Creepy Nuts

As Billboard Japan unveiled its 2024 year-end charts, the hip-hop duo Creepy Nuts ā rapper R-Shitei (also known as R-rated) and DJ Matsunaga ā land the No. 1 song of the year for the country, with their mega-hit āBling-Bang-Bang-Bornā taking the top spot on the all-genre Japan Hot 100 chart (which applies six metrics to songs: physical sales, downloads, streaming, airplay, video views and karaoke). The high-octane track also tops the year-end Global Japan Songs Excl. Japan ranking by a huge margin after holding the No. 1 position for 24 weeks, the longest ever in the history of the chart that ranks songs from Japan that are listened to internationally. In total, āBling-Bang-Bang-Bornā has dominated 12 year-end Billboard Japan roundups.
Amid the songās success, Creepy Nuts have stayed extremely busy, traveling the world for festival performance dates while working on their new album. Billboard Japan caught up with the two artists as they wrapped their whirlwind year.
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How do you feel about the success of āBling-Bang-Bang-Bornā on the year-end charts?
DJ Matsunaga: It kind of hasnāt really sunk in yet.
R-Shitei: Yeah, itās like my brain hasnāt been able to keep up at this stage. Iām like, āOhā¦ Awesomeā¦ā (Laughs.) ā¦āÆCompared to the first half of the year, the reaction to our shows [helps bring it into perspective]ā¦ But I think weāre a lot more confused about it all than people might think.
DJ Matsunaga: Itās still hard to believe weāre at the top of any kind of ranking. (Looks at R-Shitei.) Right?
Still, after āBling-Bang-Bang-Bornā became a global hit, your follow-up track, āOtonoke,ā continues to do well: On Billboardās World Digital Song Sales chart, it reached No. 1 five times (on the charts dated Oct. 19, Nov. 2, Nov. 16, Nov. 23 and Dec. 14). Youāve been on a roll in 2024.
DJ Matsunaga: Wowā¦
R-Shitei: Thatās amazing. Both āOtonokeā and āBling-Bang-Bang-Bornā were written around the same time. We were working on the former when we had no idea that the latter would become such a hit. āBling-Bang-Bang-Bornā is a work weāre really proud of, but when we were making those songs, āOtonokeā was the one we felt the most confidence in. So when the year started and āBling-Bang-Bang-Bornā became pretty popular, I was like, āSo people seem to like this a lot,ā and āWell, weāre really proud of āOtonoke,ā tooā when we released it. So Iām genuinely happy to see that people seem to accept āOtonokeā as well.
DJ Matsunaga: [The chart results are] too much of a blessing, so I donāt think itās right to use it as a precedentā¦
R-Shitei: Thatās true. Itās hard, isnāt it? Rankings can be both a source of encouragement and poison for artists.
DJ Matsunaga: For real.
R-Shitei: Weāre happy and grateful, but donāt want to focus too much on thatā¦ Our goal isnāt to do well on the charts. Itās to keep updating our own definition of āgood.ā Weāre making new songs with that in mind, too.
āHow do you interpret chart rankings?ā is a question we often ask various artists. In a recent interview, Ayase from YOASOBI said heās now working with āa really fresh feelingā after becoming the No. 1 Artist of the Year on Billboard Japanās Artist 100 ranking in 2023 with āIdol,ā because a weight has been lifted from his shoulders.
R-Shitei and DJ Matsunaga: What?!
DJ Matsunaga: The way he approaches music is completely different. When I first started out, it felt like the notion of making enough money to get by by doing hip-hop was just a pipe dream, so being able to make a living from hip-hop and quitting my part-time job was a huge weight off my shoulders. (Laughs.) Like, I donāt have to be chasing my dream while working part-time in my 30s, you know?
R-Shitei: Thatās normal, and Iād still like it regardless, so I was vaguely thinking that Iād be doing hip-hop [like that in my 30s] when I first got started.
DJ Matsunaga: Yeah, we have proper respect for those who keep at it while working part-time jobs in their 30s.
R-Shitei: When I was able to make a living doing music, I thought I was really luckyā¦ Now when you look around, [many hip-hop artists in Japan] are making a living and there are even hit songsā¦ all of this, including the fact that hip-hop is so popular in Japan, makes me really happy.
DJ Matsunaga: I really agree.
R-Shitei: We never planned to make songs that would be listened to around the world. Itās really just about expressing what we want to get out and releasing the pent-up [feelings] weāve been holding in, basically.
Tell us a bit more about āOtonoke.ā How did you go about making it?
R-Shitei: Usually, I get the beat from Matsunaga and add my rap to it, but this time, because we made it around the same time as āBling-Bang-Bang-Born,ā I was like, āIāll go to a completely different place by extension of the same mindset.ā I was in a period where I wanted to make songs using a fundamental rhythm as the key, rather than language. And I thought that a non-verbal rhythm like āBling-Bang-Bang-Bornā would be good. It was going to be the theme song for [the anime series] Dandadan, so I thought Iād try making it by using āDandadanā as the starting rhythm, and decided to use the same rhyme as āDandadan Dandadanā [in the intro] for the verse. I recorded something like scat that wasnāt really a language, sent it to Matsunaga and had him flesh out the track.
