You're listening to Song Exploder, where musicians take apart their songs,
and piece by piece, tell the story of how they were made.
I'm Rishikesh Hirway.
This episode contains explicit language.
In November 2014, Ghostface Killa of the Wu-Tang Clan released his 11th album, called 36 Seasons.
A lot of people worked on it.
A soul and R&B quartet, The Revelations, serve as a kind of house backing band for the whole thing.
Lil Fame from M.O.P. and engineer Daniel Schlett helped produce,
and there's a host of guest vocalists,
including the ones on this track, singer Trey Williams and rappers AZ and Cool G Rap.
But the person who put the whole thing together, came up with the idea,
and corralled all of these contributors is someone who doesn't appear on the record.
His name is Bob Perry, and his title is A&R, which stands for Artist and Repertoire.
Nowadays, that usually means a person at a record label who acts as a talent scout for new artists,
but back in the day, the A&R reps were often responsible for much more.
In this episode, Bob Perry talks about how the Ghostface song, The Battlefield,
came together, and Revelations guitarist Wes Mingus breaks down how the beat was assembled.
Here's The Battlefield on Song Exploder.
This is Bob Perry.
I'm the A&R on the album.