Chops and Ray sit down for conversation in full view.
The Step-Hop, the 43, the No-Comply… conceived by
Blender but you definitely made it your own. Where did your inspiration come from to
start exploring this step-off flatground arena?
I got turned on to what I
call the “step-hop” by my friend Randy Smith and the Go Skate Crew, out in
Sacramento. They were the ones who turned me onto those ideas. Back then, there
was a big interest in skating flatground, which I think had a lot to do with finding
yourself in lit-up parking lots and tennis courts at night. Finding yourself
where there were minimal things to skate but because of the lights, you could
skate, so you got creative with whatever you could. Even if it just meant
getting creative on the ground.
This is back when I lived in
San Jose. My friend Robert Torres and I started going out to Sacramento a lot
to skate because we’d met a bunch of people from there. It was a 3-hour Greyhound
ride but it was like an adventure. Leaving right after school and hopping on
the bus. By the time we got there, it would be 9 or 10 at night so we’d usually
find ourselves at Quimby Park because it was the only spot lit. There were a
few benches there but it was really just a tennis court with smooth flatground.
It wasn’t much but since it was Friday night, everybody would be charging
anyway.
Of all the tricks everyone
was doing, I really gravitated towards all the step hops that Randy was doing
out there.
For us, “step hops” is where
you hit the tail off the ground. “No Complies” were when you used something
else, like bonking off a curb. Even though we’d seen Blender doing those off
curbs, it didn’t excite us as much as what we saw Randy doing. We were more
into doing it off the tail because you were cutting out the middleman. You
didn’t need a curb. You could do it wherever. So from there, we all started
coming up with as many different variations we could think of.
Flatground lines became your calling card early on as
street skating was just starting to develop. Did you expect this approach to catch on the way it did?
Nah, I didn’t have any
expectations like that. Much like anything, when you’re in the moment, you’re
excited and that’s all you really need. Everything else that comes afterwards is
the cherry on-top. I’ve never been too conscious of where things might possibly
lead.
I actually grew up skating
ramps but I’d broken my wrist. My parents took my skateboard away while I had
my cast on but I was lucky enough to have a back-up board at a buddy’s house.
The problem was I couldn’t go back to the ramp during this time because my parents
knew where it was and I’d get caught. But I still wanted to skate so because of
that, I ended up skating more street.
We’d skated street before
but it was more like something to do after the sun went down or maybe when the
neighbors were over you skating the ramp. But now, we were starting to skate
street all-day, not just as an afterthought. It’s like we had opened this little
treasure trove of possibilities to explore.
But once again, it goes back
to Sacramento and seeing Randy do tricks back-to-back. It was so cool to see
and I knew immediately that it was adding another level to things. Tricks are
fun but doing them consecutively like that was a real challenge.
It started as seeing how
many tricks we could do in a row. From there, just like a vert run, you started
to think about how certain tricks flow into other tricks. It was the same
mentality. Like, I always liked doing backside airs on one wall and
then flowing right into a frontside ollie on the next one. It just feels right
to me. It’s this same idea but on the ground. In a sequence. In a line.
Back then, there was so much
emphasis on contests. They played a much bigger role, especially for “streetstyle”,
because street skating wasn’t really being represented in the magazines. Contests
and street jams were all we had as ways to get hip to one another and see what
everybody was doing. But because of these contests, I started seeing how
important flatground could be because no matter what the course looked like,
you always had flat. It was a great way to not only throw in new tricks but
also connecting obstacles in your run.
I know you had a few sponsors prior but how did
Powell enter the picture? How did Public Domain come about? And why a shared part?
Well, I got into skating up
in San Jose and in-between my sophomore and junior years, my parents decided to
move us down to Orange County.
You gotta remember,
skateboarding had its own version of hip-hop’s East Coast vs. West Coast beef
back then, NorCal vs. SoCal. And growing up in San Jose, I come from that NorCal
school. The Bay Area was my stomping ground. When I found out that I had to
move down south, I saw it as a death sentence! I was bummed, man! But I quickly
found out that SoCal is where the bulk of the industry is. Before I even knew,
I’m out skating with Natas, Gonz, Jason Lee, Jeremy Klein, Chet Thomas, Steve
Saiz… the list goes on and on.
So I started getting more
into the mix when I heard about this Powell demo coming up. It was kind of the
thing back then where, no matter who was at the demo, you wanted to go and
skate with them. Granted, at the time, I was riding for G&S but I still
went out there to skate the course before the demo started. It was actually
Chet and Steve Saiz’s demo, who I already knew, so it was pretty mellow. I was
just out there skating around beforehand and when it came time for the demo,
they wanted me to keep skating. So I did.
