There aren’t a lot of groups in hip-hop. The Lox figured out how to survive as a group and have individual careers. Not to compare you to The Lox musically, but as far as having those careers that you always come together and you can have individual solos, is that important to you? How do you focus on your solos, your group and everything being equal?Quavo : Most definitely. We always grew up watching groups, seeing how they get down and seeing how they move. Some move right and some of them not, but it’s all about coming together at the end. We haven’t did too much solo stuff right now anyway, so we focused on building ourselves as a team and keep building ourselves as a group.

I do features all the time. I feel like that’s not even a solo thing. I feel like a whole solo is a solo song. I feel like a whole album is a solo album if you do it by yourself. That’s what I call solo. If anybody else get a call to do movies or do anything, we always support each other. I see that in The Lox. I see that in OutKast. I see that in even the Hot Boys. They’ll have differences and still come together. At the end of the day, they know what they’ve been through. They know they can sit down and talk to each other. They know they can sit down and go through their differences or whatever. That’s what makes groups great.

What was the relationship like with you guys before all the success and how has it changed now? Is it the same? Has it enhanced because you’ve gotten rich, traveled and so on together?Quavo : Our success has enhanced. We always try to enhance our success. We all try to master our craft, we always try to stay up on fashion. We always try to beat each other in the game, basketball, anything. We always just trying to graduate. We always trying to go to the next level. So, yeah, I’d say we’re growing up and we getting right.