oO5 Dynasty Interview: Inside the Haunted Architecture of Ghost Wav –


In a rare exclusive interview, oO5 Dynasty, the creative alias of Jamel Marshall Pearson, opened the door to Ghost Wav with the rare clarity of an artist building a genre from lived history, memory and self-defined philosophy. Across this expansive interview, he traces the roots of the sound through early productions, family legacy, filmic atmosphere, dance, design, archiving and the tools that helped shape his musical language. The conversation moves through originality, preservation, creative ownership and the refusal to let algorithms flatten art into disposable repetition.

What follows is a manifesto for independent thought, emotional movement and a future where Ghost Wav grows through contribution rather than imitation.

A&R Factory asked:
Ghost Wav is being positioned as a standalone genre rather than a loose sound or aesthetic. What was the first moment where you realised this had its own identity, rules and future?

Ghost Wav Wasn’t Created Overnight. I Had Been Chasing It for More Than 20 Years.

There are moments in life when your past suddenly begins making sense.

I’ve been experiencing that lately.

Every day, driving to and from work, I listen to my old productions. Records I made nearly twenty years ago with artists like Legend of New York, Pody, A.O. Baker, Gemstar, Arlis Michaels, and collaborations featuring Staxx Paper.

Most people probably haven’t heard these songs in years.

But I have.

I listen to them faithfully because they represent something much deeper than nostalgia.

They represent discovery.

As I replay those records today, I don’t hear old beats.

I hear the beginning of Ghost Wav.

## Before I Had a Name for It

Back then, I didn’t know music theory the way I do today.

I wasn’t thinking about pivot-chord modulation.

I wasn’t intentionally writing songs that ascended and descended emotionally.

I wasn’t thinking about cinematic movement as a philosophy.

I simply kept trying.

Every beat was another experiment.

Every song was another question.

Every recording session was another opportunity to discover something I didn’t know yesterday.

Looking back now, I realize something incredible.

I wasn’t trying to copy anyone.

I was following emotion.

That made all the difference.

## Trying Is One of Humanity’s Greatest Superpowers

People often believe creativity begins after enough tutorials.

I don’t.

Some of the most important work I’ve ever created came before I understood why it worked.

I had very little experience.

Very little formal understanding.

But I had curiosity.

I kept experimenting.

I kept building.

I kept failing.

Then trying again.

There’s something extraordinary about what happens when a human being focuses completely on one problem without worrying about everyone’s opinions.

That process teaches lessons no tutorial can.

## Listening With Twenty Years of Experience

Today I hear those records differently.

I hear melodies reaching for places I didn’t yet understand.

I hear arrangements trying to move instead of remaining static.

I hear atmosphere.

I hear emotion.

Most importantly…

I hear movement.

Not movement because I knew the theory.

Movement because that’s what felt right.

Ghost Wav didn’t suddenly appear in 2020.

The seeds were already there years earlier.

I simply hadn’t discovered the language to explain what I was hearing.

## The Artists Made Me Believe Even More

One thing continues to amaze me.

The artists sounded different on my productions.

Legend’s flow felt more natural.

The records breathed differently.

The music seemed to invite performances instead of forcing them.

Those same artists could rap over traditional boom bap, trap, drill, or downloaded industry instrumentals.

But something happened when they stepped onto my productions.

The songs became conversations instead of performances.

Looking back, I think it’s because the music itself was already telling a story before the vocals ever arrived.

## Ghost Wav Is the Evolution of That Discovery

Today I no longer depend on samples to create movement.

Now I can compose it.

I can change keys naturally.

I can guide emotion from one section to another.

I can layer orchestration.

I can build atmosphere through texture.

I can use reverb as an emotional instrument instead of just an effect.

I can shape space itself.

Everything I admired in great records—the movement, the tension, the release, the unexpected turns—I now understand well enough to build intentionally.

Ghost Wav isn’t replacing who I was.

It’s revealing who I was becoming all along.

## Looking Back Is Sometimes the Greatest Teacher

People often think progress only comes from looking forward.

Sometimes it comes from looking backward.

Listening to those old productions reminded me that my instincts were leading me long before my knowledge caught up.

That’s one of the greatest gifts experience gives you.

You begin understanding the younger version of yourself.

You stop judging your early work.

Instead, you appreciate its honesty.

You realize that your vision existed before your vocabulary.

## Ghost Wav Is More Than a Genre

People may hear Ghost Wav as a new genre of music.

I hear something different.

I hear twenty years of unanswered questions finally finding answers.