Chet started talking to
Stacy about me after that demo. Evidently, Tommy had already been talking to
him for a while as well, so now he’s starting to hear about me from a few
different sources. A few weeks later, I was at a contest and I see Chet talking
to Stacy, pointing over at me. That’s when Stacy came over and asked me to ride
for Powell. This was about a year prior to Public
Domain.
Vert was pretty much the whole industry at this time. Brands would support this little street thing but it was mostly by just sponsoring amateurs. There still weren’t too many street pros yet so brands would have all these street ams to represent them at the little street contests we were talking about.
Stacy and Dorfman were
always the guys at big brands who supported street skating, to the point where
they actually had street models in their catalogs. Obviously, you had Santa
Monica Airlines but Skip was hip, man. He knew what was up. But as far as the
other big brands, G&S didn’t have any street pros at the time. And Santa
Cruz had Jeff Kendall, who because he was so versatile, had a vert and a street
model... but that seemed different. His street board almost felt like by default
or something. He didn’t seem like a dedicated street guy.
Stacy already saw the
potential in street skating. He knew what was going on out there, under the
radar. First by acquiring Tommy, Jesse, Thiebaud and Vallely and then by getting more amateur street talent, like me… I figure he saw Public Domain as his coming out party.
Let’s give this a chance.
As far as it being a shared
part, Stacy realized that there was power in numbers. You couldn’t just put an
amateur cat out there by himself that nobody had ever heard of. At least, not
that at that point. It’s way easier as a crew. So that’s how the Rubber Boys
came about.
Where did the “Rubber Boys” name come from?
You know, Stacy has never
told me. I still don’t even know what it means. (laughs)
It’s funny to think that
I’ve never cared enough to inquire! But that’s just Stacy and Stecyk doing
their thing.
My hero in skating has
always been my buddy, Randy. He was my inspiration behind my ragdoll graphic
and everything. Randy skated super loose and I’d always try to get down like that,
too. I always thought terms like “rubber” and “ragdoll” painted the picture to
me of something flowy and loose. Elastic, if you will. That’s always been my
interpretation of it anyway.
That part was a couple of days or so, right? Had you
ever skated any of those spots before?
No, that was the first time
I’d ever skated any of that stuff.
Our part in Public Domain came about as, “Hey,
you’re gonna meet up with Stacy and some guys to film.”
That was it. We showed up
and he had a list of spots he wanted to hit. That’s where we went and that’s
what we got. 3 days, back-to-back, in the same clothes.
Were those your typical daily tricks back then? Did
you bust out anything new for the cameras?
I mean, skating back then
was still like how it is now with progression but it hadn’t gotten to that
place yet where difficulty was high, which meant that you could be more
consistent. But it’s all the same stuff. You have a trick set and that’s what
you draw from. Tricks just weren’t as hard yet. But yeah, there were a few
things I’d never done before in there that I just made up on the spot.
Like what?
That kickflip 50-50 on a
bench with the backside 180 out? I’d never done that before. I gazelle’d out of
a 50-50 in there, too. Never did that one before either. Some stuff is just improvised,
man. You can’t call it. You just start making stuff up and if something’s close
to what you’re already doing, you make it happen.
Everyone draws from a
certain vocabulary, the same bag of tricks. You just apply it to wherever you
are. That’s all it really is. Just like skating a contest course for the first
time. It’s all stuff you know, just in slightly different situations.
But the kickflip stuff you were doing was way ahead
of the curve. And I know you didn’t get many tries during filming so that stuff
had to come pretty quickly…
That’s what was so cool
about back then, you just sessioned. It was all long lens stuff so you were
able to tune everything out. You were basically just skating. Filming was more
about documenting the session back then anyway instead of going after specific
tricks.
You could try all kinds of
stuff over the course of filming and you either made things so they had footage
to work with… or you didn’t. You had to be smart about it. If you’re out there
bailing the whole time and not getting anything, when it comes time to move
spots, you still gotta go. You just got nothing.
The cool thing about street
skating back then is that the tricks weren’t all laid out. There was much more
variety. I remember being able to tell where a skater was from by how they
skated. The influence of their environment. Every scene was its own individual
thing. Like, if you went to a contest, the guys from San Francisco would always
be skating faster than everyone else because of the hills. Dudes from Venice
would be doing a bunch of wall stuff because that was their approach. Even guys
from Southern California, which is where Saiz, Chet and Sanderson were from, I
feel like they were more inspired by the vert scene down there than the rest of
us. Grabs and things like that.
I was a lot more freestyle
in my approach because of that Sacramento flatground influence. So because of
that, I had a lot of kickflips into things, step-hops, and things like that.
The overall climate back
then was everyone out there doing different things. One guy’s doing this kinda
thing while this guy’s over there trying that sorta thing, both at the same spot.
There was no generally-accepted way of going about it. Everything was so fresh
and new.
Did Stacy make you remove the labels off your Vision
Street Wears?
