always shouting, “MIA,” “Dade County.” and “305″ on songs. So Orlando artists just to need to make the city more recognizable. So that’s what we push in our songs “Orange County,” “Orlando,” “407,” and everything like that . We got people all over the country trying to get 407 hats because they can see that Orlando is gonna be the next big place for hip hop.

Jon Young: We just gotta all work together, that’s the only way it’s gonna happen. If we all just stay to ourselves, it’s not gonna pop off like it should, but with teamwork we can do it.

You’ve got some pretty hot beats. What producers are you working with?

Jon Young: Actually, I do all the production myself.

J. Cash: Yeah, we do it all ourselves. It’s a combination of us doing all the hooks and coming up with all the concepts. We wanted to make it real easy, so we did everything in-house. even the recordings are done in-house on the computer.

Jon Young: We were strapped for Cash.

J. Cash: Yeah, the best way is to just start on your own. With us, it’s more about the quality of the music than the actual quality of the recording. We put some time into think about the song and everything, and not just if its gonna be a hot sounding song, but if its gonna be marketable.

- Eric Perrin

Posted in Interviews |

In-Depth Interview With Jon Young & J. Cash

Posted on Friday, May 25th, 2007

indepth

You guys were recently in Ozone magazine’s Patiently Waiting.
How was it to be recognized in a large publication?

Jon Young: It feels really good to be acknowledged by a respected
publication like Ozone. I’ve watched them grow out of nothing back
when it was Orlando SOURCE and I always wanted to be featured in there.
I used to be bitter about never bein in Ozone but I realize now that you
gotta work hard for people to notice you.

J. Cash: Yeah it’s a lovely feeling to see ourselves in there. I remember
when it was just a lil brochure like thing they passed out, its good to see
it growing. When we were in Milwaukee and we were
able to pick up the lastest issue, I thought that was great to see it
up there. O-Zones says they’re “Your favorite rapper’s favorite
magazine” and I was reading it one day saying “I bet that’s right”
cause there some person reading this who is our fan and O-Zone is my
favorite music mag, haha

With people like Wes Fif blowing up, it seems Orlando is getting
a lot of attention, where do you guys fit in the picture?

Jon Young: That’s a good question but I’ma put it like this. We’re
from Orlando, been here all our lives so how could we not fit in.

J. Cash: Yep, this our city just as much as its someone elses city.

Jon Young: We represent a different demographic than Wes Fif and Dee
Boi and all the Orlando artists but that’s why we’re respected. We’re
not trying to come off like we’re dope boiz or anything but at the same
time we’ve grown up around all that so we can touch on that aspect of the
O. I grew up primarily on the eastside; Semoran area and J. Cash on the
westside; Lockhart, Pine Hills….so we can reflect on a lot of different things.

J. Cash: We definetly got our place in the Orlando scene, and a lot
of Central Florida artists are seeing that now. They know we just
about making good music and most the people who really wanna do
something in this town and industry are bout the same thing.

Jon Young: Orlando is kinda divided in half. The east has alotta
Hispanics and people from the northeast so you get a lot of that influence
and the west there’s a big influence from the black community. It’s a good
mixture throughout so we’re able to absorb all these elements and come out
with music that can appeal to alot of different people.

White rappers from the South are interesting, because cats in the
South have such a specific swag, is it hard being Whit and being in
the Southern rap scene?

J. Cash: The white thing something I tried to never look at. We knew
it was there, but we were like “Let’s just worry more bout makin hot
songs.” We did a CD signing in Orlando at the J-Mart and these kids
in front of the market saw our poster and that we were there and said
“Jon Young and J. Cash… I thought they was black..” cause all they
ever heard of us was from mix cds.

Jon Young: Yea, the south is all about ya swag. From everything to
how you talk to how you drive your car. It all really comes down to
confidence. I lacked a lot of that early on ’cause I started makin
music for fun and it kinda took off without meaning to so I was kinda
caught like a deer in headlights when fans would approach me around
town n shit. But gettin out there and doin these shows and connectin
with the fans has helped a lot with bein comfortable as an artist.
Lotta folks expect most rappers to be cocky n all that but I guess I’m
an exception…I still feel the same as before. But back to ya
question. Bein’ white I think used to be a big issue but from my
personal experience it hasn’t been a problem. I don’t even mention
race in my music so that makes it more universal. I get emails from
fans that have never seen me tellin me they thought I was asian, or
spanish, or black and that’s kinda my goal. I want my music to touch
as many people as possible.