I hear every late night producing.

Every recording session.

Every artist.

Every melody.

Every mistake.

Every experiment.

Every moment I simply tried.

Ghost Wav isn’t just a sound.

It’s the destination my music had been walking toward long before I knew its name.

Sometimes your greatest creation isn’t something you invent overnight.

Sometimes it’s something you’ve been building your entire life without realizing it.

And one day…

You finally hear it.

“Ghost Wav isn’t a composition system. It’s a creative philosophy with a musical foundation.”
— oO5 Dynasty

 

A&R Factory asked:
You describe Ghost Wav as combining cinematic atmosphere with groove and movement. How do you balance the filmic, almost world-building side of the sound with the physical pull that makes people want to move?

Ghost Wav Isn’t About Balancing Genres. It’s About Understanding What Each Genre Leaves Behind.

When people first hear Ghost Wav, they often ask the same question.

“How do you balance cinematic atmosphere with groove and movement?”

The truth is…

I don’t.

That question assumes I’m trying to combine two existing worlds and find a middle ground between them.

I’m not.

Ghost Wav was never created by balancing genres.

It was created by understanding them deeply enough to know what they were missing.

Every Genre Already Has Its Strengths

Hip-hop already has groove.

Reggae understands rhythm in a way few genres ever will.

Film scores have mastered atmosphere.

Cinematic music understands psychology.

Classical music understands harmony.

None of those things needed me to reinvent them.

They already existed.

The question wasn’t how to balance them.

The question was:

What happens when you remove the limitations each genre has?

That question changed everything.

Hip-Hop Taught Me Movement Through Rhythm

I grew up around hip-hop.

I grew up around reggae.

I danced.

I produced.

I performed.

I watched what music did to people.

When a beat drops…

People move.

When the groove locks in…

People stop thinking and start feeling.

Hip-hop has always understood physical movement.

But after years of producing, I noticed something.

Many songs became trapped inside their first loop.

The groove stayed.

The emotion didn’t always evolve.

The body of the song remained relatively static.

That wasn’t a criticism.

It was simply an observation.

I wanted music to keep moving emotionally the same way dancers move physically.

Cinema Taught Me Psychological Movement

Then there were movies.

I’ve always loved films.

Not just the stories.

The sound.

The silence.

The atmosphere.

Sometimes a sound happens before you even see what’s coming.

Sometimes one distant texture changes your emotional state before a single character speaks.

Film composers understand something incredible.

Music can move your emotions without saying a word.

That fascinated me.

But cinematic music often serves the picture.

It isn’t usually built around groove.

It creates atmosphere beautifully.

It doesn’t always invite your body to move.

Ghost Wav Began With Subtraction

This is where Ghost Wav started.

Not by adding everything together.

By subtracting.

I asked myself:

What if I removed stagnation from hip-hop?

What if I removed the lack of groove from cinematic music?

What if movement itself became the foundation?

Ghost Wav wasn’t built by combining genres.

It was built by removing the walls that kept those genres from reaching each other.

Music Theory Opened the Door

Once I understood that movement was the destination, I needed a way to create it intentionally.

That’s when music theory became essential.

Learning pivot-chord modulation changed everything.

Instead of remaining in one emotional space, I could guide a song naturally from one key to another.

A section could ascend.

Another could descend.

A major key could become a minor key.

A chorus could feel like it was lifting into the sky.

A verse could quietly fall back to earth.

Every four or eight bars, the emotional landscape could change without feeling forced.

The music itself began traveling.

That’s what Ghost Wav is.

A journey.

Movement Exists Beyond Melody

Movement isn’t only harmonic.

It’s spatial.

Most producers understand panning from left to right.

I became fascinated with another dimension.

Front to back.

What I think of as north and south.

Reverb stacking became one of the ways I explored that space.

Instead of simply making sounds “wet,” I began placing them at different emotional distances.

Some instruments feel close enough to touch.

Others sound like they’re echoing from the horizon.

Sometimes a texture appears once in an entire song and never returns.

Not because it needs repetition.

Because it only exists to move the listener emotionally at that exact moment.

Every sound has a purpose.

The Instrumental Should Already Tell a Story

One philosophy guides everything I create.

The instrumental should already be telling a story before the artist ever begins singing or rapping.

When vocals finally arrive, they shouldn’t create the story.

They should continue one that already exists.

That’s why Ghost Wav doesn’t feel like a collection of loops.

It feels like traveling through scenes.

Each section reveals another piece of the journey.