(laughs) Oh, you’re smart! It
took me a while to figure out why that was.
Yeah, I was only 16 at the
time and there was definitely some “ignorance is bliss” there. I didn’t think
my Vision shoes were a big deal since Powell didn’t make shoes. Why would they
care? The reality was that Vision made skateboards and that’s what made it an
issue. I just didn’t think of it that way.
They never communicated that
to me, though. Stacy knew that I wanted to wear my shoes and he was trying to
work with me but rather than just explaining that to me, they grabbed my shoes
and cut off the logos when I wasn’t looking.
They didn’t even tell you they were going to do it?
Nah, the first time it
happened, we were shooting an ad and I went to change clothes. When I came back
to put my shoes back on, “Huh… the logos are gone.” (laughs)
That’s just being a naïve
teenager. Not really knowing how things worked. That’s why I was so lucky to
have Lance around. He was huge in helping me understand the realities of being
a pro skater, that there are real responsibilities to this job.
But yeah, after I finally
figured everything out, I started cutting the logos off myself.
Was it hard getting comfortable on Powell at first? Did
you have any difficulties being the new street guy?
Not at all, man. It was such
a great time and they were all so open to everything. I’d always had so much admiration
for the Bones Brigade. I’d known Tommy for a while and Lance, who was always my
favorite, really took me under his wing. I’m so thankful for all of it.
I will say something that
was a little trippy and kind of a bummer was just the timing of everything.
Once Public Domain came out and Stacy
saw the response, it was obvious that street was going to be big. This made
things tough because a lot of the vert guys who were already in-line to receive
pro models got shelved because of us. Our boards came out and some of theirs
never did. That led to some awkward moments in the van, for sure.
The Rubber Boys came out
right at the start of the whole vert-street rivalry. And this was back when
everybody was functioning together. Like, if you’re going to Europe for
contests, these are vert and street
contests, together. So everybody had to be hanging together the whole time. You
had to know that vert skaters were feeling the pressure from us essentially
coming in and taking their gigs. It wasn’t intentional on our part but it’s
just how it was. And a lot of these vert guys didn’t really have any respect
for street either, which pissed them off even more… like, “How are these guys
going to come in and take our shine?”
So would you often talk about these politics with
other street pros who were also facing the same team dynamic? In addition to
bouncing around trick ideas and concepts?
We wouldn’t talk too much
about the team dynamics, more about just trick ideas. Like I said, moving to Southern California
changed everything because I was around everybody now.
It was great becoming friends
with Mark Gonzales pretty early on. I still remember these long phone
conversations we used to have where we’d dream about doing certain tricks. Mark
would always call me back claiming that he just did the trick we were talking
about learning. But the next time we’d skate together, he couldn’t come
anywhere near pulling it off.
Later on, he told me that he
would do that so he’d have to learn the trick. (laughs)
As a black skater in the 80s, did you experience any
static within skateboarding? And not necessarily overtly negative, maybe just a
few awkward dealings with suburban white kids?
Actually, most of the
hassles I’d experience were from other brothers and sisters.
“What the heck are you
doing? Why are you trying to be white?”
Skaters could’ve cared less.
The only thing skaters care about is if you’re a kook or not. Are you someone
that we want to be around and skate with? That’s really about it.
So thankfully, nothing
really in skateboarding. There were a few instances when guys starting dabbling
and being influenced by Nazi culture… I remember the Godoy Brothers getting into
that a little bit at one point.
Iron Cross Skateboards.
Yeah, that was the closest I
ever experienced to that kind of thing within skateboarding. It was a trip,
too, because I think that was more to do with those guys just being intrigued
by all that… I was never sure if they really believed that stuff, deep down. It
almost seemed like a fashion thing at the time. The sad thing is with that
fashion statement came along all the lame hatred, too. I just stayed away from
all of it.
That being said, that stuff
felt more like a phase because all of those dudes are super cool at the end of
the day. I guess it was something they had to go through and come out the back
end of. It wasn’t some deep-rooted thing that a lot of people struggle with.
Kinda weird.
Arguably the most popular black skateboarder ever up
to that point, were you aware of any influence you may have had in this regard?
Did you ever feel any added weight as a possible role model?
I was just skating, man.
Honestly, I’d always get the
occasional interview question about this, which would be the only time that it
would even dawn on me… like, oh yeah! But that’s the beauty of skateboarding. Once
you fall into it, the culture keeps you so engrossed that you don’t even think
about some of these heavier things. It’s only when you get older that you start
to reflect on everything.
When you’re in it, you’re
just in it, man. Doing your thing. You don’t have to get caught up in all these
other concerns. Because it can be a bummer when you become too aware of weird
politics and drama. You gotta push that stuff out. So I’m kinda thankful that I
was so oblivious and didn’t let it affect me.
