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Bears K Cairo Santos’ perfect streak rolls on

Cairo Santos hasn’t missed a field goal since Dec. 20 — not that he’s keeping track.

“That’s the date?” he said.

On “Monday Night Football” last year, Vikings defensive lineman Dalvin Tomlinson reached his right paw up at the line of scrimmage to block Santos’ 49-yard try with 28 seconds left in the first half of what would be a 17-9 loss.

Santos has made 19-straight field goals ever since, the second-longest streak in the NFL. The Raiders’ Daniel Carlson has lapped the field, making 41 in a row and counting. Santos made 40 in a row — four off of Adam Vinatieri’s record — before missing a prayer of a 65-yarder as time expired in the Bears’ loss to the Steelers on Nov. 8, 2021. He missed his only field goal the next game and 1-of-2 the one after that. That was as close as he got to a cold streak.

Santos has made 69-of-75 field goals since rejoining the Bears in 2020. Put more simply: he’s missed one fewer field goal in two-and-a-half Bears seasons than Cody Parkey did in the 16 regular-season games of 2018.

“That’s what you want as a kicker: to give everybody the confidence that you’re going to go and get the job done and be a pro about it,” Santos said this week. “And if bad things happen, you know how to bounce back. It’s not something where I need coaching, in a sense; I can kind of fix myself.

“If that’s they want, that’s what I work toward giving to them.”

Three weeks after missing the Giants game with a personal issue, Santos won NFC Special Teams Player of the Week last month after making all four field goals in a win against the Patriots. Special teams coordinator Richard Hightower has praised his consistency on the field — “His steps are always the same, his operation times are usually in the same area,” he said — and off of it. Hightower is convinced that being about Santos “has really helped” rookie punter Trenton Gill, whose net average is 15th among punters.

“When you get across midfield, there’s a zone there where you’re going to potentially go for it, you can punt-and-pin or you could kick …” head coach Matt Eberflus said. “When you get to that kick line, you feel real confident …. A guy like Cairo, man, that helps you make good decisions. It helps you stay ahead of the game a little bit.”

Eberflus should know. He was in Indianapolis for the end of Vinatieri’s career.

“Having the attitude of, ‘We’re going to make the kick and we’re gonna be successful once we get into that zone,'” he said. “It certainly fosters confidence for the whole group.”

Santos gives the Bears consistency where they need it most. He’s made four kicks of 50 yards or more this season, his most in seven years.

Entering Sunday’s game against the Lions, the Bears have scored touchdowns on 55.2 percent of their trips to the red zone, which ranks No. 16 in the league. That’s a significant uptick; as recently as three ago, the Bears ranked No. 28 in the red zone efficiency.

Credit quarterback Justin Fields and an offense that sprung up during the Bears’ open weekend after losing to the Commanders.

“For me, I see more opportunities to kick,” Santos said. “I love seeing that. Obviously for team morale, for everybody to perform the way everybody expects them to. It’s a great thing.

“We root for each other’s success. Seeing that, I think everybody is able to enjoy what we have here.”

Including Santos, whose hot streak rolls on.

“It feels like you’re just moving and not thinking,” he said. “You’re just kinda reacting to your routine that I always do at practice, and try to repeat it every day.

“It takes work to keep that machine well-oiled. I just focus on that and just try to keep it going.”

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Rest in power to Meta Mo of Rubberoom

Meta Mo, aka Brian Hines, in his later years Credit: Courtesy Kevin Johnson

In the early 90s, Chicago hip-hop first began making waves around the country. Several local acts put out albums on national labels in 1992: Smash Records released Ten Tray’s Realm of Darkness, Loud Records dropped Tung Twista’s Runnin’ Off at da Mouth, and Relativity issued Common Sense’s Can I Borrow a Dollar? That same year, rapper and promoter Duro Wicks began hosting an all-ages Sunday hip-hop night at Lakeview club Lower Links, which became a nucleus for the city’s growing grassroots scene. 

The community was small enough that it seemed like every MC, producer, DJ, graffiti artist, and breaker knew every other one, but it was also strong enough to sustain a burgeoning nightlife with homegrown talent alone. And the one group everyone knew was Rubberoom. 

“The whole 90s belonged to them, as far as I’m concerned,” says rapper Zeke. “I say that without fear of contradiction. I dare anybody to say otherwise.”

Back then, Zeke and an MC named Gravity rapped as Indigenous Theory, and their duo belonged to a crew called Elements of Nature. Rubberoom, who had three MCs and three beat makers on their earliest releases, were also part of EONs. Rubberoom rapper Brian Hines, aka Meta Mo (short for Metamorphosis), gave Elements of Nature their name. “He was captain,” says rapper and EONs member Dirty MF. “He definitely brought us together in a lot of ways.”

Hines passed away at age 52 on Saturday, October 29, and no cause of death has been made public. But even now he continues to bring people together. Over the past couple weeks, Dirty MF has reconnected with lots of old friends from those days.

In the initial Rubberoom lineup, Hines shared the mike with Michael Gilmore (aka SPO) and Jon Bostic (aka Lumba). He was a sturdy leg of that tripod, but he was also clearly the rapper with the star-power wattage. “He was the front man,” says Rubberoom producer Kevin Johnson, who went by Fanum at the time (he calls himself Mr. Echoes now). “He did an incredible job of captivating people. And that’s all that we wanted him to do.”

You can also hear Hines’s charisma on Rubberoom’s recordings. “If you listen to the music, Meta Mo is, always was, and always will be the biggest voice,” Dirty MF says. “No disrespect to my brothers Lumba and SPO. Meta Mo was the attraction—when he came on, you were like, ‘What?’ It’s like when Busta Rhymes hits the stage. It’s like, ‘What is this? Why is he able to do this?’”

Rubberoom began self-releasing cassettes and 12-inch singles in 1994. They built up to high-profile shows opening for the Roots and DJ Shadow en route to inking a deal with Zero Hour imprint 3-2-1 in 1998. The group’s work ethic not only helped them land big breaks but also inspired their peers. “Meta Mo was the first guy I saw perform onstage as a real MC, you know, outside of just rapping at parties and doing little stuff at the parks,” says rapper Legendary Baller, aka LB (fka Sawbuc). “Rubberoom was the first time I’d seen somebody from our community get a record deal and take it that far. He inspired me to actually pursue my music.”

Rubberoom’s first and only studio album was orphaned when its label folded.

But Rubberoom’s debut album, 1999’s Architechnology—the release that should’ve been their breakthrough—didn’t get much of a chance. Zero Hour declared bankruptcy shortly after its release. The album was officially on the market for just three weeks, and though the label pressed 15,000 copies, Rubberoom couldn’t get access to them. The group stayed together, despite having the rug pulled out from under them, and even booked some dates for Warped Tour in 2000. But a few years later they quietly called it quits.

