Song Exploder

Leon Thomas - Mutt

25 min
Jan 28, 20263 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Leon Thomas discusses the creation of his breakout hit 'Mutt' from his album of the same name, which earned him six Grammy nominations including Best New Artist. Working with producers Rob Geringer and David Phelps, Thomas explains how a personal moment watching his dog inspired the song's concept, blending vulnerability with playful R&B production that interpolates the classic 'Silly Love Song' by Enchantment.

Insights
  • Vulnerability and authenticity in songwriting resonate more commercially than formulaic approaches—Thomas deliberately rejected overthinking and played first instincts
  • Collaboration amplifies creative output; working with long-term creative partners who share musical influences (P-Funk, jazz, classic rock) creates chemistry that elevates final product
  • Personal life events and emotional moments can be transformed into universal themes; Thomas's observation of his dog became a metaphor for romantic vulnerability
  • Interpolation vs. sampling involves financial and creative trade-offs; recreating samples can add unique sonic energy while managing licensing complexity
  • Career survival instinct drives bold creative decisions; Thomas's label transition pressure motivated him to 'swing hard' on something special rather than play it safe
Trends
Alternative R&B artists blending multiple genres (funk, jazz, hip-hop, rock) to differentiate from mainstream formulasProducer-artist long-term partnerships becoming more valuable than transactional studio sessionsArtists taking control of vocal engineering and production to maintain creative vision without external doubtInterpolation strategies gaining traction as alternative to traditional sampling for both creative and financial reasonsSocial media content creation (behind-the-scenes production videos) as discovery mechanism for new collaborationsFirst-instinct creative decisions outperforming over-produced, committee-approved approaches in streaming eraPersonal storytelling and vulnerability as competitive advantage in R&B/hip-hop market saturation
Topics
Music production collaboration and creative partnershipsSongwriting for personal vs. commercial projectsSample interpolation vs. sampling licensingVocal production and engineering techniquesGenre blending in contemporary R&BArtist career transitions and label dynamicsProducer-artist chemistry and long-term relationshipsFunk and P-Funk influence in modern productionVulnerability as artistic theme and commercial strategySocial media discovery for music collaborationsGrammy Awards and industry recognitionStudio culture and creative environment designMelody-first songwriting approachFalsetto and vocal layering techniquesPersonal inspiration and songwriting motivation
Companies
The Recording Academy
Hosts Grammy Awards where Leon Thomas received six nominations including Best New Artist and Album of the Year
People
Leon Thomas
Singer, songwriter, producer, and actor nominated for six Grammys; artist behind 'Mutt' album and title track
Rob Geringer
Producer (Freaky Rob) who co-produced 'Mutt' with David Phelps; plays bass and has 20-year collaboration history
David Phelps
Producer (D. Phelps) who co-produced 'Mutt' with Rob Geringer; plays drums and keyboards
SZA
Artist for whom Leon Thomas produced 'Snooze,' a chart-burning hit that preceded his own album success
Drake
Artist Leon Thomas worked extensively with as a producer prior to focusing on his own album
Busy Crook
Songwriter and rapper from Miami who contributed verse ideas to 'Mutt' through years-long text collaboration
Bootsy Collins
Funk musician referenced for his use of the wah-wah pedal, influencing the bass production on 'Mutt'
Rishikesh Hirwe
Host of Song Exploder podcast who interviewed Leon Thomas about the creation of 'Mutt'
Quotes
"This record, Mutt, was a survival instinct. I went in top of the year. It was January 1st, 2023. I decided, we're going to have to go in and really swing hard on something that works."
Leon ThomasEarly in episode
"Finding that in a collaborator is rare. I knew we were going to make something special. I didn't know when, but I knew we were going to make something special."
Leon ThomasMid-episode
"I spent years producing for other people. Sometimes it's nice as an artist to walk into something that started and then if I have ideas I'm down to go back and forth with the producer."
Leon ThomasMid-episode
"The greatest thing about music to me is that you can bottle up an emotion and a feeling. And waking up that year, I was like, things are going to change."