Ghost Wav Is About Human Emotion

People sometimes assume Ghost Wav is defined by cinematic textures.

Or reverb.

Or modulation.

Or orchestration.

Those are tools.

The real foundation is movement.

Psychological movement.

Emotional movement.

Physical movement.

Ghost Wav asks one simple question throughout every composition:

How can this next moment make the listener feel something different from the last?

When every section answers that question…

The song begins to float.

Like a ghost.

Not because it’s haunting.

But because it’s always moving.

Never standing still.

“Marketing Shows Possibilities. Research Reveals Purpose.”
— oO5 Dynasty

 

A&R Factory asked:
Your creative background stretches across production, recording, filmmaking, design, choreography and content creation. How much of Ghost Wav comes from seeing music as something visual, physical and architectural at the same time?

Ghost Wav Was Already Inside Me. My Life Simply Gave It a Voice.

One of my favorite questions people ask is how my background in production, recording, filmmaking, design, choreography, and entertainment shaped Ghost Wav.

I like the question because it goes deeper than asking what software I use or what inspires a particular song.

It asks something much bigger.

How does a lifetime become a genre?

For me, the answer is surprisingly simple.

Ghost Wav didn’t come from looking outward.

It came from looking inward.

Your Genre Might Already Be Inside You

One thing I’ve tried to encourage creators to do throughout my career is to stop looking for themselves in other people’s work.

Today, we’re surrounded by tutorials, algorithms, trends, and social media telling us what successful music should sound like.

People spend years studying existing genres.

Very few spend time studying themselves.

That’s backwards.

Hip-hop isn’t my genre.

I love it.

I grew up with it.

I’ve produced it.

I’ve danced to it.

I’ve lived it.

But I didn’t create it.

The same is true for cinematic music.

I love film scores.

I love the way they manipulate emotion.

I love how they create atmosphere before a single word is spoken.

But I didn’t create that either.

Ghost Wav came from asking a different question.

What does my own life sound like?

Every Experience Leaves a Fingerprint

People often think inspiration comes from listening to more music.

Sometimes it comes from paying attention to your own life.

Everything I experienced found its way into Ghost Wav.

Music production.

Recording sessions.

Songwriting.

Graphic design.

Filmmaking.

Dance.

Graffiti.

Photography.

Watching movies.

Listening to background scores that many people never even notice.

Even the way I watch a film is different.

Some people leave the theater talking about the actors.

Some leave talking about the story.

I often leave thinking about a sound that lasted three seconds.

A distant texture.

A subtle melody.

A single musical phrase that completely changed the emotional weight of a scene.

Those moments stay with me.

Eventually they became part of my music.

Ghost Wav Existed Before It Had a Name

One realization changed everything for me.

Ghost Wav didn’t suddenly appear when I named it.

It was already inside me.

Looking back at productions I made in the early 2000s, I can hear it.

Not perfectly.

Not fully developed.

But it’s there.

The emotional movement.

The atmosphere.

The desire to escape repetition.

The instinct to let music evolve instead of remaining static.

At the time I didn’t understand why I kept chasing those ideas.

I had no theory.

No terminology.

No philosophy.

I was simply following instinct.

Years later I finally understood what those instincts had been trying to teach me.

Creativity Is an Organic Process

People sometimes ask me which skill influenced Ghost Wav the most.

Was it dancing?

Producing?

Film?

Design?

Music theory?

The honest answer is…

All of them.

And none of them individually.

Ghost Wav wasn’t built by selecting one discipline over another.

It emerged naturally from the totality of my life.

Every experience contributed something.

Every mistake contributed something.

Every success contributed something.

Every late-night studio session.

Every conversation.

Every performance.

Every experiment.

It all accumulated until one day I finally recognized the pattern.

Protecting My Own Voice

Throughout my career I was fortunate enough to work with talented artists and spend time around people who had already achieved remarkable success.

Those experiences taught me a great deal.

But one lesson mattered more than any other.

Never lose your own voice.

It’s easy to spend your life chasing the next trend.

Boom bap.

Trap.

Drill.

Afrobeats.

Whatever dominates the moment.

There’s nothing wrong with appreciating those genres.

The danger comes when they replace your own identity.

I never wanted to become someone else’s echo.

I wanted to discover what was uniquely mine.

Ghost Wav became the result of that decision.

What If Everyone Looked Within?

Sometimes I wonder what music would sound like if more people stopped trying to fit into existing categories.