Do you get the same love as everybody else?

Jon Young: I’d say so. The little bit of hate we get compared to how
much love we get is really incomparable. If you make jammin’ music
that’s real then people will see that and respect it. If you front
about somethin’ you’re gonna get found out sooner or later.

J. Cash: Exactly. When the music wasn’t that good we didn’t get
love.. and I can’t blame em for hatin, haha, but that made us work
harder to figure out what WOULD work. Now there’s one hate message
every couple weeks and its just “You’re wack”… but thats about all
the details I can get out of em, haha.

You recently recorded a track with Lil’ Boosie. What was that like
and how did it come about?

Jon Young: Yea, the track is called “Post Up.” Not to brag or nuttin
but the track is a banger. It’s gotten a lot of love on XM and Sirius
satellite radio and FM radio across the country. It’s slowly
spreadin around. We actually did the track several
months before we got Boosie on it.

J. Cash: Did it and redid it, then redid it again with Boosie. I had
even named dropped Boosie in my verse. The buzz is growing on the
track, its on a DJ Scream mix cd, a DJ Smallz mix cd, buncha Lil
Boosie mix cds, even on his new Touched Down and Caused Hell DVD which
I’m still trying to figure out what exactly is on it cause it says
theres a video.

Jon Young: Yeah, so when our label asked who we wanted to get as a
feature it was a no brainer. We had a connect with this dude A.B. The
White Boi and he made it happen. Boosie was comin in to Lauderdale
for a show so we got some studio time at Lil Waynes spot at the Hit
Factory in Miami and banged it out real quick.

J. Cash: Like 4 hours notice… for a 3 hour trip. They told us “Come
to Miami” and we stopped everything we were doing and made the trip.

Jon Young: We rerecorded our verses and Boosie wrote his on the way
to the studio and knocked it out. It was a cool experience comin from
doin songs in my bedroom to
being in a big studio with a major artist.

What plan did you guys use to gain such recognition, did you
have a specific marketing plan?

J. Cash: There wasn’t really a plan.

Jon Young: Like I said before, we really didn’t plan on gettin’ to
this point. I mean anyone who raps or does music would love to be on
the radio & tv n shit but we didnt really sit down and say “This is
what we wanna do for a living.” We jus did songs ’cause it was
somethin we liked doin.

J. Cash: We would make a song or two every couple weeks on a Friday
night as something fun.

Jon Young: Somebody had told me about MySpace back in
like 2004 or 2005 and I decided to make a page. I had this track
called “City I Luv” that people I knew were tellin me was tight so I
put that on there and maybe 1 or 2 others and it started spreadin like
crazy. There was also a confusion about the song bein by Yung Joc so
it was gettin downloaded nonstop on Limewire. So the marketing all
kinda developed as we went along. I do graphic design too so I’d make
the page as professional as I could so folks thought we were major
artists.

J. Cash: Jon Young’s page jumped off first and we had a Jon Young and
J. Cash page but MySpace deleted it last November thinking it was a
fake Jon Young page, so that’s why we have seperate pages in case
ya’ll were wondering.

Do you have specific producers you work with?

Jon Young: We’ve done a few things on other producers beats but I do
all our production. We do it like that not only for financial reasons
but for our style, I know what will work best. We might not
necessarily sound right on someone else’s producton.

J. Cash: I love working with Jon Young as the producer. I put my
input in on tracks at what can be where and stuff like that, but there
hasn’t been a beat Jon Young’s sent that I didn’t like.

You’ve had some releases. Are the sales successful?

Jon Young: Yea so far we’ve put out five releases. My “Take A Ride”
mixtape, my solo CD “City I Luv,” then me & J. Cash dropped “Slept
On,” and “Keep Movin,” and a compilation of up and coming artists
called “Track Breakers.” The sales have done really well considering
the only promotion we’ve really had is MySpace. We been moving units
all over the country and world as far as the Netherlands and China.

J. Cash: Even Japan, Australia, I gotta ship come cds out in the
morning to Germany even. We get a lot of orders from troops in Iraq
as well, and I think that’s just crazy, I love knowing our cds are
worldWIDE, I never thought that’d happen.

Have you ever left your region to do any shows?