“At the height of 90s hip-hop, we really, really, really would’ve bet the farm on them taking off, and they should have,” Zeke says. “I think the tragedy of the group was that they were so far ahead of their time.”

Hines grew up in the west suburbs, not far from Johnson’s home in Maywood. In the late 1980s, they occasionally bumped into each other as students at Proviso East High School. Johnson recalls first connecting with Hines during some downtime in gym class. “Brian just started cracking jokes and entertaining everyone,” Johnson recalls. “Everyone was laughing—like it was a comedy show almost.”

After Hines and Johnson graduated, they’d cross paths at talent shows and hip-hop parties. They’d hang out at Johnson’s house and listen to music; Johnson had a soft spot for Depeche Mode, and Hines was into Public Enemy. “I’m gonna go ahead and say that’s probably the reason why he started rapping in the first place,” Johnson says. “He was so in love with Chuck D and his voice, and what they stood for, and the music.”

In the early 90s, Hines began recording with a producer named Chauncy Arnold. Around the same time, Johnson and Bostic started collaborating with beat maker Aaron Smith (aka the Isle of Weight). “The more we started making these interactions with people that did exactly what we were doing, the closer and closer we got,” Johnson says. “At one point, we made a decision: we should all come together as one big clique.”

Budding hip-hop entrepreneur Jason “J-Bird” Cook learned of Rubberoom as they were taking shape. Gilmore had hired Cook to manage his solo career, and when he became the sixth member of the group, Cook came with him. Cook was impressed by how the MCs clicked. “The chemistry between all three of them being really different, and just them coming together, was something you don’t experience much,” Cook says. “You always knew when Meta came in. You always knew when he kicked off the track. He had this projection of his voice, live even. He just stood out.”

Cook worked promotions around the city, and DJ Jesse de la Peña, who ran a south-side hip-hop shop called the Yard, saw him frequently. “He would come to the store, and he would bring artists through for meet and greets,” de la Peña says. After Rubberoom recorded their 1994 debut demo, An Introduction to the Savage Six, Cook began circulating it in his network. 

“Synapse-Gap” appears on Rubberoom’s first demo (and recurs as “Synapse Gap” on subsequent releases).

“I don’t know if he explained at the time that he was working with these guys—I thought it was just another artist he was promoting,” de la Peña says. “It was like a four-song demo, and that was my introduction to Rubberoom. Through just knowing Jason, through the hip-hop scene and the open mikes and doing parties, I met some of the guys individually. It coincided with me doing the early stages of Blue Groove Lounge.” 

The Blue Groove Lounge was a weekly hip-hop party that de la Peña organized at Elbo Room, and it became one of the most important events in the local scene. When de la Peña needed a host to launch the series, he turned to Rubberoom rapper SPO.

Hines, like Cook, rubbed shoulders in the Chicago scene and networked furiously—it was almost like he was making up for his less social bandmates. Johnson, for example, was a father and couldn’t get out often. “He was always out making connections with people,” Johnson says. “He’d come back, like, ‘Oh Kev, such and such wants to interview us. Kev, they want to book us at this show at whatever place.’ He was always the front man in social scenes.”

“It was always hard, being in Chicago, being hip-hop, getting record labels to pay attention—it was a grind for years,” Cook says. He worked with Johnson and Smith to figure out how to self-release Rubberoom’s music. “[We] did a lot of that side of it, learning, like, ‘How do you make a record? Where do you make a record? How do you make a record sound good on vinyl? How do you get it in stores?’” 

This labor paid off—Rubberoom have one of the most extensive discographies from that era of Chicago indie hip-hop. Many acts popular at the time have all but disappeared from collective memory because they released so little music formally. Nineties recordings by EONs group Spalaney’s, for example, were extremely thin on the ground until Chopped Herring put out the archival Spaghetti & Biscuits 12-inch this year.

“Rubberoom, they showed a lot of MCs how to do it,” says Duro Wicks. “Like, ‘Here’s how you record. Here’s how you finish a project. Here’s how you put out a project.’ They definitely laid a blueprint for everyone else to follow.”

Jon “Lumba” Bostic, Brian “Meta Mo” Hines, DJ Stizo, and Jason “J-Bird” Cook during Rubberoom’s initial run Credit: Courtesy Kevin Johnson

In summer 1993, Dirty MF and Hines lived in Oak Park on its border with Austin, sharing a place they called the EONs house. “It was the meetup house before we went to any shows,” Dirty MF says. “I don’t care where you live; you live on the south side, you would come to our house on the west side first, and then we’d go back to the south side if we had to. It was The Real World for Chicago hip-hop.”

Four people had their names on the EONs house lease, one for each bedroom. But Dirty MF recalls reliably finding ten to 15 people there, no matter what hour of day he dropped by. “That house was a clubhouse,” he says. “That house was a safe house. It was a rehearsal house. It was everything. And it was one of the shittiest houses you could ever live in in your life.” One of the two bathrooms rarely worked, and when housemates didn’t go elsewhere to shower, they’d sometimes just wash in a sink. If you didn’t wear shoes inside, you’d get splinters in your feet.

Hines kept recording equipment in his first-floor bedroom, right next to the front door. The other three bedrooms were on the second floor. “All of the freestyle cyphers would be in Meta Mo’s room,” Dirty MF says. “All the sessions would be in Meta Mo’s room. All the weed-smoking sessions would start in Meta Mo’s room. Everything was in his room.”

Hines commanded respect on the mike; he could shift speeds cleanly midflow and concoct verses that astounded and amused his peers. He also advised others about their craft. Hines and Dirty MF were the shortest members of EONs, but they had the biggest voices—and that helped Hines figure out what his friend needed. 

“We are polar opposites when it comes to rapping. I’m laid-back and smooth; he’s boisterous,” Dirty MF says. He recalls that Hines told him to “never do what I do”—meaning never scream, never get loud. “So I was like, ‘All right, I’m never gonna raise my voice unless I have to.’ That was from Meta Mo—he taught me how to project my voice and everything.”

The Bandcamp release of the 1995 Rubberoom EP Gothic Architecture includes three bonus tracks.

Zeke’s favorite rapper at the time was Kool Keith, but it was Hines he wanted to impress. “Anytime I’m writing something, I would write as if I’m getting ready to battle Kool Keith and Brian was the judge,” Zeke says. “Anytime I would think I had something written, and if I happened to stumble upon something from Brian that he wrote for Rubberoom, nine times out of ten I’d ball mine up, go back, and rewrite what I wrote. Because if Brian didn’t say ‘Thumbs up,’ then it absolutely sucked.”

