Long before putting out two instrumental releases through the Street Corner Music label, performing a live set at the Boiler Room, producing the entirety of the popular Emergency Raps series, and lacing an official Freddie Gibbs-assisted remix for Fly Anakin and Koncept Jackson, Atlanta-based producer and Mutant Academy member Tuamie’s introduction to music production began in earnest. It all started in 2007 as a 13-year-old Tuamie sat at his computer in Fredericksburg, Virginia watching YouTube videos. Without any stated agenda or area of focus, he stumbled upon a video of Jamla records owner and Grammy Award-winning producer 9th Wonder making beats in FL Studio. Seeing someone make professional level beats on a computer with efficiency and ease suddenly demystified the production process, made it seem attainable, and inspired Tuamie to find his own means of making music. Before long he tracked down his own copy of FL Studio and dedicated his high school years to mastering his craft.

Like many aspiring beatmakers, Tuamie initially spent countless hours emulating iconic rap producers. Scrutinizing the catalogs of legends like DJ Premier and Pete Rock, he identified their sample sources and attempted to recreate the magic he heard coming through his speakers. “I just practiced,” he says. “I learned through remaking Pete Rock beats, seeing how he made the beat, and trying to find my own sound. It took forever.” Reimagining the work of his creative heroes may have been a time-consuming ordeal, but it proved to be a critical process for Tuamie to find his own signature sound. He internalized lessons about arrangement, sample chopping, and drum patterns, which he then applied to each subsequent remake.

As Tuamie discovered his own unique style as a producer, he also embarked on a rigid program of self-guided study. Eager to research and learn about his new passion after classes were done for the day, he devoured every producer interview he could find online, watched a healthy dose of music documentaries and beatmaking videos, and read several books about the music business. Tuamie’s focus and commitment to gaining expertise may seem like an overwhelming standard to some, but he wants producers to have realistic expectations about what it takes to survive in a crowded and hypercompetitive industry. “It’s a lot of practice. Making beats at work, making beats in the car, making beats – just really dedicating your life to learning to do what you want to do,” he says.

Beyond constant learning and practice, a fair amount of resourcefulness has helped Tuamie achieve his desired sound over the years. When he wanted his 2011 Water Loops debut to evoke the iconic sounds of an E-mu SP-1200, he purchased an inexpensive Casio SK-1 keyboard sampler. After figuring out how to use the keyboard in tandem with his computer during his senior year of high school, he ran every song on the album through the sampler to give each track a distinct timbre. The gritty texture he achieved helped give songs like “High Eyes” an inimitable sound unlike anything else in the beat scene at the time. Then, amidst personal turmoil and a temporary relocation from North Carolina to Virginia in late 2016, Tuamie made one of the most emotional records of his career by utilizing a rather unconventional recording setup. Facing an uncertain living situation and looking for a quiet place to focus his creative energy, he found refuge in a local grocery store while working on his second album Street Corner Music. “It was a two story grocery store, it had a cafe upstairs, and it was 24/7,” he says. “That’s where I finished Holy Ghost Spirituals and turned it in.” The store became an effective impromptu studio as Tuamie went there night after night with his laptop to work in Ableton Live. Looking to create in near-isolation, he often arrived during off-peak hours late at night and lost himself in the process.

Though Holy Ghost Spirituals first started out as an eight song Bandcamp release of Gospel-sampled beats, Tuamie was encouraged by Street Corner founder House Shoes to flesh the EP out into a full length effort by making more instrumentals out of religious music. Despite the uncertainty in his life and the career setbacks he was navigating at the time, Tuamie’s dedication to the creative process paid off. The original brief EP more than doubled in size by the end of 2016 as he completed 20 beats for the final version, which has since become one of the most revered albums from his expansive catalog. After taking a moment to think about the reasons why he chose to create a 20-song album that features song titles like “The Pain Is Still Here” and “Tears” and exclusively samples Gospel music, Tuamie believes the original sample sources used on Holy Ghost Spirituals are a direct reflection of his mindstate at the time – a common theme throughout his catalog. “I don’t know what it was, I assume it was depression,” he says. “Seeing if I could live off Bandcamp and experimenting with that, that not working. Not feeling like I was where I needed to be. It was all that stuff. But it was enough for me to make what I made with that amount of intensity.”

In a very busy world, listeners don’t always stop to appreciate how much blood, sweat, and tears artists distill into their music. And so, while producing Holy Ghost Spirituals was a cleansing and therapeutic process for Tuamie, releasing the music to the general public left him emotionally raw. When some of the people close to him failed to derive meaning from the music, it hurt. “It only connects with people you don’t know,” Tuamie says. “I don’t know how that works. Your neighbour that’s known you for five years could care less about your beat.” And even when strangers do find meaning in his music, they might not consider the very real and challenging circumstances Tuamie had to navigate to bring listeners Holy Ghost Spirituals. Though this can be frustrating, he doesn’t fault people for overlooking the personal pain artists often expel to keep their fanbase happy. “I guess it’s not really for them to know what’s going on,” he says. “It’s for them to just enjoy it and I hope it helps them.”

Tuamie makes a beat and shares insights on Verysickbeats

In the two years since the release of Holy Ghost Spirituals, Tuamie has spent considerable time further refining his process of sample selection, chopping, and converting his altered sounds into actual songs in Ableton. He also prides himself on frequently making his samples unrecognizable. “I just go through a process of elimination. As I’m playing the song repeatedly I take whatever four or five points that I want,” he says. “Then make it to where I can play it for you and you won’t know what it is.” In an effort to explain his workflow, Tuamie likens his process of chopping and rearranging samples with his laptop keyboard to another musical instrument. “I chop it to where it’s like certain parts are treated as a note on a piano,” he says. “I have total control over what I want. It’s similar to that. Not exactly the same, but very similar.” Despite putting in a great deal of work towards honing his process, Tuamie found himself hitting a bit of a wall in 2018. Like many self-taught music-makers, he felt that his productions were lacking some undefinable element. Not being able to achieve the same kind of cohesiveness in sound that he heard on songs getting frequent radio play left him frustrated. “There was something I was missing,” he says. “I’m learning the music theory and I’m like, ‘There’s something that I’m not understanding.’”

Undeterred, he went back to the source that first sparked his journey as a producer and worked his way through some YouTube tutorials. After watching and re-watching a tutorial on harmonic mixing, he learned how to better balance the disparate elements in one of his new instrumentals. The new knowledge obtained from the tutorial helped him flesh out “Old 50 Cent” from his recent Emergency Raps Vol. 4 collaboration with Richmond, Virginia rapper Fly Anakin, an album Pitchfork praised for its “lush, crate-digging loops” and “Tuamie’s head-knocking drum-kicks and creamy soul.” Though the video is aimed at DJs, Tuamie recommends that producers also take time to learn about harmonic mixing because much of the information is transferable to the beatmaking process. It can also help beatmakers understand how to blend their own original sounds and music with samples, a process Tuamie is currently exploring. Now, as Tuamie closes in on 12 years of consistent practice, study, and work, he finds himself at a new pinnacle as an artist. “I just, this year, got it to where I can say, ‘I can create my ideas that I have in my head,” he says. Despite the satisfaction that comes with revelation, Tuamie isn’t resting on his laurels. Instead, he’s looking forward to creating the quality of songs he dreamt of making at age 13. “Now that I’ve kind of gotten to where I want to be, I feel like I’m in a place to make the music I’ve been trying to make since forever.”