Leon ThomasLate in episode
"I have free reign to mix genres in ways a lot of other artists aren't open to. I can say outlandish things that I think I would feel comfortable saying on a stage that maybe other artists wouldn't be open to."
Leon ThomasMid-episode
Full Transcript
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 Hirwe. This episode of Song Exploder is made possible by IBM. It was recorded in front of a live audience at IBM's offices in New York City, and it was a great experience. I learned a lot about the work that IBM's doing in partnership with the Grammys, which includes the Grammy IQ trivia game that you can check out at iq.grammy.com. It was built with IBM Watson X, and it's just one of the ways IBM helps create smarter business. This episode contains explicit language. Leon Thomas is a singer, songwriter, producer, and actor. He's nominated for six Grammys at this year's Grammy Awards, including Best New Artist, Best R&P Album, and Album of the Year for Mutt. Mutt is his second album, and I talked to Leon about the title track, which was a breakout hit. He'd already won a Grammy for his work with SZA, but he reached a new level in his own career with this song and this album. I also spoke to David Phelps and Rob Geringer, aka D. Phelps and Freaky Rob, who produced the song. She said, take your time, what's the rush? I said, baby, I'm a dog, I'm a mutt. She said, take your time, what's the rush? I said, baby, I'm a dog, I'm a mutt. I'm a dog, I'm a mutt. Leading up to the day when you first started writing Mud, what was going on in your life? Right around the time when I was doing the album Mud, it was a transitional period in my life. You know, I had records that were doing very well for other artists. There was a song that I produced for SZA called Snooze that was like burning up the charts. Previous to that, I was working with Drake a lot. But at the end of the year, I was very frustrated because I felt like my first album, Electric Dusk, was getting some love. But it wasn't enough to really shake the building. And we had a new president coming in to the label. And it was a very scary time because sometimes when the person that signs you leaves the label, the next person could easily say, all right, we're not sure about this kid. So this record, Mutt, was a survival instinct. You know, I went in top of the year. It was January 1st, 2023. I decided, I said, OK, we're going to have to go in and really swing hard on something that that works. It was literally New Year's Day. Yeah, literally New Year's Day. January 1st, 2023. My name is Rob Geringer, a.k.a. Freaky Rob. And I'm Dee Phelps. And we produce Mutt. How did you two first start collaborating? We met when I was 14. And I had to be like 16. And have you been making music together ever since? Ever since. So the way we even met Leon is my management and David's management have been on our asses about doing content. Me and Dee were terrible at doing content. What do you mean by content? Like how you see producers on Instagram, they make the beat from scratch and then they put it up. And it was like our managers was pretty much like, you guys need to get in on that. Like you guys should be making videos. You should be showing some of these gems. And so we had did a cool idea this day in particular. David was like, you know what? I'm gonna record myself playing the drums and I'm gonna put that up. I was scrolling through Instagram and I saw a video of David playing drums and Freaky Rod playing bass and I DM them. And, you know, it's funny because when they came out, that video didn't have that many views, but it led to him. So meeting up with them was like finding lost brothers. I feel like we all listen to the same mixture of Led Zeppelin, Kendrick Lamar, Miles Davis, Pink Floyd. You know, these guys get me. They understand P-Funk in a real way. They understand jazz, Art Tatum, John Coltrane. They get my mind when it comes to wanting to make something that feels like something. Finding that in a collaborator is rare. And I knew we were going to make something special. I didn't know when, but I knew we were going to make something special. So when you started working on the song Mutt, how much had you done together at that point? probably about six months into working. Okay, so you had a solid working relationship with them already. Yeah, man, we would pull up. You know, Rob had a studio. He named the playground because it was like a pretty large room. He had instruments lined in so any musician could come in and pick up their acts of choice, the keys, drums, whatever, and it was all lined into Logic and we could play. So when you first started Mutt, how did that day begin? I walked in on a mission. top of the year, it's up, I was energized it was the same kind of vibe that people walk into the gym with on like January 5th or some shit I was just like, I'm gonna do it six pack is on the way, you know what I'm saying I had this energy to me that felt like alright, we gotta make