“He was awesome to work with, but sometimes he’d make me very mad in the studio,” Johnson says. “He’d come into the studio sometimes and lay down one take, full-blown—it was incredible. He was powerful—he used to overpower the mike. He used to overpower the system itself.” 

But Hines would sometimes come to sessions with verses he hadn’t finished writing. That didn’t sit well with Johnson, since Rubberoom couldn’t afford much studio time. “It was a little frustrating—I’m more logistical in a sense, where I would like to have things done,” Johnson says. “It’d be the equivalent of me showing up in the studio and not having a beat completed—I could never do that.” Still, Hines always came through in the end, and he kept his bandmates’ spirits up while he did it. “He was fun to be with in the studio,” Johnson says.

Hines could turn any place he went into a party. In the 90s, he and Zeke would perform on the sidewalk for anyone in earshot. “He and I would sit outside and sing Frank Sinatra songs in front of the liquor store, just to freak people out,” Zeke says. Hines loved Sinatra—he liked to sing “Strangers in the Night” and quote Ol’ Blue Eyes. “It’s not authentic unless you hear him, with that raspy voice, trying to sing Frank Sinatra,” Zeke says. “His favorite quote from Frank Sinatra was, ‘Live every day as if it’s your last, because one day it will be.’”

Rubberoom were a four-piece when Architechnology came out in 1999. SPO and Chauncy Arnold had left, and the group used 13 different guest DJs across the album. By that point, Hines was the only member who didn’t have a child. Bostic took a day job that kept him from touring, and his chemistry with Hines began to change. “When they were together, both doing it at the same time, it was great,” Johnson says. “They weren’t even writing together anymore, and it became increasingly difficult for them to get on the same page.” 

In the early 2000s, Rubberoom played an opening set for Atmosphere (who’d previously opened for Rubberoom), and the whole production was so plagued by miscommunications that the group ended up just calling it a day. A brief Rubberoom reboot in the early 2010s didn’t stick.

Johnson and Smith continued producing together as the Opus, and in 2004 they dropped an EP called Earthwalkers. Hines wrote narration that he read over the music like a radio play. “We stayed in contact, because I loved him like a brother,” Johnson says. “I knew him when we weren’t even remotely close to doing anything in rap. I knew him when there was no rap art form in Chicago. We always had a good relationship in that sense.” This past February, Hines announced on Facebook he’d been working on a series of EPs, and he listed Johnson as one of his collaborators. 

Brian Hines (aka Meta Mo) wrote and performed the narration on this 1994 EP by the Opus.

Facebook is also where Hines reconnected with a woman named Damira Bell he’d known from the scene in the 1990s. “This person literally showed up for me in my life, was just irreplaceable,” Bell says. “Just the best friend you could have. The most understanding person, the most candid person, just open about everything. I didn’t even know a person could exist like that.”

Bell lives on the south side with her twin daughters. She and Hines began dating earlier this year, and at the time she was suffering from a bout of agoraphobia. Often Hines would bike down from his place on the northwest side to support her. 

“He dedicated himself to making sure that I came outside every day,” Bell says. “He always came around to see if I was going out and living, and he made sure I did. As weird and awkward as it was, he literally came to my door and he held my hand, to my elevator, on my elevator, to my stairs, outside. He sat with me in the park. He watched me shake like a leaf, and he held my hand and told me it was gonna be OK. He said, ‘I’m here. I’m never gonna leave you.’”

During the seven months of Bell and Hines’s relationship, they spent as much time together as they could. On their nights apart, they’d get on the phone and stay on the line till morning. “That’s what we did every night,” Bell says. “Every single night. We didn’t miss a night of having our phones open and waking up and hearing each other’s voices.” Bell didn’t hear from Hines the night before he died. “It was a lot for me,” she says. “Because I knew something was different.” 

Late-period Rubberoom: Brian “Meta Mo” Hines, Aaron Smith (aka the Isle of Weight), DJ Stizo, Kevin Johnson (aka Fanum), and Jon “Lumba” Bostic Credit: Courtesy Kevin Johnson

Hines shared a lot online, and he could be frank when he addressed his struggles. A couple of his friends mentioned in passing that he’d had a spotty history with drugs and the carceral system. According to Johnson, though, Hines put in the work over the past few years to create a more stable life for himself. “I saw that pattern of him getting better and better and better and better,” he says.

Other things, Hines kept close to his chest—including the imminent possibility of new Rubberoom music. He and Johnson had started working on a solo Meta Mo project, and Hines recruited Jon Bostic to rap on the recording. “Me, Brian, Jon, and Aaron, we all decided, ‘You know what? Why don’t we just do another Rubberoom project on top of it?’” Johnson says. “I started a group chat, and they were writing rhymes on the group chat and developing ideas and concepts. It completely reminded me of when we first started back in 1994. It totally had that feel—it was all about the music.”

The group had a rollout plan: Hines would drop a solo EP, followed with one by the Opus. “And then over the wintertime, we can work on this Rubberoom LP,” Johnson says. “We’re like, ‘Don’t say anything to anybody, keep it off of the Internet, keep it off social media. We want to surprise people. Let’s get a few songs recorded and then possibly make an announcement that we’re going to put out a Rubberoom LP. But let’s keep it under wraps for now.’”

Johnson and Hines talked weekly about their music making. Johnson set aside time to work on beats the last weekend in October. “Saturday, I was out for a little bit in the daytime, running errands,” Johnson says. “And got the call that he was gone.”

After Hines died, Bell was in touch with his relations. “His family knew about me in such a way that I was shocked,” she says. “When everything happened, they were like, ‘Oh, Brian loves you so much.’ They were just going on and on, and I was getting more full with tears and pain, because I didn’t know he thought that much of me like that. I mean, I knew he loved me, but my God, these people, they were like, ‘He loves you so much, and he told everybody, “That’s my wife, that’s my wife.”’”

Dirty MF has been having long phone calls with friends. “Meta Mo brought us together again,” he says. “Our brother Butch, he called me—that’s how I found out. He’s in Maryland. How does he find out before me? I live here. That’s because Butch has his own relationship with Meta Mo. Zeke has his own. We all have these personal relationships. We love each other as a conglomerate—everybody in our crew had a personal and special relationship with Meta Mo. And I don’t think we all have that with each other.” 

“There’s a lot of love coming out of this tragedy,” Dirty MF says. “And I want it to continue, because that’s what he would want.”

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CB Jaylon Johnson questionable, Kindle Vildor out for Bears

Jaylon Johnson was limited in practice for the second-straight day with an oblique injury and was ruled questionable for Sunday’s game against the Lions. Fellow Bears cornerback Kindle Vildor was ruled out after hurting his ankle on the second play of the Dolphins game.