Jon Young: We’ve done a couple shows outside of Florida. In
Milwaukee and Dallas. They were for the Core DJs retreat. We’re
really trying to focus on our area first to make sure we got Florida
ridin’ with us.

J. Cash: We got people from everywhere wanting us to come to their
city but we know that will come once the buzz is high enough for the
radio plays, and the radio will bring the bigger demand for shows

Have you been approached by any labels, do you have your own? What is
your distribution situation?

Jon Young: Currently our distribution has been purely online orders
and mail orders.

J. Cash: Lotsa trips to the post office so they know us by name now.

Jon Young: We’ve handled all our own packing and shipping and
we get our CDs pressed down in Miami. We’ve been approached by
several labels. We were workin’ out a deal with Warner/Chappel but
that was for publishing….song writing and production.

J. Cash: We ain’t against the writing and producing idea, it just
didn’t seem like that was the way for us to go as we enjoy doing shows
and doing what we like on a track.

Jon Young: We’ve been approached by Fontana for distribution and
MySpace Records. But we inked a deal with Defient Entertainment which
is an independent label.
We’re staying busy building the buzz and our label is shopping around
for a major distribution deal. They’re in talks with all the big
labels….Universal, Jive, etc.

The Southern fans are very loyal. More so than other regions, why is that?

J. Cash: The south always sticks with the south because we get enough
hate from other regions sometimes. And we wanna see us coming up and
doing good. The south always been tight knit, not just in music but
in life, it’s love down here.

Jon Young: I think it’s because southern artists create a whole
movement that surrounds them. You’re getting more than just an artist
when you listen to someone like T.I. or Chamillionaire. Even back in
the No Limit days, bein’ ‘Bout It’ was like a whole lifestyle. They
were droppin movies and everything so you could really get wrapped up
in the atmosphere they create. Southern artists will make you feel
like you ridin through their city when you listen to ‘em. We’ve got
people all over wearin 407 hats, people that never even been to
Orlando.

J. Cash: New Era… we want our cut ya’ll!

What are you working on right now?

J. Cash: We always working on something, even if it’s behind the
scenes. We just trying to get our name on everyone’s mind right now
by doing anything and everything.

Jon Young: Right now we’re finishing up a mixtape called “MOTIVTION”
to be featured as afree download on our MySpace pages and
www.jonyoungmusic.com and we’realso working on our major release
album. We’ve got a lot of new music in the can waitin’ to be dropped so
stay keep checkin the pages!

Can we expect any more big name collaborations?

Jon Young: Right now we’re just focused on gettin this music out to
the masses. Once we get more exposure it’ll make it easier to make
those collabs possible.

J. Cash: We’ve done real well being us and people like that.

Anything you’d like to tell the fans?

Jon Young: Just wanna thank everybody that’s been jammin our music
over the past couple years. Y’all have changed my life drastically
and I appreciate it so much. Things might get a lil rough over the
next year or so ’cause we’re making that move into the actual
industry. It might seem like we’ve disappeared for a lil while but we
just out here tryna make the best moves for us. So the music won’t
change or nuttin like that, we still goin be droppin those type of
tracks that made you feel us in the first place.

J. Cash: In one of my new songs I say “If it wasn’t for the fans.. I
woulda quit a long time ago” and that’s the God’s honest truth. When
the labels, lawyers, DJs, A&Rs, any music industry people get us down,
I know I can go on my MySpace and have pages of unread messages of
motivation. Ya’ll make all this possible so keep the messages coming
and just tell anybody and everybody bout Jon Young and J. Cash, the
more people just knowing of us will get this shit bigger and bigger.
It’s a crazy feeling to know how our music has influenced some of
ya’lls lives. We’ve had people get song titles of ours tattooed on
them because they were that powerful. Thank ya’ll for everything and
stay reppin for ya boys Jon Young and J. Cash!

Interview by Jonny Boy: JONMPNYC@aol.com

Posted in Interviews |

Jon Young Interview On RapSearch.com

Posted on Thursday, May 25th, 2006

rapsearch

If you’re from the Orlando area, most likely you’ve heard of Jon Young. If you’re on MySpace, you could be apart of his 50,000 fans. With 5.8 Million total plays on his profile, and 1.7 million currently on ‘City I Luv,’ he’s defintely blowing up MySpace. Here today, Jon Young comes through with a very detailed interview, that gives y’all the first glimpse.

