Fatin: Unc is Auntie’s man. Also, it’s the OG in the neighborhood. In a lot of ways for me, now, I’m about to turn 48 years old, I’ve been doing music together with my wife for over 20 years. I got six kids. I got a lot of family and friends who look up to me. I’ve got a lot of understudies and the mentees in a sense, so I don’t think that ages you more. It’s just like a title that is reserved in certain spaces of our community.
What love advice is in this album?
Fatin: I think we [try to] stay away from advice. Alternatively, we just like to affirm where we are. And that if that resonates with other people, then at least they know they got the authentic us. So for if there was something you could get from this album, in terms of where we are, we’re just at a place in our relationship where we feel confident about what it means and what it has done for us.
Aja: And we’re not going anywhere, this is what it is and it’s strong, and the state of our union is strong.
What do you say to these artists singing and rapping about drugs?
Fatin: I think living the example is more like we are what we sing about. We don’t do anything other than that.