Johnson, who is perhaps the Bears’ best remaining defensive player, said Thursday that his injury was a “battle wound” and didn’t sound concerned that it would prevent him from facing the Lions.

Starting defensive end Al-Quadin Muhammad, who hasn’t practiced all week because of a knee injury, is doubtful. He’s started all nine games this season but recorded only one sack.

Right guard Teven Jenkins, who was limited Thursday and Friday with a back injury, was called questionable.

Cornerback Josh Blackwell and Dane Cruikshank will both play Sunday at Soldier Field after being full participants Friday. They had a knee injury and an illness, respectively.

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Steady and smart, coach Matt Eberflus proves to be sensible choice for Bears

In typical Bears’ style, they went the quiet, restrained route when they rebooted their coaching staff in January rather than chase the flashiest candidate.

They didn’t go for the coveted upstarts Yale-educated Mike McDaniel or Belichick-groomed Josh McDaniels, and they didn’t make offers to Super Bowl winners Doug Pederson and Dan Quinn.

Instead, they chose Matt Eberflus. Hardly a household name, but sensible, experienced, organized, calm. No splash, just substance. He’s the coaching equivalent of a pair of khakis.

They liked that he had a thorough, long-range plan. They liked his three decades of coaching experience, regardless of him never having held the head job before. And they liked that he’d take a CEO-style approach to running the team.

So far, it’s working.

The Bears are 3-6, but something along those lines was expected all along with a stripped-down roster in the initial phase of their rebuild. Just like quarterback Justin Fields, it’s possible to evaluate Eberflus within the context of adverse conditions. He can show progress even as losses accumulate.

Surprisingly, the biggest indicator of Eberflus eventually succeeding with the Bears is the way he has handled Fields and the offense. Given that his entire career had been exclusively on defense, that was a significant concern when the Bears hired him.

His choice of Luke Getsy as offensive coordinator has proven prudent, and his oversight of Getsy reworking the offense after a dreadful first four games is further proof that he knows how to run a team.

The shift Eberflus and Getsy made during the Bears’ extended break between Weeks 6 and 7 was incredibly promising. It wasn’t just that their changes have worked, it was that they made changes at all.

Stubbornness is no virtue, as his predecessor Matt Nagy learned the hard way.

As the Bears’ offense cratered toward a 29th-place finish in 2020, he was pressed on whether he needed to consider significant changes to his scheme and said, “The big thing is just… not changing a whole lot.”

He added, “That’s a sign of weakness when you just come in and start changing everything, especially when you’ve seen something that’s worked before. It’s not broken.”

On the eve of last season, he was still unbending in his belief that his offense was finally about to click. The Bears finished 27th in scoring. Staying the course cost him his job and them a season.

Nagy’s inflexibility was exposed repeatedly, and Eberflus and Getsy have shown adaptability at every turn so far.

Nagy couldn’t make halftime adjustments; Eberflus seems like a master of them. Nagy tried to jam Fields into an offense suited for Andy Dalton’s skillset; Getsy embraced his elite running ability and made it the centerpiece.

Getsy, by the way, has more or less maintained that he didn’t make significant changes to an offense that produced just 16 points per game over the first four weeks and resulted in Fields being statistically the worst quarterback in the NFL. His view is that this has been a linear trajectory, boosted by players executing better.

That seems implausible, and besides, there’s nothing wrong with making changes. That’s a sign of strength. This offense was plummeting, but now it’s skyrocketing. Fields is making a strong case to be the Bears’ quarterback of the future. Reassessing and redirecting are not causes of embarrassment. Making that shift was impressive.

It’s reassuring to the Bears to know that Eberflus was involved in that. If things keep going well, Getsy will emerge as a head-coaching candidate for other teams, and the fact that Eberflus has his hand on the offense will enable him to identify a new offensive coordinator when needed.

It is starkly different from the Nagy era. Nagy wanted to micromanage the offense, retaking play calling going into last season after giving it up in 2020, and gave his defensive coordinator autonomy. When Vic Fangio left, Nagy effectively made Chuck Pagano, and subsequently Sean Desai, head coach of the defense. In that sense, Nagy was still just an offensive coordinator, only with a bigger paycheck.

His deep engrossment in the offense also limited his ability to see the big picture on game day. He mismanaged the setup for what would’ve been a game-winning field goal in 2019. His timeouts often were confounding. Game management was always an issue, whereas it hasn’t been with Eberflus.

Eberflus hasn’t been perfect in that department, but there hasn’t been anything outright laughable. And even in his debatable decisions, his logic was coherent.

The next step for him is to figure out his defense, which won’t be easy after an exodus of top-shelf players. Look at the departures since January: Khalil Mack, Robert Quinn, Roquan Smith, Akiem Hicks, Bilal Nichols. And that’s from a group that struggled last season anyway.

The Bears have gotten good play out of rookies Jaquan Brisker at safety and Kyler Gordon at cornerback, but it still has been a net loss in talent, and general manager Ryan Poles is going to need another offseason to shore it up.

But limited personnel can’t be an excuse for Eberflus. He has to reassess and redirect just like he did with the offense. No coach could transform this into a top-10 defense, but he needs to make it respectable. And based on his other moves, there’s optimism that he can.

There are no magic tricks with Eberflus. No wild, lofty declarations that he can’t possibly fulfill. He has simply been steady and smart, and if that’s how he continues to coach this team, the Bears picked the right guy.

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Rest in power to Meta Mo of RubberoomLeor Galilon November 11, 2022 at 7:32 pm

Meta Mo, aka Brian Hines, in his later years Credit: Courtesy Kevin Johnson

In the early 90s, Chicago hip-hop first began making waves around the country. Several local acts put out albums on national labels in 1992: Smash Records released Ten Tray’s Realm of Darkness, Loud Records dropped Tung Twista’s Runnin’ Off at da Mouth, and Relativity issued Common Sense’s Can I Borrow a Dollar? That same year, rapper and promoter Duro Wicks began hosting an all-ages Sunday hip-hop night at Lakeview club Lower Links, which became a nucleus for the city’s growing grassroots scene. 

The community was small enough that it seemed like every MC, producer, DJ, graffiti artist, and breaker knew every other one, but it was also strong enough to sustain a burgeoning nightlife with homegrown talent alone. And the one group everyone knew was Rubberoom. 

“The whole 90s belonged to them, as far as I’m concerned,” says rapper Zeke. “I say that without fear of contradiction. I dare anybody to say otherwise.”