You mentioned earlier that your friend Randy had
something to do with your Ragdoll concept?
Yeah, the Ragdoll was
inspired by Randy.
This is right when Sean
Cliver had become an illustrator for Powell through that ad. My board graphic
was one of his first assignments and I still remember sitting with him one day,
talking about stuff I’d be interested in.
“What about a ragdoll or
something?” Because I loved how loose and free Randy was while he was skating.
We’d always say that he skated like a ragdoll. And because I was so inspired by
him, people began to say that I had the same type of thing.
I had no way of fathoming
how Cliver would interpret that but I totally fell in love with what he did. It’s
like he made a superhero out of it! I think it’s still one of the coolest
things ever. It reminds me of Spiderman or something. Even the beads and the
friendship bracelets around the wrist, that was all stuff that we wore. The hat
and the name in the cards… Sean’s amazing.
His name keeps popping up, whatever happened to
Randy?
A knee injury took him out.
It was terrible, man. His skating really was something special.
Sounds like it. So were you more nervous about Ban This being a completely solo part on
the eve of turning pro?
Ban This
was different because we all knew how big it was by then. It was no longer
Stacy taking a chance. The response to Public
Domain had shown that street skating had arrived.
The team had really grown
with more street skaters. By that time, Stacy had already sponsored Guy, Rudy,
Paulo and Gabriel and they were out there filming their part as well. I thought
all of this was great. The more, the merrier, you know? It didn’t even dawn on
me that most people would feel added pressure with these younger guys around. I
just wasn’t thinking of it that way.
I don’t know if Stacy could
sense that but I remember him sitting me down before going out to film and
showing me their part. Basically as a way to show me what was going on. I was
hyped, though. I thought their part was awesome. I understand that he wanted to
motivate me but I’ve just never had a competitive mindset with filming parts.
It was cool as a source of inspiration but I just looked at it like I can only
try my best and do what I’m going to do. And that’s what we got.
That part ended up being way
different but it was still only 2 or 3 different get-togethers with just Stacy
and I.
How was it different?
Stacy and I would literally
just drive around looking for stuff. He’d see a spot or maybe even just a
backdrop he liked and pullover. We’d get out, film a line real quick, get back in
the car and cruise around some more. It was way more on the run. We weren’t
camping out for that one at all.
There were some spots that I
dug, so I’d just keep skating. Like, the stuff with the stairs? That was just
around the corner from the Pink Motel. We were filming for Sk8-TV and I
happened to find those stairs so we went for it. I was able to get all those
tricks in-between stuff for Sk8-TV.
But something that came to light in Guy’s Epicly Later’d regarding Ban This was talk of Stacy possibly throttling
their coverage in favor of his more merchandised pros?
I’m not sure, man. I feel
like Stacy probably thought that he had enough for their part. Why go back for
more? That’s how Stacy tended to look at stuff. You have these days to film and
then your part is done. That’s it. Stacy had no desire to be sitting there
forever so someone could get one trick. He didn’t have that mentality… at all,
which became a challenge later on.
It was just different back then.
So much of how things are now come down to the riders’ input. They have so much
input with everything where as back then, the rider really didn’t have much say
in how things were done by the brand. You were either part of the program or
you weren’t. Riders can throw fits now and get what they want. In the Powell days,
Stacy would’ve just kicked you off. (laughs)
You have to remember that
Stacy was managing so many people. He didn’t have time to switch things around
because his schedule was so tight. It had to be in order to get everything
done. He couldn’t afford to be that flexible.
“We’re done, man. I don’t
have time for that. You should’ve done that when we were filming.”
Were you concerned with Stacy’s treatment of street
skating compared to H-Street’s bro-cam trick porn? That these dudes are blowing
doors while you’re out filming scooter races?
My initial thought on the
H-Street videos was that there were a lot of rippers in this video but the
presentation is just so overwhelming! It took more work to decipher everything
because there so much stuff going on. It was just so different.
That being said, Matt
Hensley’s skating really stood out to me as being special.
Talk a little about your 1990 Transworld Pro
Spotlight. Did you tackle that just like another video part? Did you expect it
to have as much impact as it did?
It’s funny to hear you say
that because to this day, I still don’t know how much of an impact it had.
What!?! That’s a classic!
You have to remember that I
had so much rolling out at this time. Everything felt well-received, to be
honest, so it was hard for me to see different levels of things. There wasn’t a
clear contrast. I was just thankful to have gotten an interview.
It’s only in hindsight where
I really learn how people looked at these things.
Had you ever worked with Spike before? Because he
really brought a special look to it.
Oh, I loved working with
Spike. I’d actually met him years before when he was at Homeboy. So yeah, when
I found out he was shooting my interview, I was hyped. Because for me,
especially back then, I got out with so many photographers. All I care about is
if I want to hang out with the dude because you end up spending a lot of time
together. But I dug Spike. Right away, it was a win-win.