What if every creator spent less time asking,

“What’s popular?”

and more time asking,

“What already exists inside me?”

Maybe we’d discover genres that don’t exist yet.

Maybe we’d hear sounds no one has imagined.

Maybe music would continue evolving instead of repeating itself.

That’s one of the reasons I openly share the philosophy behind Ghost Wav.

Not because I want people to copy it.

Quite the opposite.

I hope it encourages people to discover something that’s uniquely theirs.

Ghost Wav Is My Life in Musical Form

When people hear Ghost Wav, they’re hearing more than a style of music.

They’re hearing decades of experiences converging into one creative language.

Dance.

Film.

Design.

Architecture.

Psychology.

Production.

Emotion.

Curiosity.

Persistence.

None of those things existed separately inside me.

They always belonged together.

I just needed enough years, enough failures, enough victories, and enough understanding to recognize the language they had been speaking all along.

Ghost Wav wasn’t something I invented by looking at the world.

It was something I discovered by finally listening to myself.

“A foundation should support imagination, not limit it.”
— oO5 Dynasty

 

A&R Factory asked:
Before oO5 Dynasty, there was Legacy, Legendary Team and a whole earlier era of work. What did that chapter teach you about discipline, authorship and protecting your own creative language?

Before I Became oO5 Dynasty, I Learned How to Help Someone Else Build a Dream

People often ask me what my years as Legacy and my time with Legendary Team taught me.

Most expect me to talk about the music industry.

The truth is…

The greatest lesson wasn’t about music.

It was about becoming useful.

I Didn’t Start With Talent

When people look at me today, they see someone who produces music, writes songs, builds websites, designs graphics, creates videos, researches music theory, and documents history.

It can look like those skills simply appeared.

They didn’t.

I started with almost nothing.

My twin brother, Tywan Mitchell Pearson—known professionally as Legend of New York—already knew what he wanted.

He wanted to become a recording artist.

He spent countless hours writing lyrics, developing his craft, and chasing his dream.

I looked at that and asked myself a different question.

How can I help?

That single question changed my life.

Every Problem Became an Opportunity to Learn

If Legend needed beats…

I learned how to make beats.

If he needed artwork…

I learned Photoshop.

If he needed a website…

I learned HTML and CSS.

If he needed someone to understand contracts…

I studied business.

If I needed a deeper understanding of the recording industry…

I enrolled at the Institute of Audio Research in New York City.

Every challenge became another skill.

Not because I wanted to collect talents.

Because I wanted to remove obstacles.

Looking back, I realize I wasn’t just helping build Legendary Team.

I was building myself.

Legacy Was Given to Me

One thing many people don’t know is that I didn’t choose the name Legacy.

Legend gave it to me.

Because he was Legend, he looked at me one day and said,

“Your name should be Legacy.”

At the time, I didn’t fully appreciate what that meant.

Years later, I understood something important.

Not every part of your story is chosen by you.

Some opportunities find you.

Some names find you.

Some responsibilities find you.

Life isn’t only about creating your own path.

Sometimes it’s about how you respond to the path that’s placed in front of you.

Consistency Built Everything

People often ask what the secret is.

There wasn’t one.

I simply showed up.

Every day.

I made another beat.

Designed another graphic.

Built another webpage.

Went to another recording session.

Took another photograph.

Learned another lesson.

Most of those early beats were probably terrible.

Most people will never hear them.

But they served their purpose.

Every bad beat taught me something the next beat needed.

Progress wasn’t glamorous.

It was repetitive.

Being Present Was an Education

Even when I wasn’t the featured artist…

I was there.

Even when I wasn’t the lead producer…

I was there.

Even when I wasn’t speaking…

I was listening.

Recording sessions became classrooms.

Conversations became education.

Watching professionals work became part of my training.

Sometimes the greatest lesson isn’t being the person in the spotlight.

Sometimes it’s simply being in the room long enough to understand how greatness is built.

Legendary Team Became My University

People often think education only happens inside schools.

For me, Legendary Team was another kind of university.

Working alongside artists.

Producing records.

Filming.

Designing.

Traveling.

Problem-solving.

Building.

Failing.

Trying again.

Those experiences taught me things no textbook ever could.

By the time people started recognizing my work, they were seeing the result of thousands of invisible hours.

Legacy Built oO5 Dynasty

People sometimes separate my past from my present.

I don’t.

Legacy didn’t disappear.

Legacy evolved.

Without those years…

There would be no Ghost Wav.

There would be no documentaries.

No websites.

No archives.

No production philosophy.