Back then, Zeke and an MC named Gravity rapped as Indigenous Theory, and their duo belonged to a crew called Elements of Nature. Rubberoom, who had three MCs and three beat makers on their earliest releases, were also part of EONs. Rubberoom rapper Brian Hines, aka Meta Mo (short for Metamorphosis), gave Elements of Nature their name. “He was captain,” says rapper and EONs member Dirty MF. “He definitely brought us together in a lot of ways.”

Hines passed away at age 52 on Saturday, October 29, and no cause of death has been made public. But even now he continues to bring people together. Over the past couple weeks, Dirty MF has reconnected with lots of old friends from those days.

In the initial Rubberoom lineup, Hines shared the mike with Michael Gilmore (aka SPO) and Jon Bostic (aka Lumba). He was a sturdy leg of that tripod, but he was also clearly the rapper with the star-power wattage. “He was the front man,” says Rubberoom producer Kevin Johnson, who went by Fanum at the time (he calls himself Mr. Echoes now). “He did an incredible job of captivating people. And that’s all that we wanted him to do.”

You can also hear Hines’s charisma on Rubberoom’s recordings. “If you listen to the music, Meta Mo is, always was, and always will be the biggest voice,” Dirty MF says. “No disrespect to my brothers Lumba and SPO. Meta Mo was the attraction—when he came on, you were like, ‘What?’ It’s like when Busta Rhymes hits the stage. It’s like, ‘What is this? Why is he able to do this?’”

Rubberoom began self-releasing cassettes and 12-inch singles in 1994. They built up to high-profile shows opening for the Roots and DJ Shadow en route to inking a deal with Zero Hour imprint 3-2-1 in 1998. The group’s work ethic not only helped them land big breaks but also inspired their peers. “Meta Mo was the first guy I saw perform onstage as a real MC, you know, outside of just rapping at parties and doing little stuff at the parks,” says rapper Legendary Baller, aka LB (fka Sawbuc). “Rubberoom was the first time I’d seen somebody from our community get a record deal and take it that far. He inspired me to actually pursue my music.”

Rubberoom’s first and only studio album was orphaned when its label folded.

But Rubberoom’s debut album, 1999’s Architechnology—the release that should’ve been their breakthrough—didn’t get much of a chance. Zero Hour declared bankruptcy shortly after its release. The album was officially on the market for just three weeks, and though the label pressed 15,000 copies, Rubberoom couldn’t get access to them. The group stayed together, despite having the rug pulled out from under them, and even booked some dates for Warped Tour in 2000. But a few years later they quietly called it quits.

“At the height of 90s hip-hop, we really, really, really would’ve bet the farm on them taking off, and they should have,” Zeke says. “I think the tragedy of the group was that they were so far ahead of their time.”

Hines grew up in the west suburbs, not far from Johnson’s home in Maywood. In the late 1980s, they occasionally bumped into each other as students at Proviso East High School. Johnson recalls first connecting with Hines during some downtime in gym class. “Brian just started cracking jokes and entertaining everyone,” Johnson recalls. “Everyone was laughing—like it was a comedy show almost.”

After Hines and Johnson graduated, they’d cross paths at talent shows and hip-hop parties. They’d hang out at Johnson’s house and listen to music; Johnson had a soft spot for Depeche Mode, and Hines was into Public Enemy. “I’m gonna go ahead and say that’s probably the reason why he started rapping in the first place,” Johnson says. “He was so in love with Chuck D and his voice, and what they stood for, and the music.”

In the early 90s, Hines began recording with a producer named Chauncy Arnold. Around the same time, Johnson and Bostic started collaborating with beat maker Aaron Smith (aka the Isle of Weight). “The more we started making these interactions with people that did exactly what we were doing, the closer and closer we got,” Johnson says. “At one point, we made a decision: we should all come together as one big clique.”

Budding hip-hop entrepreneur Jason “J-Bird” Cook learned of Rubberoom as they were taking shape. Gilmore had hired Cook to manage his solo career, and when he became the sixth member of the group, Cook came with him. Cook was impressed by how the MCs clicked. “The chemistry between all three of them being really different, and just them coming together, was something you don’t experience much,” Cook says. “You always knew when Meta came in. You always knew when he kicked off the track. He had this projection of his voice, live even. He just stood out.”

Cook worked promotions around the city, and DJ Jesse de la Peña, who ran a south-side hip-hop shop called the Yard, saw him frequently. “He would come to the store, and he would bring artists through for meet and greets,” de la Peña says. After Rubberoom recorded their 1994 debut demo, An Introduction to the Savage Six, Cook began circulating it in his network. 

“Synapse-Gap” appears on Rubberoom’s first demo (and recurs as “Synapse Gap” on subsequent releases).

“I don’t know if he explained at the time that he was working with these guys—I thought it was just another artist he was promoting,” de la Peña says. “It was like a four-song demo, and that was my introduction to Rubberoom. Through just knowing Jason, through the hip-hop scene and the open mikes and doing parties, I met some of the guys individually. It coincided with me doing the early stages of Blue Groove Lounge.” 

The Blue Groove Lounge was a weekly hip-hop party that de la Peña organized at Elbo Room, and it became one of the most important events in the local scene. When de la Peña needed a host to launch the series, he turned to Rubberoom rapper SPO.

Hines, like Cook, rubbed shoulders in the Chicago scene and networked furiously—it was almost like he was making up for his less social bandmates. Johnson, for example, was a father and couldn’t get out often. “He was always out making connections with people,” Johnson says. “He’d come back, like, ‘Oh Kev, such and such wants to interview us. Kev, they want to book us at this show at whatever place.’ He was always the front man in social scenes.”

“It was always hard, being in Chicago, being hip-hop, getting record labels to pay attention—it was a grind for years,” Cook says. He worked with Johnson and Smith to figure out how to self-release Rubberoom’s music. “[We] did a lot of that side of it, learning, like, ‘How do you make a record? Where do you make a record? How do you make a record sound good on vinyl? How do you get it in stores?’” 

This labor paid off—Rubberoom have one of the most extensive discographies from that era of Chicago indie hip-hop. Many acts popular at the time have all but disappeared from collective memory because they released so little music formally. Nineties recordings by EONs group Spalaney’s, for example, were extremely thin on the ground until Chopped Herring put out the archival Spaghetti & Biscuits 12-inch this year.

“Rubberoom, they showed a lot of MCs how to do it,” says Duro Wicks. “Like, ‘Here’s how you record. Here’s how you finish a project. Here’s how you put out a project.’ They definitely laid a blueprint for everyone else to follow.”

