LEVEL 7 EXPERIENCE
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LEVEL 7 EXPERIENCE

Rochester, New York, United States | Established. Jan 01, 2016 | SELF

Rochester, New York, United States | SELF
Established on Jan, 2016
Band Hip Hop Reggae

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"Cosmic Level"

It took almost a decade, but the stars finally aligned for The Level 7 Experience

The Level 7 Experience was inevitable. Kind of like an epic tale of long-lost love, the band's five members spent almost 15 years circling one another until the stars aligned.

Separately, the musicians in The Level 7 Experience have been deeply tied to Rochester's jam band, reggae, and funk scenes and actively a part of helping create an ever-growing, tight-knit community of fans and bands. It has made the band and the hip-hop music it creates that more approachable.

Each month, The Level 7 Experience hosts a showcase at ButaPub where local emcees can join the band onstage in a freestyle cypher. It's the band's hope to create a holistic space for hip-hop artists, and together break away from the negative stigmas Rochester bar-owners and goers alike have for hip-hop shows.

Vocalist Grant "Skribe Da God" Atkins and drummer Aaron Hughes grew up together in Rochester and became roommates during college. Hughes was training to become a session drummer on the jazz circuit — he has since played alongside renowned artists like John Scofield and Maceo Parker. During that time, Atkins wasn't playing an instrument, but felt motivated creatively and had a growing admiration for Hughes's drumming. He inevitably picked up a Djembe, and together Atkins and Hughes started making reggae music. To this day, Atkins believes the core of his musical existence is rooted in their friendship.

click to enlarge
The Level 7 Experience is (from left to right) drummer Aaron Hughes, bassist Dexter Redic, keyboard player Ekwem Bogmis, vocalist Grant "Skribe Da God" Atkins, and beatmaker Adam "DJ 2way" Ackerman. - PHOTO BY KEVIN FULLER
PHOTO BY KEVIN FULLER
The Level 7 Experience is (from left to right) drummer Aaron Hughes, bassist Dexter Redic, keyboard player Ekwem Bogmis, vocalist Grant "Skribe Da God" Atkins, and beatmaker Adam "DJ 2way" Ackerman.
In 2003, Atkins attended the Ultimate Breakdown Hip-Hop event for his first rap battle. Although he lost, he came away with a significant connection: Adam "DJ 2way" Ackerman, a beatmaker, was only 17 years old at the time and was excitedly watching from the crowd. He approached Atkins as he was getting off stage in hopes the two could work together.

Atkins and Ackerman immediately connected on what they call a "musical spiritual level" and started recording hip-hop together under the moniker Level 7. Hughes would occasionally sit in with the duo, but he eventually moved to New York City to pursue his own career in professional drumming. Before he left, though, Hughes coordinated a few musicians to sit in on Level 7 performances — when this happened, the group called itself Skunk's Monks.

Atkins had also joined Giant Panda Guerrilla Dub Squad in 2003 as a percussionist and vocalist. But in 2007, he made the difficult decision to leave the band and focus on his family and career as a history teacher in the Rochester City School District. Although he didn't have the time to devote himself to a group, he remained on the reggae circuit as an occasional featured artist with other Rochester bands.

Among those bands was roots-reggae outfit Mosaic Foundation, which took Atkins and Ackerman under its wing, and the two made a connection with keyboard player Ekwem Bogmis. As their friendship grew, the idea slowly formed to make music together outside of the reggae genre. Although it was ambiguous at that time, the point of focus for Level 7 was to expand on what they were doing with two turntables and a microphone and evolve into a full live sound.

Bogmis moved out of Rochester to Ithaca around 2014, then later moved out of country to South Korea. There he performed as B33T JUIC3, a one-man band creating loops with guitars, percussion, and vocals. Meanwhile, Atkins and Ackerman continued to dream of a full band. With no specific musician in mind to join them, they would have open jam sessions, but no one particularly stuck — so the vision wouldn't quite yet come to fruition. The belief was that it would happen ... just not yet. There needed to be patience to allow the universe to let things fall as they may.