No oO5 Dynasty.

Everything I create today stands on foundations that were built years earlier.

Becoming the Ultimate Human Being

One philosophy has guided me throughout my life.

I never wanted to become the best at one thing.

I wanted to become the best version of myself.

Every new skill became another tool.

Photography.

Music production.

Graphic design.

Filmmaking.

Dance.

Web development.

Business.

Writing.

Research.

None of those disciplines compete with one another.

Together, they make me a more complete creator.

They allow me to contribute wherever I’m needed.

Success Isn’t Just About Yourself

Looking back, I don’t think Legacy was only preparing me for a career.

It was preparing me for a philosophy.

Helping someone else taught me how to help myself.

Building a team taught me how to build a vision.

Learning one skill taught me how to learn anything.

The music industry showed me success.

It also showed me disappointment.

It showed me loyalty.

It showed me betrayal.

It showed me creativity.

It showed me imitation.

Every experience became another layer of understanding.

Today, people know me as oO5 Dynasty.

They see Ghost Wav.

They see the music.

They see the philosophy.

But none of those things appeared overnight.

Before there was oO5 Dynasty…

There was Legacy.

And Legacy taught me that the greatest investment you can ever make isn’t into a trend, a platform, or even a career.

It’s into becoming the kind of person who can keep growing, no matter what life asks of you next.

“If everyone creates identical Ghost Wav… then Ghost Wav has failed.”
— oO5 Dynasty

 

A&R Factory asked:
You’ve been releasing archival productions, including songs produced for Legend of NY. What does preservation mean to you in a culture that keeps pushing artists to chase the next trend instead of documenting what already mattered?

I Didn’t Start Documenting My Work Because I Wanted Fame. I Started Because I Learned What It Feels Like to Lose History.

People often ask why I’ve spent so much time archiving my music, documenting my work, and preserving projects that many creators would have left behind years ago.

The answer has very little to do with music.

It has everything to do with history.

Following Is Human Nature

I don’t believe people wake up one morning and consciously decide to become followers.

I think it happens naturally.

From the day we’re born, we’re taught by someone else.

Our parents teach us how to walk.

How to speak.

How to read.

How to understand the world.

Following is one of the first things we ever learn.

As adults, that instinct often continues.

Only now we’re following trends.

Following algorithms.

Following influencers.

Following whatever everyone else is doing.

Most people aren’t trying to lose themselves.

They’re simply repeating what they’ve always been taught.

Then, for some people, something changes.

It’s almost like waking up.

You suddenly step outside the crowd and realize…

“I’ve been following everyone else’s path instead of discovering my own.”

That realization changes everything.

I Never Planned to Build an Archive

People sometimes assume I always intended to preserve everything I created.

I didn’t.

I simply never wanted to throw it away.

Old hard drives.

Music sessions.

Photos.

Videos.

Graphics.

Projects.

They stayed with me because getting rid of them never felt right.

I wasn’t building an archive.

I was simply holding onto pieces of my life.

Years later, I realized those pieces had become history.

Losing My Mother Changed the Way I Value Memory

When I was a child, my mother passed away.

Afterward, much of what we had in our home disappeared.

Photographs.

Personal belongings.

Memories captured in physical form.

Gone.

Some relatives later found and shared a few photographs with us.

Without them, many moments would have existed only in memory.

That experience stayed with me.

I don’t think I understood it at the time.

But looking back now, I believe it quietly shaped the way I treat everything I create.

I learned early that once history disappears…

Sometimes it never comes back.

The Internet Taught Me Another Lesson

Years later I began speaking publicly about creativity, originality, and what I eventually called the Copy and Clone Generation.

As those conversations grew, people naturally asked questions about my own history.

“Where’s your proof?”

“What have you done?”

“Where’s the evidence?”

At first, I wasn’t bothered.

Because I knew what I had lived.

But then I realized something important.

If your work isn’t documented…

To the outside world, it might as well not exist.

That wasn’t a painful realization.

It was an educational one.

I had spent years producing records.

Designing.

Filming.

Building websites.

Creating graphics.

Working behind the scenes.

Helping artists.

But because much of it had never been publicly documented, people couldn’t see it.

Not because it wasn’t real.

Because it wasn’t preserved where others could discover it.

A Digital Museum

That realization completely changed my philosophy.

I no longer wanted to simply create.

I wanted to preserve.

That’s when the idea of building a digital museum emerged.

Not a museum about fame.

A museum about evidence.