Jon “Lumba” Bostic, Brian “Meta Mo” Hines, DJ Stizo, and Jason “J-Bird” Cook during Rubberoom’s initial run Credit: Courtesy Kevin Johnson

In summer 1993, Dirty MF and Hines lived in Oak Park on its border with Austin, sharing a place they called the EONs house. “It was the meetup house before we went to any shows,” Dirty MF says. “I don’t care where you live; you live on the south side, you would come to our house on the west side first, and then we’d go back to the south side if we had to. It was The Real World for Chicago hip-hop.”

Four people had their names on the EONs house lease, one for each bedroom. But Dirty MF recalls reliably finding ten to 15 people there, no matter what hour of day he dropped by. “That house was a clubhouse,” he says. “That house was a safe house. It was a rehearsal house. It was everything. And it was one of the shittiest houses you could ever live in in your life.” One of the two bathrooms rarely worked, and when housemates didn’t go elsewhere to shower, they’d sometimes just wash in a sink. If you didn’t wear shoes inside, you’d get splinters in your feet.

Hines kept recording equipment in his first-floor bedroom, right next to the front door. The other three bedrooms were on the second floor. “All of the freestyle cyphers would be in Meta Mo’s room,” Dirty MF says. “All the sessions would be in Meta Mo’s room. All the weed-smoking sessions would start in Meta Mo’s room. Everything was in his room.”

Hines commanded respect on the mike; he could shift speeds cleanly midflow and concoct verses that astounded and amused his peers. He also advised others about their craft. Hines and Dirty MF were the shortest members of EONs, but they had the biggest voices—and that helped Hines figure out what his friend needed. 

“We are polar opposites when it comes to rapping. I’m laid-back and smooth; he’s boisterous,” Dirty MF says. He recalls that Hines told him to “never do what I do”—meaning never scream, never get loud. “So I was like, ‘All right, I’m never gonna raise my voice unless I have to.’ That was from Meta Mo—he taught me how to project my voice and everything.”

The Bandcamp release of the 1995 Rubberoom EP Gothic Architecture includes three bonus tracks.

Zeke’s favorite rapper at the time was Kool Keith, but it was Hines he wanted to impress. “Anytime I’m writing something, I would write as if I’m getting ready to battle Kool Keith and Brian was the judge,” Zeke says. “Anytime I would think I had something written, and if I happened to stumble upon something from Brian that he wrote for Rubberoom, nine times out of ten I’d ball mine up, go back, and rewrite what I wrote. Because if Brian didn’t say ‘Thumbs up,’ then it absolutely sucked.”

“He was awesome to work with, but sometimes he’d make me very mad in the studio,” Johnson says. “He’d come into the studio sometimes and lay down one take, full-blown—it was incredible. He was powerful—he used to overpower the mike. He used to overpower the system itself.” 

But Hines would sometimes come to sessions with verses he hadn’t finished writing. That didn’t sit well with Johnson, since Rubberoom couldn’t afford much studio time. “It was a little frustrating—I’m more logistical in a sense, where I would like to have things done,” Johnson says. “It’d be the equivalent of me showing up in the studio and not having a beat completed—I could never do that.” Still, Hines always came through in the end, and he kept his bandmates’ spirits up while he did it. “He was fun to be with in the studio,” Johnson says.

Hines could turn any place he went into a party. In the 90s, he and Zeke would perform on the sidewalk for anyone in earshot. “He and I would sit outside and sing Frank Sinatra songs in front of the liquor store, just to freak people out,” Zeke says. Hines loved Sinatra—he liked to sing “Strangers in the Night” and quote Ol’ Blue Eyes. “It’s not authentic unless you hear him, with that raspy voice, trying to sing Frank Sinatra,” Zeke says. “His favorite quote from Frank Sinatra was, ‘Live every day as if it’s your last, because one day it will be.’”

Rubberoom were a four-piece when Architechnology came out in 1999. SPO and Chauncy Arnold had left, and the group used 13 different guest DJs across the album. By that point, Hines was the only member who didn’t have a child. Bostic took a day job that kept him from touring, and his chemistry with Hines began to change. “When they were together, both doing it at the same time, it was great,” Johnson says. “They weren’t even writing together anymore, and it became increasingly difficult for them to get on the same page.” 

In the early 2000s, Rubberoom played an opening set for Atmosphere (who’d previously opened for Rubberoom), and the whole production was so plagued by miscommunications that the group ended up just calling it a day. A brief Rubberoom reboot in the early 2010s didn’t stick.

Johnson and Smith continued producing together as the Opus, and in 2004 they dropped an EP called Earthwalkers. Hines wrote narration that he read over the music like a radio play. “We stayed in contact, because I loved him like a brother,” Johnson says. “I knew him when we weren’t even remotely close to doing anything in rap. I knew him when there was no rap art form in Chicago. We always had a good relationship in that sense.” This past February, Hines announced on Facebook he’d been working on a series of EPs, and he listed Johnson as one of his collaborators. 

Brian Hines (aka Meta Mo) wrote and performed the narration on this 1994 EP by the Opus.

Facebook is also where Hines reconnected with a woman named Damira Bell he’d known from the scene in the 1990s. “This person literally showed up for me in my life, was just irreplaceable,” Bell says. “Just the best friend you could have. The most understanding person, the most candid person, just open about everything. I didn’t even know a person could exist like that.”

Bell lives on the south side with her twin daughters. She and Hines began dating earlier this year, and at the time she was suffering from a bout of agoraphobia. Often Hines would bike down from his place on the northwest side to support her. 

“He dedicated himself to making sure that I came outside every day,” Bell says. “He always came around to see if I was going out and living, and he made sure I did. As weird and awkward as it was, he literally came to my door and he held my hand, to my elevator, on my elevator, to my stairs, outside. He sat with me in the park. He watched me shake like a leaf, and he held my hand and told me it was gonna be OK. He said, ‘I’m here. I’m never gonna leave you.’”

During the seven months of Bell and Hines’s relationship, they spent as much time together as they could. On their nights apart, they’d get on the phone and stay on the line till morning. “That’s what we did every night,” Bell says. “Every single night. We didn’t miss a night of having our phones open and waking up and hearing each other’s voices.” Bell didn’t hear from Hines the night before he died. “It was a lot for me,” she says. “Because I knew something was different.” 

Late-period Rubberoom: Brian “Meta Mo” Hines, Aaron Smith (aka the Isle of Weight), DJ Stizo, Kevin Johnson (aka Fanum), and Jon “Lumba” Bostic Credit: Courtesy Kevin Johnson

Hines shared a lot online, and he could be frank when he addressed his struggles. A couple of his friends mentioned in passing that he’d had a spotty history with drugs and the carceral system. According to Johnson, though, Hines put in the work over the past few years to create a more stable life for himself. “I saw that pattern of him getting better and better and better and better,” he says.