Spike was cool because he’d
always skate the stuff with me. That always helps. Go to a mini-ramp, Spike’s
dropping in as well. It’s more like hanging out with a friend while we also
happen to be working on this thing together.
But I remember one of the
first shots we got, I’d taken him to this school. It was around noon or so, but
I was ready to get the trick. Let’s do this.
“Ok, cool. Let’s go get
something to eat and maybe check out another spot. Let’s come back to this one
around sunset because that’s when it will look the best.”
“What!?! Sunset!?! I’m ready
to do this now!”
But I listened to him and
came back later. We got the trick and when he showed me the photo later, it
looked so sick. I trusted him after that. Ok, cool… Spike knows what he’s
doing. I’m not tripping on nothing.
I remember him telling me
that he’d won some photography award for those pieced together frames he did of
me.
Like the Talking Heads cover?
Exactly! I thought that was
super cool, man. If anything, that’s what I remember most about that interview,
just the fun times I had with Spike and him getting that award. I was really impressed
because it was an award outside of skateboarding.
That Spotlight was a great early example of how to
shoot street skating… because I remember you having a few ill-timed photos published
elsewhere that would’ve never run a few years later.
Guys were just used to
shooting vert. In their defense, that’s like going from 10-foot airs to some
little flip off the ground. And it’s not like we were catching it either. It’s
rocketing the whole time. I don’t really know how you’d go about shooting that.
(laughs)
Fair point. Do you
still like the Bangles?
(laughs) Yeah, man. I do.
Here’s what I’ve realized about my personality: if there was ever an
emotional connection with something, that never changes for me. I can never
relate to people who “used to like” something. I always wonder what happened
to make them not like it anymore? Those reasons never change for me.
But yeah, there are some cuts on that second Bangles album, back when
they were signed to IRS before they got big… “All Over the Place”, when
they were super in the mix of the LA punk scene with Red Kross and all that. So
many good tracks on that album.
What’s the story behind that shot of you pushing that
Powell ran as an ad?
I have no idea, man. Magazines
would come out and I wouldn’t know where half of my stuff even came from.
“Huh? What’s that? When did
that happen? Well…. Okay.”
Back then, you’d go out with
Powell for a day or two and get so much stuff done. You’d shoot a bunch of
photos and they’d sit on the stuff, rolling it out as needed. It’s not like
today where companies call up different photographers, seeing if they have any
pictures. Powell would just backlog a ton of stuff for each rider. So yeah, when
that came out, I didn’t even know.
“Wow, we shot that so long
ago… and why did they just shoot me pushing?” (laughs)
Everything was very
conceptual back then. If you think about Stacy’s style, tricks were involved
but not how it is today. It was much more about that rider’s personality,
closer to how record labels market their stars. Sure, this guy’s a ripper but
does the personality come through?
Here’s photo of Ray pushing.
Here’s one of a bunch of dudes hanging out on the deck of a ramp. That was an
ad. Stacy’s approach was to connect skaters to the person, rather than their
tricks. I mean, I had an ad doing a handstand! That was the magic of Stecyk and
Stacy.
Rocco come from that school,
too. Those early World ads are just the product of guys sitting around, cooking
up goofy stuff. Half of the time, there was no skateboarding even in it. That
was the climate. We weren’t to the mid-90s where everything got so militant. It
was still fun, man. It had character. As corny as some people think that stuff
is, it gave way more insight into that guy’s personality than just seeing them
on their boards.
I know we talked earlier
about how we really didn’t see H-Street as a threat, Rocco was a different
story. He was blatantly attacking Powell. And I could tell Stacy was getting flustered.
It became pretty obvious that Powell didn’t know how to respond, which became a
much bigger issue and concern for all of us.
So what were your thoughts on Powell’s notorious
MeMeMe ad? Did you realize it was going to yield such a gnarly retaliation from
Rocco?
Oh, dude. At that point,
with that ad... to me, Powell was really struggling. I remember thinking that if that’s
all they could come up with, we were in big trouble.
There’s a verse I love in
the Bible that says, “Do not answer a fool according to his folly or lest he be
wise in his own eyes.”
You can’t come up with a
World Industries ad to battle World Industries. It just doesn’t work like that.
So yeah, I knew it was bad
idea. But again, this was my job. And I’m grateful for that because it taught
me to be professional. I work for the brand. I’m not the boss, so… ok, here we
go! (laughs)
It was a tough one, though.
But yeah, that’s when I knew it was over. This ad was all she wrote. And that’s
pretty much how it went down. Stacy bailed shortly after and we were all left
looking at each other, wondering what we were going to do.
When did Lance bring you into his plans for the Firm?
Right from the jump.