A place where music…

Photography…

Design…

Dance…

Film…

Writing…

Ghost Wav…

And every chapter of my creative life could exist together.

Not because I need validation.

Because history deserves preservation.

Trends Eventually Disappear

One reason I never became interested in chasing trends is because trends have expiration dates.

Today’s viral sound becomes tomorrow’s forgotten algorithm.

History works differently.

History compounds.

The more accurately it’s documented…

The more valuable it becomes.

I’d rather spend twenty years building something people can study than twenty days building something people scroll past.

Documentation Is an Act of Respect

Today, I don’t archive my work because I believe every project is perfect.

I archive it because every project represents a moment that can never happen again.

Every song.

Every photograph.

Every interview.

Every website.

Every documentary.

Every experiment.

Together they tell a story that no single project ever could.

That’s why I continue documenting.

Not because I’m chasing trends.

Not because I’m chasing fame.

But because I finally understand something I learned many years ago.

When history is lost…

Part of us disappears with it.

When history is preserved…

Future generations can still hear our voice.

 

A&R Factory asked:
The idea of structured digital archives, websites, publications and media platforms feels central to what you’re building. Are you thinking of Ghost Wav as a music genre, a historical record, a creative institution, or all of those at once?

Ghost Wav Isn’t a Rulebook. It’s a Foundation for Human Creativity.

One question I often receive is whether Ghost Wav is becoming more than a musical genre.

People ask about the websites.

The documentation.

The articles.

The archives.

The diagrams.

The philosophy.

Sometimes they assume I’m trying to create a rigid structure around Ghost Wav.

The truth is…

I’m trying to do the opposite.

Every Structure Needs a Foundation

I believe every meaningful creation needs a foundation.

Ghost Wav is no different.

That foundation isn’t a specific instrument.

It isn’t a specific tempo.

It isn’t a specific chord progression.

It isn’t even a specific sound.

The foundation is movement.

Movement through harmony.

Movement through emotion.

Movement through psychology.

Movement through the body of the song.

That’s why I talk about pivot-chord modulation, key changes, emotional transitions, ascending, descending, texture, atmosphere, rhythm, and groove.

Those ideas aren’t rules.

They’re ways of encouraging music to keep evolving instead of standing still.

Everything Beyond That Belongs to the Creator

Once the foundation exists…

The rest belongs to you.

Maybe your Ghost Wav begins with a piano.

Someone else’s begins with a violin.

Another producer starts with field recordings.

Another begins with an acapella voice.

Someone else may begin with artificial intelligence before transforming it into something deeply personal.

None of those approaches automatically make or break Ghost Wav.

Because Ghost Wav doesn’t begin with the tool.

It begins with the person using it.

Documentation Doesn’t Define Ghost Wav

People sometimes look at my websites, articles, and archives and assume they’re part of Ghost Wav itself.

They’re not.

They’re documentation.

They’re simply the tools available in today’s world.

If the internet didn’t exist…

I’d be writing everything in notebooks.

Drawing diagrams by hand.

Publishing books instead of websites.

The medium would change.

The philosophy wouldn’t.

Ghost Wav doesn’t exist because of websites.

The websites exist because Ghost Wav already exists.

Freedom Is Part of the Design

One reason I believe Ghost Wav has so much potential is because it refuses to force everyone toward the same destination.

A producer in Brazil won’t hear Ghost Wav exactly the way I do.

Neither will someone in Japan.

Or Australia.

Or Chile.

Or New York.

And I don’t want them to.

Every person carries different experiences.

Different emotions.

Different cultures.

Different stories.

Why should every Ghost Wav composition sound identical?

It shouldn’t.

Even Ghosts Are Experienced Differently

I’ve always loved the symbolism behind the name Ghost Wav.

Ask ten people what a ghost looks like…

You’ll probably hear ten different answers.

Some imagine a glowing white figure.

Others imagine something transparent.

Some imagine a glitch.

Some don’t see anything at all.

They simply feel a presence.

A cold breeze.

A shift in atmosphere.

Ghost Wav works the same way.

The experience matters more than the appearance.

My Goal Isn’t to Create Followers

One thing has remained consistent throughout my entire creative journey.

I’m not interested in creating followers.

I’m interested in helping people discover themselves.

That’s why I encourage musicians to look inward instead of outward.

Ghost Wav isn’t asking people to imitate me.

It’s asking them to understand themselves deeply enough that something original begins to emerge.

If everyone creates identical Ghost Wav…

Then Ghost Wav has failed.