Other things, Hines kept close to his chest—including the imminent possibility of new Rubberoom music. He and Johnson had started working on a solo Meta Mo project, and Hines recruited Jon Bostic to rap on the recording. “Me, Brian, Jon, and Aaron, we all decided, ‘You know what? Why don’t we just do another Rubberoom project on top of it?’” Johnson says. “I started a group chat, and they were writing rhymes on the group chat and developing ideas and concepts. It completely reminded me of when we first started back in 1994. It totally had that feel—it was all about the music.”

The group had a rollout plan: Hines would drop a solo EP, followed with one by the Opus. “And then over the wintertime, we can work on this Rubberoom LP,” Johnson says. “We’re like, ‘Don’t say anything to anybody, keep it off of the Internet, keep it off social media. We want to surprise people. Let’s get a few songs recorded and then possibly make an announcement that we’re going to put out a Rubberoom LP. But let’s keep it under wraps for now.’”

Johnson and Hines talked weekly about their music making. Johnson set aside time to work on beats the last weekend in October. “Saturday, I was out for a little bit in the daytime, running errands,” Johnson says. “And got the call that he was gone.”

After Hines died, Bell was in touch with his relations. “His family knew about me in such a way that I was shocked,” she says. “When everything happened, they were like, ‘Oh, Brian loves you so much.’ They were just going on and on, and I was getting more full with tears and pain, because I didn’t know he thought that much of me like that. I mean, I knew he loved me, but my God, these people, they were like, ‘He loves you so much, and he told everybody, “That’s my wife, that’s my wife.”’”

Dirty MF has been having long phone calls with friends. “Meta Mo brought us together again,” he says. “Our brother Butch, he called me—that’s how I found out. He’s in Maryland. How does he find out before me? I live here. That’s because Butch has his own relationship with Meta Mo. Zeke has his own. We all have these personal relationships. We love each other as a conglomerate—everybody in our crew had a personal and special relationship with Meta Mo. And I don’t think we all have that with each other.” 

“There’s a lot of love coming out of this tragedy,” Dirty MF says. “And I want it to continue, because that’s what he would want.”

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Wednesday, November 30, 2022 at the Museum of Contemporary Art

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Rest in power to Meta Mo of RubberoomLeor Galilon November 11, 2022 at 7:32 pm Read More »

High school football: Payton Salomon posts remarkable stats, leads Lemont to consecutive deep playoff runs

Growing up, Payton Salomon cycled from sport to sport, going from football to wrestling to baseball.

The Lemont senior stopped playing baseball in seventh grade but remained a two-sport athlete into high school.

Like everyone else in Illinois, his rhythm was thrown off by the COVID pandemic. Football and wrestling overlapped as the IHSA tried to squeeze in at least a semblance of a season for every sport at the end of the 2020-21 school year.

Football was always No. 1 for Salomon, and that year it became the only one.

“I hurt my shoulder and I was like, ‘Yeah, I’m gonna back off now. Now it’s only football,'” he said.

The injury was to his right (throwing) shoulder.

“That’s why it spooked me a little bit,” he said. “You know, it’s like, what’s more important to me, football or wrestling? Obviously it’s football.”

The proof is in the numbers. The 6-foot, 175-pounder has put up some remarkable stats in his two seasons as Lemont’s starting quarterback. For last season’s 11-1 team that was eliminated by powerhouse East St. Louis in the Class 6A quarterfinals, Salomon completed 70% of his passes for 1,753 yards with 31 touchdowns and only one interception.

That team also featured Albert Kunickis, a powerful running back with an inspiring back story (he was born with a right arm that ends at the elbow). Opposing defenses no longer have to account for Kunickis, who is a preferred walk-on at Northwestern.

But with more of the focus on him this season, Salomon has been even better for 11-0 Lemont. His completion rate is up to 80% and he’s thrown for 2,416 yards and 36 touchdowns with one interception. Yes, over two seasons, he’s completed 75% of his passes for 4,169 yards, 67 TDs and two interceptions.

The important thing to note, according to Lemont coach Bret Kooi, is that Salomon isn’t just throwing five-yard quick hits.

“When you’re throwing the ball down the field a little bit more and he’s still able to maintain at that 80% [completion rate] ,.. that’s pretty astonishing, especially for a high school kid,” Kooi said.

Salomon’s leadership isn’t just limited to the stat sheet.

“He’s just full of energy non-stop,” Kooi said. “If you watch him during a game and somebody scores, whether it’s a running back, whether it’s a receiver, he’s the first one there [to celebrate]. Those are the things you want to see out of your quarterback — [he] wants everybody else on the field to be successful.”

Salomon has had some recruiting interest from FCS and Division II schools, but is focusing only on what’s in front of him: Saturday’s 6A quarterfinal at home against Kenwood.

“You can only control the controllables,” he said of recruiting. I gotta put myself in the best position to succeed and these guys” — he gestures to his teammates — “they helped me do that.”

Kooi envisions a bright future for his quarterback.

“Somebody’s gonna grab him and then see all the things I’ve been talking about,” Kooi said. “Especially the leadership aspect of it. He’s the same guy off the field. He’s the first guy in any type of drill you do, weight room-wise, speed-wise. And he’s not the fastest. not the strongest. But he’s the guy that’s getting it done all the time.”

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High school football: Payton Salomon posts remarkable stats, leads Lemont to consecutive deep playoff runs Read More »

As Steelers’ view of Chase Claypool dwindled, Bears saw limitless potential

Talented young players like wide receiver Chase Claypool usually aren’t available via trade, especially when they’ve already provided solid evidence that they’re going to be very good in the long run.

The Steelers were high enough on Claypool to take him in the second round of the 2020 draft, and it’s not like he was a bust. Over his first two seasons, he put up 1,845 yards of total offense and scored 13 touchdowns. High draft picks sometimes don’t work out, but that clearly wasn’t the case for Claypool.

Yet, even with all his promise, the Steelers were done despite the fact they’re rebuilding similarly to the Bears and could seemingly use exactly this type of player. They basically opted for a refund on Claypool when the Bears sent a 2023 second-round pick to get him.

And Claypool was eager for the fresh start — something players don’t usually need this early. But his best grasp of what happened in Pittsburgh was essentially that the organization saw a relatively low ceiling on his potential, whereas the Bears think he’ll be a star.

The sense that the Steelers didn’t value him was more than a feeling. He saw it in their game plans.

“At some point the perspective on me was like, ‘He’s not a red-zone threat,’ for some reason,” Claypool said. “Or, ‘He’s not a deep-ball threat,’ for some reason. I’m not sure when that happened, but I started getting ‘formation-ed’ away from those things.

“So it was super hard for me to make big plays, because anytime there was a big play drawn up, I was on the other side of it.”