something special. You could tell he was ready to get to something talking to me and David like we the congregation yeah, and I just remember Leon with the sunglasses and just like guys, I had an epiphany so while I was on Christmas break I watched this Elvis biopic and you know he had the hound dog almost like a a totem for like his world and at the time I had a dog and a cat and my dog and my cat were bickering and my cat you know lightly taps my my dog on the face with her paw and my dog had this face like he kind of did something wrong. But it was like playful. And in that moment, his face, I don't know, maybe this sounds crazy, but his face looked like mine. I was kind of seeing myself in him for the first time. And that honestly really hit me. I wanted to find a way to kind of tie in all of these songs about unrequited love about maybe being a player at times or maybe not being the right kind of partner at times And I wanted to find a way to really encompass all of that from a very vulnerable place, rather than a place of bravado. I was like, hold on, mutt, hound dog, all of this, all right, we could tie this together. And I thought it would be a real fun, playful hook, you know, because my dog is a mutt, you know. He's a German Shepherd Husky Pit. So he's just got a lot going on. And the term mutt, immediately it just had like a ring to it. The vibe was right. One thing about him is just like, we know a dreamer when we sing one. And we're going to empower it. And so we was just like, all right, let's get it. So did you start with the music? Well, funny enough, the music already was started. It was started already. Yeah, we just didn't know it. Basically, bro kind of gave us what he was searching for sonically. and then we just started pressing play on beats and stuff like we always do. And then I found the session on accident looking for another beat I was supposed to play Leon and played the beat. And then I tried to stop it and he was like... He was like, that's it. That's it. Me and David looked at each other like, what the hell? Because it was so bare bones. It was just kind of like an eight bar loop. Because we used to make sketches. Like, we would be at the studio so long, either he, David would get bored, just go start some shit, and I'd come back to it later, add everything, or I would do the same thing. We, like, literally save stuff like, Rob, come back to this. Or David, add keys to this. And it was one of those things, and I low-key had forgot about it. I'm like, this shit is hard. And Leon was like, y'all want to go ahead and build this out, my brothers? I spent years producing for other people. sometimes it's nice as an artist to walk into something that started and then if i have ideas i'm down to go back and forth with the producer to see if we can like take it to another place but it can be a little exhausting if you're trying to do a hundred percent of everything and less fun i like to collaborate man it's like a party in the studio when you're there with your boys you know when everybody's together and everybody's coming up with really cool ideas the art of collaboration can really turn into a really positive thing so at this point all you had for the instrumental was drums 808 and a sample yeah the sample was silly love song by enchantment if i could write a silly love song rob is the reason i heard silly love song he was cleaning up his studio one day on a sunday my studio was a wreck at the time we had just recorded a bunch of different sessions going on that week so the studio was in shambles and that's my happy place. Like David knows I'm a very old soul. I'll put on oldies. I'll clean up. But I didn't know. What's funny is I thought he knew what that song was. Because this is like backyard barbecue Chicago music. Like my grandmothers, my uncles, they're stepping to this. They're having a good time. They vibing. Like this is like a part of my childhood, you know? And when I seen him go to the computer after listening to it, I was like, oh shit, he hears something. That's him on drums. That's what got me. I was like, yeah. But I know how big the song is personally. Right. Like, okay, well, it's Enchantment. But Leon is just like, I don't give a damn. This is a great song. You know what I'm saying? But we're thinking about the actual logistics, like the real part of it. Right, like you're thinking about how do we do this without having to rely on a sample? You didn't want to go down that rabbit hole, get in trouble and stuff. So you literally made it a point to try to recreate or interpolate that whole feeling. What is the difference between using a sample and then doing this kind of interpolation that you're talking about? What does that change? Your finances. Literally. You pay either way. It's just depending on how much. You get to save a little bit if you go one way opposed to the other. But I do think us being able to interpolate the song actually did add a unique energy to the sonic wall. How did you go about doing