I see! So the rhyme came first.
R-Shitei: Right. So the sound that was going āDandadan Dandadanā a cappella became more and more like language, and then it became a slightly slower melody, and then a more bouncy melody, and so on. The rhythm stays the same, but the flavor changes. Iād only imagined it as a straight line climbing up, but Matsunaga expanded it horizontally with the track. The scenery changes suddenly when you get to the bridge that goes āHaireta Haireta,ā and itās because he really opened it up there during the scat stage, adding that completely different development. And the lyrics changed to āHairetaā (āIām inā) at that point. I thought, āThis feels like Iāve āgone in.ā ā Like, if I were a āspecter of sound (oto no ke),ā a music monster, Iād probably enter peopleās brains through their ears at the moment when the scenery changes suddenly. So, words also appear during our back-and-forth.
DJ Matsunaga: What was good about this time was that I had the a cappella version, where R had already gone the distance with the same rhymes and prosody, so I was able to add crazy development to the track. No matter how much I changed it, the rap maintains the same groove as it develops, so the song doesnāt fall apart at all. Heād given me that kind of guarantee first, so I was able to make bold developments that wouldnāt ordinarily have been possible. I mean, itās possible to make [tracks like that] at any time, but itās not easy to make something that works beautifully after itās done, even if you intend to make it that way.
You appeared at festivals in the United States, South Korea and Taiwan this year. What was the response like?
R-Shitei: There were moments when I could tell people knew our songs and were responding to them, and that made me really happy. And of course I feel it when people are really grooving and partying. But I think weāre only starting to understand how people really feel about us.
DJ Matsunaga: The main reason is that we havenāt done any tours. Weāve only appeared in events so far. Each country is completely different, and the audience in each country is also completely different, so itās not like we can compare themā¦
R-Shitei: We donāt have enough data yet inside ourselves, right?
DJ Matsunaga: It feels like weāre still at the entry level. Even if we were talking about Japan, festivals that youāre invited to perform in are irregular spaces.
R-Shitei: Yeah.
DJ Matsunaga: So we can only get a real feel for it by doing our own tours while performing in those invited events, then adding up and dividing them.
What is your vision for the future?
R-Shitei: To make things feel good to me from the end of this year and on to the next, I need to focus on the things that are right in front of meā¦ Iām in the middle of making an album, so my mindās still on that. Rather than any kind of vision, Iām thinking about what I should do with the next bar or the next line, you know? I mean, just nowā¦
DJ Matsunaga: Yeah, we were talking about it for a long time just now [before the interview].
R-Shitei: Yeah! We were coming up with themes and ideas nonstop, so I guess thatās the biggest thing occupying my mind right now. Thatās exactly my vision for the future.
DJ Matsunaga: Me too. Ninety percent of my private life is like that. (Laughs.)
R-Shitei: Also, my way of thinking might have reverted to the way it was before. While the content of our songs has evolved a lot and weāve grown from around 2013 to 2014 when Creepy Nuts began, itās likeā¦ I canāt find the right words to describe it. But if you listen to the album, you might understand.
DJ Matsunaga: Itās like weāve gone back a decade. Weāll lose our social position.
Lose your what?
R-Shitei: (Laughs.)
DJ Matsunaga: Our social position will go down. (Laughs.) I mean, when you do work and stand in front of people and appear in the media and advertisingā¦ When you branch out from just making music and become involved with people in companies, you inevitably have to take on social responsibilities. Now that weāve returned to a lifestyle focusing on music, it feels like the irresponsibleness that I had before is back.
R-Shitei: If the stages in our career had continued to visibly rise in an easy-to-understand way like from 2020 to 2022, and weād kept busy, constantly appearing in the media and so on, I probably would have felt that I should only say proper things. I might have just ended up trying to say good things in my songs. But we stopped doing that and just focused on the music and our expression and the things we like. As a result, I figured I might be able to express the bad and ugly parts of myself in an irresponsible way, which is something I used to think about when I first started rapping. Because the thing that makes hip-hop interesting to me is how it allows you to express the dirty stuff in its raw form.
DJ Matsunaga: Thatās true. Express bad stuff like it is.
R-Shitei: As a listener you go, āDude shouldnāt be saying that!ā but the way itās so bad and crazy makes it exciting as hip-hop. And then thereās āDude says some good stuff once in a while, doesnāt he?ā (Laughs.) So itās a balance. Itās hard to express succinctly, but weāve evolved in certain ways while still being like, āNo way, weāre no good at all to begin with as human beings.ā Itās about being able to go, āSo what?ā and expressing that as well next time.
DJ Matsunaga: It feels like weāve regained the courage to do that.
R-Shitei: Feels like we got it back, doesnāt it?
DJ Matsunaga: Thatās so true! We got it back and somehowā¦ Iāve found a balance. Itās more natural and I actually feel more level-headed now.
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