A Living Culture

People sometimes ask whether Ghost Wav is simply a genre.

I think it’s capable of becoming something much larger.

Not because I control it.

Because I don’t.

A culture grows when people contribute their own experiences.

Their own interpretations.

Their own emotions.

Their own perspectives.

Ghost Wav has room for all of that.

The foundation remains.

Everything else continues evolving.

The Invisible Architecture

When people ask me what Ghost Wav really is…

I don’t think about websites.

I don’t think about articles.

I don’t think about archives.

I think about a feeling.

A vibration.

A piece of music that refuses to remain emotionally still.

Something that moves.

Something that breathes.

Something that changes.

Just enough to make the listener feel like they’re traveling instead of simply listening.

The documentation simply explains the philosophy.

The music is where Ghost Wav truly exists.

And that’s exactly where I believe it should stay.

 

A&R Factory asked:
You’re currently using the Roland FA-06 and MPC Live to create original Ghost Wav compositions. What do those tools give you that software alone can’t, especially when you’re trying to build something with its own signature DNA?

Ghost Wav Didn’t Come From Expensive Gear. It Came From Understanding My Tools.

One question I’ve been asked is why I continue creating Ghost Wav with a Roland FA-06 workstation and an MPC Live.

Most people expect me to answer by talking about hardware.

That’s not really the answer.

The answer is understanding.

The Tool Was Never the Destination

For years, I watched people argue about equipment.

Which sampler is better.

Which workstation sounds better.

Which plugins are better.

Which company makes the best keyboard.

Eventually I stopped asking those questions.

Instead, I asked something much simpler.

“What is this tool actually designed to do?”

That single question changed my entire creative process.

Marketing Shows Possibilities

Research Reveals Purpose

Modern music technology is surrounded by incredible marketing.

Beautiful videos.

Finger drumming.

Flashy demonstrations.

Influencers.

Product launches.

Endless feature lists.

There’s nothing wrong with any of that.

But marketing teaches you what a company wants you to see.

Research teaches you what the tool actually is.

I became fascinated with understanding the inner architecture of the instruments I already owned.

How they processed sound.

How they handled sampling.

How they layered instruments.

How reverb actually behaved.

How pre-delay affected emotional space.

How stereo width changed perception.

The more I understood the tools…

The more they disappeared.

My Roland FA-06 Waited Patiently

One of the biggest lessons in my journey came from a keyboard that spent years sitting in the corner of my room.

My Roland FA-06 collected dust.

I even have photographs of it sitting there untouched.

At one point I cleaned it until it looked exactly the way it had the day I opened the box.

Then something changed.

Instead of seeing it as another keyboard…

I began seeing it as an orchestra waiting to be explored.

That’s when Ghost Wav truly accelerated.

Building My Own Musical DNA

I stopped searching for someone else’s sounds.

I began building my own.

My own layered strings.

My own trumpet sections.

My own orchestral textures.

My own studio sets.

Names like…

oO5 Elven Forest

oO5 Trumpets

These weren’t presets.

They became part of my own musical language.

Every sound carried a purpose.

Every layer became another color on my palette.

Eventually I realized something beautiful.

I wasn’t collecting sounds.

I was building a vocabulary.

Then the MPC Found Its True Purpose

Around the same time, I stopped asking the MPC to become something it wasn’t.

Modern technology often encourages us to use every feature simply because it exists.

I chose a different approach.

I allowed the MPC to excel at what made it legendary.

Sampling.

Performance.

Capture.

Workflow.

The workstation remained the workstation.

The sampler remained the sampler.

Instead of forcing both machines to become identical…

I allowed each one to become exceptional at its own job.

That’s when the workflow finally clicked.

Understanding Creates Freedom

Once I understood the foundation…

Everything became possible.

An entire composition could grow from one string section.

Every four or eight bars the harmony could evolve.

Pivot-chord modulation could move the emotion.

A piano could enter.

Then disappear.

A choir could quietly emerge.

An eagle could begin in the left speaker…

Travel across the stereo field…

Fade into the distance…

While layers of carefully controlled reverb pushed it farther toward the horizon.

Those aren’t effects for the sake of effects.

They’re movement.

Every decision serves the journey.

Ghost Wav Lives Beyond the Equipment

People sometimes assume Ghost Wav exists because of specific instruments.

I don’t believe that.

If tomorrow I lost every piece of equipment I own…

Ghost Wav would still exist.

Because Ghost Wav doesn’t live inside the hardware.

It lives inside understanding.

The instruments simply help me express it.