Before bassist Dexter Redic joined what would eventually evolve from Level 7 to The Level 7 Experience, he would attend jam sessions with Atkins and Ackerman. But he was already committed to another Rochester band, RootsCollider. It was clear that everybody involved wanted to create something magical together, but they were all consciously following other passions.

In the summer of 2016, Atkins and Ackerman began collaborating with longtime friends Matt Schenk and Sean Driscoll, and they finally started to find that full band sound they were looking for when the guitar and bass were added. Drummer Aaron Hughes was back in town, too.

Just days into practicing together as a band, Bogmis came home from overseas, and everything really started falling into place. They all began jamming in Schenk's basement until that following fall: Schenk and Driscoll split off from the rest of the group, leaving the band with a void.

Just at that time, Dexter Redic found himself without a band — RootsCollider had also split. "I would call and call," Redic says, "until finally they let me come jam with them. I was looking for like-minded bandmates and to get all this stuff out of my head. I was going crazy."

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PHOTO BY KEVIN FULLER
PHOTO BY KEVIN FULLER
When Redic joined, he didn't only fill the band's bass void, he personified the idea that it wasn't truly an experience until the right people came together. The decision was made that a guitar was no longer needed (it muddied up the sound they were going for). The stars finally aligned so fluently and naturally, it was almost cosmic.

The five began writing as a band with a truly prolific process that Atkins describes as "allowing the music to write itself by pulling sounds out of a large creative reservoir and see what fits." Each one of them is an artistic vessel with different influences and skills; without all their ideas brought forth, they couldn't build the unique sound they want. The band incorporates a Buddhist philosophy: let go of the ego; don't let the mind get in the way.

One Saturday night, in a basement somewhere in Rochester, I sat in on one of The Level 7 Experience's practices and witnessed the five musicians melt into one unified form. Taking in the practice was like listening to them have conversations through their music.

Atkins, sitting in a computer chair with his back to the band, trancedly spit rhymes he wrote for another beat created by Ackerman the night before. Meanwhile, Ackerman looped and sampled Sun Ra like a mad beat scientist with his Roland SP303 and Ableton Live. The song wasn't nearly finished, but to the untrained ear one wouldn't have guessed that. Bogmis laid down soulful keys effortlessly while Redic strategically came in heavy on the groove sounds. Each of their faces contorted to the music, staring into their own creative spaces. They vibrated off one another, like the music notes were charged atoms and in turn created a new, personal universe.

As they took a break from their practice, I posed a few questions to the nebula of talent and humbleness. An edited transcript of that conversation follows.

CITY: What does the "experience" mean in Level 7 Experience?

Adam Ackerman: The experience is the vibe with the crowd.

Grant Atkins: The mission and vision of the experience is to use our collective gift of wisdom and understanding we have acquired from our perspectives and fuse that. Use the art as a vehicle to pretty much code that artistic message and share it, or externalize it, and spread it. It's not just us — it's everybody who influenced us and supported us.

Dexter Redic: We also have been pulling a lot out of each other. Like, pulling moments of "This shit is awesome!" When you remove that ego from it, you get to enjoy it. If you can do that for a crowd, get them to feel like that — especially because we improvise a lot. We have set forms of songs before we play, where we will leave it open to see how we feel from the crowd.

Aaron Hughes: That's where the word "experience" comes from: if you can read the energy from the crowd.

So have you ever had a bad show experience then?

Ekwem Bogmis: Well, I've thought we had some pretty ill shows before, and Skribe will be like, "Nah, that show was no good."

Atkins: I feel like I am barely the toughest guy to please when it comes to how the show went.

Redic: I know I can't afford to go to as many shows as I see people going to — shows that I'm playing. I respect that, and I want to make it worth their time. I'm trying to heal them and myself. No show is a bad show.

You guys have a lot of reggae, jazz, and jam band backgrounds, which you can clearly hear in your music. How would you describe your sound?

Atkins: We call it party music. We take from the fun music, which includes reggae, hip-hop, psychedelic-funk rock. Those are the polarities we vibe between, but there are no limits.

Redic: [laughs] You listen and tell me what you think it is.