At first, George wanted
Lance to do a company through Powell. George would run it but the company would
be headed by Lance. That’s when Lance reached out to see if I’d be into it and,
of course, I was down.
Honestly, by that point, I
really didn’t know what we were doing at Powell anymore. It was kind of a mess
after Stacy left.
So that’s how the Firm
started. It was originally going to be Lance, myself and Colin McKay… somebody
else, too, early on. I think maybe Moses Itkonen? I can’t remember. But yeah,
as time went on, Lance started to realize that building it this way would mean
that he’d always have to deal with George. That even with all the hard work he
was ready to put in, the company would still never truly be his. So he took out
a second mortgage on his house and started the Firm.
Unfortunately, Colin bailed
but we ended up getting the Gruber brothers and we were on our way. I was hyped.
freakin' wholesome |
Did you have any other offers at the time? I imagine with
Powell slowly dissolving, you had to be getting hit up on all sides.
Not so much. Because I think
as far as everyone else knew, I was planning on being at Powell for the
duration.
This is funny in hindsight,
but Rocco actually hit me up to ride for SMA a few days after I got on Powell.
It was all the same week. This is back when he was just starting out and didn’t
have a team yet. I know he was already in a few peoples’ ear, though. He was
already talking to Rodney and Vallely… it was pretty obvious that he was trying
to kill Stacy from the beginning.
I just couldn’t take him
seriously. I’d was on Powell-Peralta, man! They were huge at this point! How is
this freestyler going to start a brand that would ever take out the Bones
Brigade? (laughs)
That’s weird to think about. But going back to the
Firm, you guys put out La Buena Vida pretty quickly. Was there an excitement
at the beginning with having complete control? Or was there possibly more anxiety
now since there was no safety net?
Well, my level of concern was
different from Lance’s but I was excited. At that point, Powell had kinda run
its course and skating was entering a whole new phase. Obviously board sales weren’t
what they used to be but as far as overall excitement, it was a great time!
Everything felt so new and there was so much potential. Even though we’re all
wearing Blind jeans with bearing covers for wheels, it was all still a breath
of fresh air that you could appreciate.
We had control now. There
was sense of ownership. Doing it for ourselves, for this thing that we believed
in. We weren’t submitting something to a bigger idea. We were in charge now going
forward. It was a blast, man!
La Buena Vida was so much fun to do. I’ve always felt that the best scenario a
skateboarder can find themselves in is to just be out skating with friends and
the Firm was like a family, man. Stacy wasn’t controlling everything anymore.
It was all up to us, which was huge, but also meant that we were entering the
era of very loose deadlines. Things started to get done… whenever they got
done. (laughs)
So yeah, all of this is came
into play with La Buena Vida, which
is why that video has the feel it does. Lance had always talked about wanting
to do a video that felt looser and wasn’t so serious, that was more about
friends skating together. Even down to the guys leaving their house and
stopping by my place to pick me up. Those are really our houses! But that’s how
skateboarding truly is, man. It was cool to showcase that.
Why go with Firehose’s “In My Mind” for your part not long after
Tom Knox had just used it in Speed Freaks?
That just kinda happened. I
didn’t really think about it until I heard from a few people after the fact.
Playing music, I’ve always
been a huge fan of Firehose and the Minutemen. In a lot of ways, I learned how
to play guitar by listening to those albums. Ed Crawford’s riff on that song,
in particular, always got me. I remember my friends and I always used to play
that one live. So I had an emotional connection there, irrelevant to who used
it before.
FIrehose was in San Pedro,
right under the bridge from Long Beach, so I’d always go see them play. I
actually remember asking Watt one time, “Hey, I want to use one of your guys’
songs for my video part. Is that cool?”
“Take something from SST.
Don’t take anything from Sony. They’ll come after you.”
Because I actually wanted to
use “Down with the Bass” off Flying the Flannel but Mike didn’t think that was
a good idea, which led me over to the SST catalog. “In My Mind” just felt
right.
I honestly didn’t realize
that Tom had used it before.
Give us your favorite Lance Mountain story.
Ok, this is the first one
that comes to mind. We were in Barcelona for two weeks, filming for Can’t Stop. We were in a hotel and I
still don’t know how Lance thought to do this but I guess whenever he was in
the bathroom, he could hear everything going on in the bathroom a floor above
us. I remember it being Anthony Claravall’s room with a few of our guys. But I
guess the bathrooms were connected somehow.
I don’t know how it
started but he figured out that there was a way to push up on the ceiling to
where you could get through to the pipe and up to the next floor. I guess he
thought it would be funny if he tunneled up through the ceiling to our friend’s
bathroom and surprise them! The only problem was that the set-up was too small
and Lance ended up getting stuck! (laughs)
I just remember thinking to
myself, “Man, what are we gonna do? Lance is stuck in the ceiling in Barcelona
and we can’t get him out!” (laughs)
Needless to say, we were
able to get him out. He was covered in all this nastiness, man. Just filthy.
