“The 90’s was my favourite decade of sound and music. From Tool, Beck, A Tribe Called Quest, to Oasis. Oasis is the most influential band on today’s music scene. Though they weren’t my favourite band back in the day, in high school, it was like those songs felt like they’d come out a month ago. They were just so current and relevant, and I feel like they stood the test of time in a different way.”
“The genre that had the biggest impact on music in the noughties I'd say was R&B. I feel like it really peaked then and it's time to resurrect it. Again, all of the soul, all of the grooves, all of the production, even the arrangements, I just think chords were more adventurous and bridges were a thing back in the noughties. You’d just have a big power bridge that was just key change. R&B brought a lot of life and energy and influenced pop music and other music.”
“I think what I would have loved the most about being an artist in the 1980s would have been this new forefront of making videos. Certainly, at the advent of MTV, there were no rules. People were doing crazy stuff. The concepts for the videos were just wild. And I think that that would have been a lot of fun to be a part of.”
“Rock was coming out of a 20-, 30-year domination, out of the ’60s, ’70s, and going into the ’80s. But hip-hop took that mantra; it was like a relay race. They took the baton and they carried it all the way through. Appetite for Destruction is one of the greatest albums I’ve ever heard. Master [of] Puppet is one of the greatest albums I’ve ever heard. With that said, those albums had a profound effect on this rapper that sits here before you today.”