that? How did you recreate the sample? We built over the sample. So like the bass and guitar, like Rob knocked that out real fast. Piano. Shout out to Leon a lot too, because like with the strings, he kind of took the initiative to get those things recorded. But at the time when I first heard the instrumental, there was no bass yet. Once again, I told you I had this mission. I was like, now we need that P-funk. I was like, yo, Rob, you could play a bass line, but I wanted to have that wild Bootsy. Bootsy Collins is known for his use of the wild, wild pedal and that open closed feeling. It gives so much structure to the bass and it's really dope and vintage. You know, it's that funk. That drum and bass is a marriage that's like, you know, me and D have been playing together almost 20 years. So it's like some things, it's just a chemistry thing, you know. The story of Mutt continues after this. Song Exploder is sponsored by IBM. If you didn't already know, IBM stands for International Business Machines, and since its founding in 1911, they've been leading the evolution of technology, helping businesses leverage the latest tools, and driving business success. It in that spirit that IBM has been supporting the Recording Academy solving real business challenges with innovative solutions like engaging music fans on Grammy with features like the Grammy IQ trivia game or delivering personalized experiences to the 24 members of the Recording Academy which in turn serves the entire music community All of this helps make the Recording Academy more productive and innovative That how IBM is helping the Recording Academy create a smarter business After you put together the bass and drums and the elements of the beat, what happened next? I feel like after we built it, we got out the way. Another person that helped with this song is Busy Crook. He's a great songwriter from Miami, rapper, artist. Shout out to my boy Busy Crook because we, you know, we send each other ideas through a text thread and have been doing that for years now. So we have a text thread for, I'm going to say about eight years of just endless verses. Paragraphs long, like it's crazy. And I knew what the hook was going to say, but I needed verses that felt fun and playful. The first verse and I think the second verse were constructed years ago. It just never found to home on another song. I feel like finding something potent to say that's clever and cool takes more time, but melody is the fun part. So yeah, melody was like, that was my first mind. A lot of the stuff on this record was like my first mind, and I refused to overthink it. I really attached myself to that lyric because right around that time, I woke up in the middle of the night to my dog barking. And I mean, he barks, but he was like going at it. So, you know, I put some shorts on just to see what's going on. And there's a grown man sitting on my couch. And I'm like, hmm, all right. A stranger. Absolute stranger, gang. So I'm like, what? I don't have a weapon nearby. And I'm thinking about it. And I'm saying to myself, all right, I just watched John Wick. And I did some random call. Get him, boy. Like, my dog lit. I don't know. It was an energy, I guess. My boy comes running out the door, barking. And he's a big boy, so he's barking and, you know, charging towards the living room. By the time my dog turned the corner, that man was out of my crib. So it was kind of fire. It was kind of fire that my boy Terry saved the day, man. He locked it in. When you're writing your own songs, do you find that you think about that process differently than when you're writing for other artists? Absolutely. I mean, I have free reign to mix genres in ways a lot of other artists aren't open to. I can say outlandish things that I think I would feel comfortable saying on a stage that maybe other artists wouldn't be open to. That was the reason why I started kind of stepping away from songwriting and productions, because I kind of didn't like how safe I had to be sometimes. It became a bit constraining, especially when everybody has these imaginary formulas on what a hit sounds like. when honestly I feel like the best music comes from being honest. And I think a lot of people just kind of overthink it. Do Rob and Dave get involved in the vocal side of things or do you do that production on your own? Well, the way I work is selfish on purpose. So I'll be in my headphones and I engineer myself just so I don't get any doubt in the building just in case I'm working through something. And so essentially all they're hearing me do is just like riff and they're hearing a little bleed from the headphones. We sit there patiently while he just records. So I started with the verses, and then I got to the hook. It's got that silly, playful, flirty energy to it. Throughout the verse, I'm just talking about how it's hard for me to trust because people can be kind of wild. But I see something in you and I just want to speed into things. Let's just get straight to the love, you