The Bears sketched a much different outlook when Claypool arrived. Given the price to acquire him, there’s little doubt they intend to make him a pillar of their future. With one season left on his rookie contract after this, it’s highly likely they’ll sign him to an extension in the coming offseason.

Claypool is playing just his second game since the Nov. 1 trade, and while he’s picking the offense up quickly, he probably won’t be running at full capacity Sunday against the Lions. He caught two passes for 13 yards on six targets in his debut against the Dolphins, playing just 35% of the snaps.

It’ll probably be double that Sunday, and he hopes to have a thorough grasp of the playbook when the Bears visit the Falcons next week. Claypool is learning a different route tree after spending the first half of the season playing in the slot for the Steelers.

Nonetheless, it’s clear from what he’s heard since he walked into Halas Hall that he’s going to get major opportunities once everything settles.

“You’ll have four or five plays where you can get a good chunk of yards,” he said.

In Pittsburgh, conversely, he felt like the scenario was, “Hey, here’s your one play of the week. Make sure you make a play on this no matter what the coverage is.

At 24, Claypool is the youngest receiver on the Bears’ roster — he still has the most yardage (2,228) and touchdowns (14) in the group — and believes he is still ascending.

“Especially as the opportunities increase,” he said.

And they surely will, because both sides needed each other.

Darnell Mooney leads the team with 32 catches, which ranks 55th in the NFL. The next Bears wide receiver after him is Equanimeous St. Brown with 11.

Mooney, who also is due for an extension after this season, and Claypool give the Bears the best wide receiver combination they’ve had in almost a decade. But general manager Ryan Poles likely is looking for more than that.

It’d be ideal if the Bears picked up an elite receiver with their first-round pick and worked toward a scenario where Claypool and Mooney rounded out their top three instead of leading it. That would be a formidable trio to help quarterback Justin Fields.

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Bulls C Vucevic fined $15K for obscene gestureon November 11, 2022 at 6:48 pm

CHICAGO — The NBA fined Chicago Bulls center Nikola Vucevic $15,000 on Friday for making an obscene gesture on the playing court Wednesday during the 115-111 loss to the New Orleans Pelicans.

Vucevic was called for a traveling violation with 4:32 remaining in the first quarter and as he turned to run to the other end of the court, he extended a middle finger. He did not receive a technical foul at that moment during the game, but broadcast cameras caught the gesture as he turned away from the referees.

However, Vucevic, who finished with 18 points and seven rebounds, did receive his third technical foul of the season later in the game.

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Bulls C Vucevic fined $15K for obscene gestureon November 11, 2022 at 6:48 pm Read More »

Smino steps up his game on the explorative new Luv 4 Rent

Smino is simultaneously experimental and intentional—it’s a trip. His music feels better with each listen. The midwest breeds multitalented artists, including rappers who love to sing, but Smino (born in Saint Louis with roots in Chicago) is more than a rapper who sings or a singer who raps. With his endearing falsetto, undeniable charm, and frequent collaborations (including with Chicagoans Monte Booker and Ravyn Lenae), he makes music that’s great for the cookout, the kickback, and—importantly—the bedroom. Oozing with sex appeal and blessed with great hair, Smino has a surplus of personality, knowledge, and control. Though his music drips familiarity and sometimes evokes fellow explorative hip-hop acts such as OutKast or Kendrick Lamar, he’s got enough fresh ideas that it never feels plagiarized. Smino’s lyrics and musical decisions come chock-full of respect for pop culture and music history, and his unique voice shines through from the core. 

Smino’s new third album, Luv 4 Rent, clearly expresses his artistic growth since his 2018 breakout album, Noir, with its beat selection, big features (including J. Cole), instrumental choices, and vocal direction. Thick with smoky melodies, the music weaves between hip-hop, R&B, gospel, and straight-up pop—and it’s all abundantly Black. “Blu Billy” is good and breezy, while “Pudgy” is a big pulsating hug with a stellar Lil Uzi Vert verse. The guest spot from Tampa rapper Doechii on “Pro Freak” will be a revelation for anyone sleeping on her abilities, and Smino shows that he’s not just a playful crooner—he’s a real MC with a wordplay that isn’t to be undervalued. Luv 4 Rent has a certain je ne sais quoi—it’s sharp, loose, and satisfying. Longtime Smino fans will love it, and it’ll introduce new listeners to a rising talent who shows no signs of slowing down.

Smino’s Luv 4 Rent is available through Zero Fatigue.


Wednesday, November 30, 2022 at the Museum of Contemporary Art

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Smino steps up his game on the explorative new Luv 4 Rent Read More »

Smino steps up his game on the explorative new Luv 4 RentCristalle Bowenon November 11, 2022 at 6:00 pm

Smino is simultaneously experimental and intentional—it’s a trip. His music feels better with each listen. The midwest breeds multitalented artists, including rappers who love to sing, but Smino (born in Saint Louis with roots in Chicago) is more than a rapper who sings or a singer who raps. With his endearing falsetto, undeniable charm, and frequent collaborations (including with Chicagoans Monte Booker and Ravyn Lenae), he makes music that’s great for the cookout, the kickback, and—importantly—the bedroom. Oozing with sex appeal and blessed with great hair, Smino has a surplus of personality, knowledge, and control. Though his music drips familiarity and sometimes evokes fellow explorative hip-hop acts such as OutKast or Kendrick Lamar, he’s got enough fresh ideas that it never feels plagiarized. Smino’s lyrics and musical decisions come chock-full of respect for pop culture and music history, and his unique voice shines through from the core. 

Smino’s new third album, Luv 4 Rent, clearly expresses his artistic growth since his 2018 breakout album, Noir, with its beat selection, big features (including J. Cole), instrumental choices, and vocal direction. Thick with smoky melodies, the music weaves between hip-hop, R&B, gospel, and straight-up pop—and it’s all abundantly Black. “Blu Billy” is good and breezy, while “Pudgy” is a big pulsating hug with a stellar Lil Uzi Vert verse. The guest spot from Tampa rapper Doechii on “Pro Freak” will be a revelation for anyone sleeping on her abilities, and Smino shows that he’s not just a playful crooner—he’s a real MC with a wordplay that isn’t to be undervalued. Luv 4 Rent has a certain je ne sais quoi—it’s sharp, loose, and satisfying. Longtime Smino fans will love it, and it’ll introduce new listeners to a rising talent who shows no signs of slowing down.

Smino’s Luv 4 Rent is available through Zero Fatigue.


Wednesday, November 30, 2022 at the Museum of Contemporary Art

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Smino steps up his game on the explorative new Luv 4 RentCristalle Bowenon November 11, 2022 at 6:00 pm Read More »