Are there any influences the band shares as a whole?

Atkins: I'm going to get really esoteric here: the influences are all meta. Frequencies, vibes, and trying to quantify the unseen, so to speak. So it's almost like fuckin' dark matter, you know? It's a conjuring. It's the traditional sense of music-making, where you're conjuring up a deity or spirit of sorts.

The influences go back to even Miles Davis. Miles wouldn't give musicians chart music — you just had a mode, a feeling, an idea. So that's kind of the influence there. But also, though, Fela Kuti, Wu-Tang, Sun Ra, Grateful Dead, Phish...

Ackerman: For me, MF Doom and Madlib. J Dilla, too.

Redic: Victor Wooten. Bootsy motherfuckin' Collins.

click to enlarge
PHOTO BY KEVIN FULLER
PHOTO BY KEVIN FULLER
What's in your near future? Do you guys have any goals with the band?

Atkins: We want to crystallize and record some music.

Okay, but do you guys want to be put on the map and eventually get signed with a record label?

Atkins: We want to spread this healing and love vibration to a more mass audience, of course. The focus right now: to stay true to the philosophy. To the desire to be more and more effective at transferring the light code. If our lumen level is only bright enough to fill a 100-person room, then that's what it is in that moment. The goal is to not have a goal but to love the process.

Hughes: I wouldn't say no to tour dates in a Winnebago. Sign me up!

How do you think you are contributing to Rochester's hip-hop scene?

Atkins: We are conscientiously doing it for the culture. What we are doing for the culture, the city, it's an inward and outward conscience movement.

Ackerman: By breaking down the stigmas. By breaking down the walls. If it's real hip-hop, if it's about the right things, it's not going to be a negative time. We don't need to label it as just "Gangster Rap" — maybe in the 90's. We have to break down the stigma. When you say hip-hop, what images does it bring to different people's minds? We can change that in Rochester.

Atkins: When I say "do it for the culture," it's not just the culture. It is culture as a larger idea, and that is to clearly express to different ways of life that we bring together, to make the sound. So breaking down stereotypes of what hip-hop culture is and enriching that at the same time. We actively break those down and build up the positive elements of it.

We are very specifically focused on and intentionally doing the Butapub hip-hop showcases monthly to bring artists together. That is what the culture of hip-hop is primarily. We're there expounding or pushing the boundaries of what those artists feel hip-hop is. By anchoring it every time, with our interpretation of the music. We are creating a safe, positive space. - City Newspaper


"Getting To Know DJ 2WAY Of Level 7 Experience; A Band On Top Of Their Game"

People call me 2way among many other nicknames. I’m a Dj, beat maker, husband and father of four. I’m one half of the Hip Hop Duo Known around Rochester, NY as Level 7. I was born in Rochester, NY in 85. Moved to East Rochester when I was about 5 Years Old. I had a very troubled youth, home life wasn’t good at all. I would act out in negative ways. I got kicked out of a couple of different middle schools. Wound up in Alternative High School. Never got enough seat time to graduate. Really had trouble coloring inside the lines so to speak.

53 Credit Aaron Winters
Courtesy of Aaron Winters

What inspired you to be an artist/entertainer? Early experiences worth sharing?

There was a teacher named Ms.Davis in Alternative High School that taught a creative writing class. She was a writer and a poet and was really interested in Hip Hop and had done a few interviews with Tupac before he passed. She would tell that story a lot and how her daughter was the editor for the source magazine. Anyways she encouraged us to express ourselves in class both musically and through our writtings. These are the years where I would start to focus on creation rather than destruction. This is also at the point where I was writing rhymes all day and skipping class or not even showing up. I liked this writing class a lot and Ms.Davis it was one of the only reasons to come to school. It was through this class that a book of my writings was published all over the school system and I was introduced to the computer software I would learn to make beats on. Ms.Davis was truely a blessing in my life.

1724 Credit Aaron Winters
Courtesy of Aaron Winters

Talk about a time where you have faced adversity/conflict and have triumphed.