know. Let's just fall in love. And if you want to break my heart, it's all good. I don't care, you know. It's really slick. It's the slick talk, you might say, that'll make the girl you really like laugh. But also, also who knows. I said, baby, I'm a dog, I'm a mutt. And then Phelps, he never does this, but he was like, yo, what if you do like a call and response thing? David told Leon, we need something to connect the phrases. And I left to go get Chick-fil-A and I came back and the shit was like, ooh, ooh. I was like, whoa, like, no, that shit is fire. He had harmonized them too. She said, take your time, what's the rush? I said, baby, I'm a dog, I'm a mutt. I'm a dog, I'm a mutt. I used Verispeed and I did the falsetto part in the middle. It's like intricate stuff, but then it's also, it's play, man. We were at the playground and I was just playing and I was trying to impress my friends and say like, yo, look. His little falsetto he does at the top. Oh my gosh. It's crazy. So sweet. It's just like those money notes. Like those runs were so crazy to me. Then I went back to my home and recorded the actual vocal that's out there in the world. That was a fun experience because I knew the vocal I put down just sounded like bourbon. And I wanted it to be a little cleaner and just like really precise. I'm glad I took the time to re-record. Said I'll put my guard down for you Said I'll be vulnerable So you can break my heart if you want to She said take your time, what's the rush? Take your time, what's the rush? I said baby I'm a dog, I'm a mutt She said take your time, what's the rush? I said baby I'm a dog, I'm a mutt I'm a dog, I'm a mutt The layers of this project show the vulnerability that are within a dog. I mean, I think anybody that owns a dog understands that even that vicious pit bull loves to cuddle. And I think there's a duality behind that. When you finished the song Did you already have a feeling That this was going to be a hit? I knew I liked it I would play it at my house And I could drive to it You know, it was the kind of song That I could enjoy But it's tough being like a Like an alternative R&B artist I would say Sometimes like It was kind of hard Being an outsider in the beginning But around that time I did a lot of self-reflecting and a lot of dreaming. And the greatest thing about music to me is that you can bottle up an emotion and a feeling. And waking up that year, I was like, things are going to change. I'm going to be everything I'm capable of, and I'm going to continue to just have fun. And now, here's Mutt by Leon Thomas in its entirety. She said take your time, what's the rush? I said baby I'm a dog, I'm a mutt She said take your time What's the rush? I said baby I'm a dog I'm a mutt I'm a dog I'm a mutt I can't smoke no reddy So pardon my bluntness I see past pretty faces So I got trouble trusting But I let my guard down for you Said I'll put my guard down for you Said I'll be vulnerable So you can break my heart if you want to She said take your time, what's the rush? I said baby I'm a dog, I'm a mutt She said take your time, what's the rush? I said baby I'm a dog, I'm a mutt I'm a dog, I'm a mutt No credit on the come through, it's time to break it in 32 like my pants size cause the niggas tried breaking it New condos, say your name at the front You can stay if you want It's been one of those nights, one of those nights I ain't had in a minute It's been a minute, had to pop a shumery, ain't the feeling But it's never the same as the first time we did it First time you did it But I let my guard down for you Said I'll put my guard down for you Said I'll be vulnerable So you can break my heart if you want to She said take your time, what's the rush? Take your time, what's the rush? I said baby I'm a dog, I'm a man She said take your time, what's the rush? I said baby I'm a dog out my money I'm a dog out my money I'm a dog out my money To learn more, visit songexploder.net. You'll find links to buy or stream Mutt, and you can watch the music video. This episode was produced by me, Craig Ely, Mary Dolan, and Kathleen Smith, with production assistance from Tiger Biscuit. The episode artwork is by Carlos Lerma, and I made the show's theme music and logo. Song Exploder is a proud member of Radiotopia from PRX, a network of independent, listener-supported, artist-owned podcasts. You can learn more about our shows at radiotopia.fm. If you'd like to hear more from me, I write a newsletter where I write about the making of some of these episodes and about music and film and the creative process. You can find a link to the newsletter on the Song Exploder website. You can also get a Song Exploder shirt at songexploder.net slash shirt. I'm Rishikesh Haraway. Thanks for listening. Radiotopia. From PRX. Thanks again to IBM for their support of both Song Exploder and the Grammys. IBM helps smarter businesses like the Recording Academy find new ways to connect with and leverage their data wherever it lives. Let's create smarter business, IBM.