But those are the kind of child-like antics that are just so good…
I always try to imagine how
housekeeping would’ve reacted had they walked into this construction zone scene
with some dude stuck in the ceiling. (laughs)
Amazing. Going back a bit, the ’94 Firm Video
seemed much more traditional in comparison to Buena. Was this the company possibly getting more serious about
things? Regardless, not enough people talk about Weston Correa’s part.
Right!?! How good was Wes, man!?!? Wow!
But yeah, that’s just where skateboarding was at the time. Skating was
beyond serious during those years and that video just reflected the times.
Like, this trick is accepted, that one isn’t. The crew is cool, that one’s not.
Things weren’t so warm and fuzzy back then. There was a definite non-inclusive
feel to it all.
That being said, none of that was really conscious at the time, even though
it is affecting you. It just shows up in things, like how you make a video. You
know how it is, everything goes through phases and this was skateboarding’s
“serious” phase. And with all of these new riders on the team, James Qua and
Weston… that was more of their deal, too. Those guys just wanted to get down to
biz.
What was the relationship
between Girl and the Firm around this time? I know you guys went on several
tours together, Lance did some graphics in addition to your Gas Station cameo
in Chocolate Tour.
We were just friends, man. Simple as that. Friendship and respect. We
had this feeling where we were all in it together. I can speak for Lance in
that we always had a feeling of community with the Firm. Everyone has their
respective brands and interests but we’re all still skaters, trying to enjoy
the whole trip.
With Girl, you have to remember how many connections we had over there
through the Powell days. Those are deep friendships from early on, in addition
to the guys that we got close to later on. It just made sense. We were always
skating together anyway, might as well tour together, too.
The Chocolate Tour cameo was
Spike’s idea and you already know the history there. Of course, man. It’s all
family. That was fun, too. Spike’s always a good time.
How would you and Lance conduct your careers with
regard to spirituality in the often-shocking Rocco era? Individually, you guys made your faith known
but it was never like The Firm was branded a “Christian Company”. What’s the balance?
We just felt that only
people can have the Holy Spirit in them, not a company. Not the Firm. But
you’re right, as individuals, Lance and I both put our faith in Jesus. For me,
it has more to do with loving people and being sincere. At the end of the day, we
love skateboarding and skateboarders and pray that somehow, in some way, we will
be used to draw people in to want to know God’s love.
But I know you got grief over the years as the “God
Squad”, right?
Oh, that’s rad! I’ve never
heard that before! (laughs)
It’s one of those things
where this is so real to me, that other stuff doesn’t matter. When you’re on
your deathbed, who cares what people think about you? It doesn’t mean anything.
Faith is only as good as what it’s placed in, so hopefully, whatever someone puts their faith into is worthy of it. I have such a peace that I’ll die for that
faith, which makes it easy not to get discouraged when you might be getting
made fun of or called names.
I always think to myself… are
these people gonna help me when I die? What are they doing for me and my life?
I got some heavy stuff happening, what are they doing about it? Because I know
who helps me and gets me through.
So no, that doesn’t affect
me at all. It’s not like I’m getting martyred for this. There are people out
there getting killed for their faith. This kinda stuff is whatever. Getting
called “The God Squad”… I actually like that! (laughs)
People get caught up in a
lot of stuff. Most of it, at the end of the day, doesn’t really matter.
What kept you on the Firm through all the ups-and-downs?
Relationships, pure and
simple. We’re family. And if Lance didn’t pull the plug when he did, we’d still
be at it. I’m very thankful for Lance, Yvette and my years with The Firm. I
learned a lot. Lance is the older brother I never had. I have so much respect
and admiration for that guy.
But how bad did Salman’s sockless feet smell back in the
day?
(laughs) Dude! Sally and
Stranger both, man! Whew!!!! If those cats took their shoes off in the van, you
were done! If you lived through that, you are one tough cookie!
Not that I can say anything,
I was right up in there with no socks, too. But I chose to keep my shoes on. I
wasn’t trying to air them out in the van! (laughs)
And doing that is so bad for
your feet! Blisters and all that… especially where the seams are? Don’t do it!
What about filming your first “modern part” for Can’t Stop? Did you take a more
2000s approach with trick lists and sitting in on editing?
No, I never had any trick
lists but I’m pretty sure I sat in on some of the editing.
The big difference with filming
Can’t Stop was that we traveled together
to a lot other countries. We also took longer to film for it, too. But whenever
you travel together for filming like that, you tend to find yourself at a lot
of different spots based on what other guys want to skate. You end up filming
wherever because people see things and they get ideas… but there are always spots that you’re maybe
not that interested in, which can make you feel like you’re just tagging along in a way. So
you start to hope that it’s a spot that you can get something on, too. That was
a big change.