I grew up in a tough situation, full of domestic violence issues, neglect, psychological abuse. It left me with panic disorder and agorophobia. I was agorphobic at varying degrees for over 10 years of my life. Now I just call it being a home body, but I can handle leaving the house a lot more then I used to. It gave me alot of time for introspection, to read a lot of books and learn how to make music. It has all shaped me as an artist. I never seen myself performing on stage at all. That’s kind of the opposite of my personality and some of my anxiety issues. It really is a healing process. It took seeking a change and my big brother SkribeDaGod to help me heal. That’s triumph in my book.

What do you believe sets you apart from other artists/entertainers?8487_10205700049803271_788224378972691039_n

Everyone has the ability to be unique by just being themselves and translating that to their art. If I had to pin down something I would say music has been my saviour in life and it’s been my therapy. I live the music, I need the music in my life, I need creative expression in my life. It’s a healing for me, so I respect it greatly. I am not about trends and do not shape my music based on whats cool or hip. I just do what resonates with my soul.

Do you have other interests or hobbies?

Reading is up there. My favorite topics are theology, spirituality, the occult and stuff in that vein. I am also into comedy movies, tv, podcasts and standup. I’ve been known to get lost in video games throughout my life, but haven’t in awhile. Something good needs to come out. I’m a family man so a lot of my hobbies include recreational and learning activities and adventures with the wife and kids. That list is endless, lots of good stuff.

Any projects you have out or currently working on?

Making beats for a lot of Emcees in Rochester, NY. You may or may not hear me on some of your favorite rappers albums and mix tapes. Level 7(SkribeDaGod and Dj 2way) are coming out with another release soon. I am also hyper focused on The Level 7 Experience(www.level7exp.com) which is a live band project that myself and Skribe Da God have put together. It’s really great dance/party music. It combines the best of Hip Hop, Reggae, Funk, Jazz and Pyschedellia. It’s something that I am proud to be a part of. It’s full of heavy hitters in the rochester music scene. It’s definitely a thing.

17362056_10209000157343897_391599401486936834_nWhere would you like to see yourself in 5 years?

5 Years more awesome, 5 year ahead of now. Hahaha. Really though I am focused on waking up to each new day and meeting the challenges and reaching my goals. So my goals for the next 5 years are to spread this music as far and wide as possible and I’d also like to work towards living comfortably from my music. Artist sacrifice a lot. I don’t see why with more hard work that can’t be turned around. The ability to live off of the fruits of the labor. That would be nice.

11018793_10203943275925022_5932186036770210536_nWhat advice can you give to aspiring artists/entertainers?

Do not take short cuts. Do not hesitate to invest in your business, but do not pay for views and likes online. Do not create this online only universe for yourself and think your fans are ride or die. Content is important but you gotta be able to perform well and not pay to play every time you get out an up on stage. It’s important to build from the ground up at some point in your process. That’s what paying dues is, starting from the bottom and climbing. You’ll get a lot more from being on the scene and rubbing elbows then paying for a few time slots a year.

How can we follow along in your journey? Social media?

I’ve been uploading a lot of beats to youtube. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC6YT7g5fMH_95DKPOnpF1oA

The Level 7 Experiences website is www.level7exp.com. - Talker of the Town (Democrat & Chronicle)


Discography

LEVEL 7 - LEVEL 7  

KING'S ENGLISH - SKRIBE DA GOD

LORD'S MANOR - SKRIBE DA GOD

ANKH'EL SOUP - SKRIBE DA GOD

ME & MY UNCLE - SKRIBE DA GOD

STEAK 4 BABIES - SKRIBE DA GOD

Photos

Bio

SkribeDaGod is the Emcee, DJ 2-Way is on the 1's & 2's, We are LEVEL 7

When we form like VOLTRON with Ekwum, Dexter, & Aaron we are THE LEVEL 7 EXPIERENCE

We Fuse the 4 major party music genres (HipHop/Reggae/Psychedelic-Rock/Electronic) into one sound EXPIERENCE. We are designed for and are conduits to a good old fun time that immerses patrons in an EXPIERENCE that activates the mind/body/soul in a beautiful human interaction. AND WE ROCK

Band Members