Respect the Tool. Discover Yourself.

If there’s one lesson my creative journey has taught me, it’s this.

Respect your tools enough to understand them.

Respect the people who built them.

Learn why they exist.

Learn what they’re actually good at.

Then…

Forget about the equipment.

Bring yourself into the music.

Because no workstation…

No sampler…

No synthesizer…

No software…

Can create your identity for you.

Only you can do that.

The tools simply help reveal what was already waiting inside.

 

A&R Factory asked:
In an era dominated by algorithms, imitation and disposable trends, your work places huge value on originality, independent thinking and intellectual property. What does the long-term Ghost Wav ecosystem look like once the releases, archives, visuals and documentation all start speaking to each other?

Ghost Wav Doesn’t Belong to Me. It Belongs to Everyone Who Builds Upon It.

One of the most fascinating questions I’ve been asked is about the future of Ghost Wav.

People want to know what the long-term ecosystem looks like.

The websites.

The archives.

The music.

The culture.

The community.

The truth is…

I can’t answer that question.

And I don’t think I’m supposed to.

A Creator Doesn’t Own the Future

I know where Ghost Wav began.

I know why I created it.

I understand its foundation.

But I don’t know what Ghost Wav will ultimately become.

Because that part no longer belongs only to me.

Every person who experiences Ghost Wav will see something different.

Every producer will hear different possibilities.

Every songwriter will tell different stories.

Every culture will contribute different emotions.

That’s exactly how it should be.

A Foundation Shouldn’t Become a Cage

Everything in our world is built around structure.

Schools.

Governments.

Jobs.

Laws.

Organizations.

Most systems teach people where they are allowed to go.

Ghost Wav asks a different question.

“Where haven’t you gone yet?”

The foundation exists.

Movement.

Emotion.

Growth.

Psychology.

Originality.

Everything beyond that is exploration.

Ghost Wav Encourages Discovery

I’m not interested in telling another producer which chord progression they must use.

Or which instrument they should begin with.

Or which emotion they should express.

Ghost Wav begins with one simple idea.

Bring yourself into the music.

If your journey leads somewhere unexpected…

Go there.

If your imagination finds a sound no one has heard before…

Follow it.

That’s not breaking Ghost Wav.

That’s fulfilling it.

One Song Can Contain Many Songs

One realization changed the way I compose.

Most songs revolve around one primary musical identity.

Ghost Wav doesn’t have to.

An introduction can become its own world.

A verse can introduce another.

A chorus can completely transform the emotional landscape.

A bridge can reveal something entirely unexpected.

By the end of a single composition…

You haven’t simply repeated one great loop.

You’ve explored multiple musical worlds connected by one emotional journey.

Sometimes I think about it this way.

A truly successful Ghost Wav composition doesn’t contain one song.

It contains many songs living together.

Each section could inspire an entirely different creation.

Each loop could become its own record.

That’s one reason Ghost Wav feels so alive to me.

Every section has its own identity.

The Possibilities Continue Expanding

Because Ghost Wav is built around movement rather than limitation…

Its possibilities continue expanding.

Films.

Television.

Video games.

Commercials.

Background scores.

Orchestral performances.

Hip-hop.

Reggae.

Music that hasn’t even been named yet.

Every new creator adds another possibility.

Every new interpretation expands the language.

That’s how living cultures evolve.

My Goal Was Never Control

Some founders want complete ownership over everything their creation becomes.

I don’t.

If Ghost Wav depends entirely on me forever…

Then I haven’t created something living.

I’ve created something fragile.

I’d much rather see Ghost Wav become something people continue exploring long after my own journey is finished.

Not because they copied me.

Because they discovered themselves.

Ghost Wav Belongs to Everyone

People often call me the founder of Ghost Wav.

That’s true.

History should accurately remember where it began.

But history shouldn’t stop there.

Ghost Wav doesn’t become meaningful because I continue speaking.

It becomes meaningful because other people eventually have something meaningful to say through it.

That’s the future I’m excited about.

Not ownership.

Contribution.

Not imitation.

Discovery.

Not repetition.

Evolution.

Ghost Wav began with one person’s imagination.

Its future belongs to everyone willing to bring their own.

Thank you again for creating questions that encouraged reflection rather than promotion. This interview became an opportunity to define Ghost Wav not only as a genre, but as a creative philosophy with a musical foundation. I sincerely appreciate the opportunity to share my story.

Respectfully,

oO5 Dynasty
Jamel Marshall Pearson



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