Who’s Jon Young? What’s Sky Skrapin’ Entertainment?

Who is Jon Young? Well I’m a lot like most people. I think that’s why so many can relate to what I’m saying. Growin’ up, my family was never wealthy but we lived comfortably. My dad worked for the post office and my mom worked part time off & on. They both put themselves through college so they always stressed to me the importance of being educated. I was always trying to learn new things anywhere and that eventually lead to learnin music production on my own. Music became an important part of my life early on. My brother was very into music, playing guitar and drums, so I guess it rubbed off on me. Since 2nd grade or so when I was first introduced to rap, I always had an urge to be involved in music in some way. I saw it as a way to express things i was feeling inside in a productive way. I started out listenin to groups like Kriss Kross and Another Bad Creation (A.B.C.) then later Snoop, Dre, Bone thugs, and 3-6 Mafia as I got older. The southern, westcoast, and midwest styles always appealed to me most because it felt familiar to me. Never growing up in a large city like New York made it hard for me to relate to east coast artists. But at the same time, I think that’s what’s most important in music, especially rap. Your surroundings and experiences should shape your sound and influence your concepts. And that’s exactly what I do, I write about what I’ve been through and seen. You might notice after listening to some of my material that there isn’t much mention of drugs or even violence. Although I’ve experienced it to a degree, I chose to distance myself from that lifestyle early on. I’ve seen it bring down too many people, people extremely close to me. I chose to focus my energy on other things like music, my girl, the car thing, etc.

As far as my name & where I got it, well me and my boy Wes Fif (myspace.com/wesfif) came up with the names together. They’re both based on major road names in Orlando, John Young Parkway and West Hwy 50. We felt it’d be a good way to rep our city and promote ourselves at the same time. If you live in Central Florida, you hear these names on a daily so it’s like free promotion 24/7.

Sky Skrapin’ Entertainment is kind of a recent thing. Up until a little while ago, me and J. Cash (myspace.com/officialjash) we were just putting out CDs without any type of label but we felt it was time to make things more official so went ahead and incorporated our own label. J. Cash came up with the label name based on one of our track titles, “Sky Skrapin’.” It represents Florida and us to the fullest. From the car thang to the fact that we built everything from the ground up. The name reminds us that the sky is the limit. J. Cash is CEO and I’m President of the company. We’re keeping it limited for now, not signing anybody else, but once things start poppin’ off, that might change.

Over 50,000 myspace fans, 1 million page views, 5.8 million plays, seems as you got something going on down there in Orlando, how’d you get started?

To be honest, word of mouth was the key factor in the rapid growth of my buzz. I dropped my song “City I Luv” almost 2 years ago and I just put it out anywhere I could, mixtapes, online, etc. And before I knew it, it was all over the place. Magic Mall flea market and West Oaks Mall in Orlando had it on alot of their mix CDs, and they were even selling it as a ringtone. MySpace blew me up like crazy. I signed up at the end of 2005 and I went through and added like a couple hundred people in the Orlando area and the rest was history. Folks started puttin my songs on their page and it just spread like wild fire. I don’t do any advertising other than post bulletins every once in a while about new songs or CDs I’m droppin’. My boy DJ White Boi Pizal once said “if you’re hot, then you’re hot.” And I feel that’s true, you don’t really gotta bust your ass promotin if you got a hot product. If one person gets ahold of it and it’s tight, they goin’ pass it on to somebody else, so that’s your promotion right there.

“City I Luv,” I’m feeling that. You kind of switched it up, you know from doing the same old same old. What made you rap about Orlando instead of chick?

Well I try to touch on as many topics as possible. Most of what I write about is based on actual experiences so it was only natural for me to write about the place I’ve lived my whole life. Prior to recording “City i Luv,” I had written other tracks with a similar concept but they lacked that mainstream appeal. My parents split up when I was about 8, so I was always going back & forth living in different parts of town so I’ve lived all over the city and surrounding areas. From Ocoee, Casselberry, Oviedo, Rosemont, Winter Springs, to Union Park so I tried to express that in the lyrics. I focused on the west side of Orange County in the hook because I feel that part of town accurately depicts what it’s like in Orlando and most of Florida. On the other hand, Florida has a lot of folks from all over the country, especially the northeast, so I do my best to make my tracks universally appealing while still staying true to my influences. I feel this is what caused the rapid growth of my buzz; I try not to limit myself too much by alienating potential listeners.