You never went on any solo missions?
There were a few times where
I felt the need to grab Kurt Hayashi and hash some things out solo, of course.
Maybe a few spots that I saw earlier in the day that I wanted to hit by myself.
Ideas where I didn’t necessarily want to make the other guys wait around for me
to do it. But it’s always more fun with a crew.
Honestly, I feel like I’ve
gone about all of my solo parts the same way, just with different tricks. My
thought process has always been more or less the same.
“What can I do here? How can
I get excited about this spot? Okay, how about this?”
To me, video parts are like
when you think about the back catalog of your favorite bands, they’re all based
in a time. Very rarely does someone’s style not reflect the changes of a
constantly-evolving environment. That’s how creativity works.
Don’t get me wrong, there’s
always pressure with each part. Pressure to get tricks. You’re always tallying
up what you got every day. That’s what drives you. Going on a trip and having
not gotten anything yet? It’s the worst!
Do you have any madness-type stresses when it comes
to skating? You always look like you’re having the best time.
My son just asked me this
the other day and actually, I do. If you watch, I’ll always do like a kickflip
or a tre flip as I roll up to get myself hyped before trying whatever it is
that I really want to try. The feeling of landing something clean on my way in,
it’s a mental thing for me. It really helps. It makes me feel like I’m more
ready somehow.
“Alright, that heelflip felt
good. I’m on point, I’m concentrating… Okay, let’s go!”
It doesn’t matter what I’m
trying. It doesn’t even need to have a flip in it, like a feeble or something.
But that’s what I gotta do.
After rolling through every conceivable trend, what’s
been your favorite era of skating? And with always so much attention on the
Rubber Boys, what’s your personal favorite Ray Barbee video part?
It’s kinda like when you
first get turned on to a band. Most people love the Beatles but everyone has a
different favorite album, right? A lot of times, that person’s favorite is the
first one they heard. That’s how skateboarding is for me. I have the fondest
memories of those early times, when there was such a sense of wonder with it
all.
As far as a personal
favorite part, I can’t really say because they’re all my babies. I was sincere
with all that stuff. Obviously there are tricks in each that I’m a bit more
excited about, for the time, but I can’t say one part as a whole. Of course,
I’d have to say that I’m most thankful for Public
Domain. I’m talking to you right now because of that part. Knowing that,
it’s hard not to acknowledge the Rubber Boys.
As a street pioneer, how have you gone about staying relevant
as so many of your contemporaries either fell back or retired?
I’m not really sure. I just
know that I still want to skate and push myself. So I just do what I can do and
try to be out there. I realize that I can’t keep up with the young dudes.
Physically, it’s not even possible. There will always be anomalies like Guy and
Daewon, but the reality of the situation is that our bodies are deteriorating. So
I want to get all that I can out of it. That’s why I’m so thankful for my
sponsors supporting me and being able to use all of my other interests, like my
music and photography.
But yeah, that’s really it…
Just do what you can do, keep pushing yourself and make sure you want to be out
there.
Special thanks to Mark Whiteley and Ray for taking the time.
=O
=O
12 comments:
Awesome interview. I always listed for suede visions because of Ray but couldn't afford them and had to skate the cheaper canvas versions of Chuck's.
*lusted
Glad it was mostlyskating,to be frank I don't care about music or photograpgy
Crucial read. So sick. Thanks Chops! Thanks Ray.
Thanks for that! Ray Barbee seems like such a cool guy. That Public Domain part was one of the first times I realized that style was something important.
Should have asked him about "Afro Fu," "Angry Fu Man" and "Micro Fu"
Great read! Have been trying to emulate Chris Miller & Ray Barbee on a skateboard for the last 30 years. Legendary style and the nicest guy.
Great read, thank you.. I agree, I came to read about Ray Barbee's history as a skater, it is well documented that he does other things. I am just glad he still pops up in a Vans video or something, with that crisp style we were all inspired by...
the fact that he is a great musician just makes him that much cooler..
who are his sponsors? Vans & Element? Does Element even promote him?
Looking forward to seeing more footage of this legend..
Thank you for that interview Chops. Ray thanks for let us feel close to you, and for expressing everything in the best way, so people like me, who skated on the 90's and still, feel again in those younger years. You're one of the best and your story must be a neccesary subject for everyone who call himselve skaters. Thanks and blessing my friend. I'm skating one of your element boards right in this days.
Sick read. His reference to the Bible and World Industries vs Powell days was quite intriguing.
~ Neil Nice
still holding out for the paul luna or lopez bros. chrome ball treatment.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rATPTlcKlzE
Thank you, Ray is so rad!! I watched The Rubber Boys every time I went skating, wanting Ray's style to rub off on me!
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