‘City I Luv’ is available, what can a listener not familiar with Jon Young expect? Lyrics? Beats?

My primary goal is to make solid tracks. So what you’ll get from me is well rounded songs and consistency. I do all my own production and writing so you get a cohesiveness that I feel a lot of artists lack. Most folks just do one thing so if they’re a rapper, they’ll have a variety of producers (and writers) which I feel can lead to an inconsistant album. Certain songs may feel out of place because there’s so many different vibes. Ofcourse there’s exceptions to everything. As far as lyrically, I’m definitely not a battle rapper or anything like that but what I’m speaking on is always from the heart and based on something I actually went through. I respect everyone in the game from the emcees to the producers because this industry requires a ton of creativity. And for my beats, they’re usually mid tempo and melodic. I try to reflect my personality and I’m pretty laid back and chilled out so that’s the feel you get when you hear my music… for the most part.

What’s up with the graphic design hustle? What made you leave that for rap?

To be honest, the graphic design thing was a result of the music. I needed artwork and web sites to promote my tracks so I started messin around with it. After highschool I studied graphic design for a little while but it wasn’t where my heart was. I liked doing it for my own projects but I’d get frustrated designing for other people ’cause folks can be picky so now I only do it occasionally.

The comparisons are going to come, do you think you’re anything like a Paul Wall or Lil Whyte?

I get the Paul Wall comparisons the most beacuse of the grill n what not, but nowadays who doesn’t have one? … I’ve been a big fan of Paul for a long while now and I have to admit that him and Chamillionaire inspired and motivated me a lot. Just seeing how they came up on their own and made a name for themselves was a big inspiration. It almost didn’t seem possible for me to even get known ’til I found out about them. They had their home town and the internet goin’ nuts before MySpace & all that so I kinda used it as a blueprint for myself. Our styles can be similar at times because we’re both from the south so we speak on a lot of the same things. I respect Lil Wyte as well, I’m not as familiar with his material as Paul’s but he’s definitely doin’ his thing, I just relate to Paul a lil’ more.

What made you use that sample of “Listen 2 Ur Heart?” It’s sick don’t get me wrong, but you know.

I was actually just working on a beat like I normally do, it didn’t have any samples or anything and I was on the phone with a friend and the chords I was playing were the same ones in “Listen to Your Heart.” So they were like, “oh that’s tight, you’re sampling that one song” and I said “umm, it’s not a sample” and they told me it was “Listen to Your Heart” so I got ahold of the track and sampled some portions of it and it fit right in the beat I was makin almost perfectly. So I just left it in there and I picked out the lyrics in the song that spoke to me the most and wrote based on what they meant to me.

What’s with the south being down with the Cutlass’s and Box Chevy’s? Seems as if everybody from the south is poppin’ off with at least one.

There’s alotta reasons them type of cars are popular down here. Back when bass music got started, folks were startin to put systems in their cars and naturally…if you want it louder, you’re gonna want more speakers. They started out being populer in the lower income communities…we can’t afford Beamers and Benz’s so we got the next best thing, older luxury cars. You get all the options, power windows, seats, locks, etc. There’s just a lot you can do with ‘em, you can lift ‘em and put big rims or juice ‘em (hydraulics). Older cars are pretty easy to find around here, and in good condition because of the mild weather conditions. Up north, older cars are pretty much rusted out from the snow. It’s a big part of the southern rap culture, and I think always will be. Music and cars go hand & hand. It’s basically just a a form of expression, you can let other people know what you’re about by what you drive and what you listen to.

Have you hooked up with any bigger artists that the more mainstream would know about?

I’ve done some production for other artists…the biggest names so far are Magno, former Swisha House artist and Big Sid outta’ Louisiana. I worked with Wes Fif a lot, he’s been my potna’ durin’ this whole thing since the beginning. You goin’ be hearin about him a lot soon enough if you havn’t already. I’ve been discussing possible relationships with some major labels recently so my credits should be expanding quite a bit in the near future.

Where can we get music from Jon Young?

The number one spot to get my CDs and check out my music is my web site: JonYoungMusic.com or on my MySpace page at Jon Young MySpace. My CDs are also available throughout Central Florida in Magic Mall & J Mart both located in Orlando. We’re working on gettin them in more locations and on Itunes soon.

rapsearch.com/news/article/jon-young-interview

Posted in Interviews |