Interview with Raphael J Jones

Interview with Raphael J Jones

Multi-Disciplinary Creator | Engineer | Rap Architect | Fitness Visionary

Today, we’re featuring a conversation with Raphael J Jones, a multi-talented creator based in the USA. He is a Multi-Disciplinary Creator, Engineer, Rap Architect, Fitness Visionary. His work reflects passion, discipline, and a deep creative vision. In this conversation, we talks about his journey, his art, and how he balances creativity with fitness.1

Q1. For those who may not know you yet, could you please introduce yourself and share a bit about your background?

Answer: I’m Raphael J. Jones — a comic artist, musician, rapper, engineer, and fitness trainer. My life revolves around creation and invention. I’m currently developing and holding patents for several projects that merge music, technology, and storytelling. My goal is to build sound systems that go beyond entertainment — to prove that hip-hop can operate like an engineered language. My goal is to not only engineer the future, but create as if I actually live in it. One of my inspired lines remind me of how Leeloo was explained in The Fifth Element; Art and engineering that it feels alien yet perfect, a work that shouldn’t be possible and yet is.

Q2. You work in four different creative areas: comics, music, rap, and fitness. How do you describe yourself first?

Answer: I see myself as an architect of rhythm and machinery. Whether it’s anatomy, sound, or circuitry, I design things that move. My mind operate in an advanced medium towards my creations. Everything I create — from a verse to a workout — operates on the same physics: energy, flow, and transformation. My fitness also go back years also. In the end, all my works are merged within each other.

Q3. How did your journey into art and music begin? Was it something you planned or something that happened naturally?

Answer: It happened naturally. I didn’t separate science from art; I treated both like twin languages. Drawing was my first engineering class. Rap became the mathematics of my imagination. Every time I wrote, I was building something unseen. This realization led me to believe that not only are we advanced created beings, but our minds can be fully programmed to operate as one too. Spirituality is also important for me as I see creation connected within itself.

Q4. Who were your biggest influences growing up, both in art and music?

Answer: Artists like Jack Kirby and Moebius — their worlds had gravity. Musically, Missy Elliott, Kanye, Andre 3000, 2Pac, Twista, Big L, Kool G Rap, Canibus and Lupe Fiasco showed me that lyricism could reprogram sound. Add Tesla and Einstein to that list — they taught me rhythm exists in energy itself. My goal is humanity’s needs in enlightenment. 

Q5. Your art often reflects strong emotions and identity. What inspires your themes and characters?

Answer: My characters come from emotional physics, innovation and world building — what happens when the soul meets machinery. They’re born out of fusion, identity, and evolution. I’m inspired by what humanity might look like once it learns to breathe through technology and most importantly, love. 

Q6. Do your experiences as a musician ever influence your comic storytelling, or vice versa?

Answer: Constantly! Every bar is a panel, every panel is a beat. When I rap, I’m drawing with sound; when I draw, I’m composing silence. They feed each other like circuits in a loop. Currently I am developing this in a way to revolutionize Hip-hop and music in general. 

Q7. Which artist or character inspired you the most as a child?

Answer: Spider-Man, Iron Man, Superman and countless others. They fight aliens, use advanced technology and create storylines that are fun and childlike at times. Genius and vulnerability in one body. All proved that intellect and emotion can coexist — and that innovation without empathy is hollow. The best way to know how advanced technology can function is to embody it. Everyone have this gift. Whether it be in music, the arts, engineering and etc. 

Q8. As a rapper, what kind of messages or feelings do you try to express through your lyrics?

Answer: I express evolution. I want my music to awaken inventors. Every verse is a hypothesis — a living experiment in rhythm. My songs ask listeners not just to feel the beat, but to build with it. You can literally see an entire system operating in my rap. It’s like constructing a verse so good, it looks like it was actually built.

Fitness comes with countless benefits. Advanced societies as a language would likely use this too. It expand brain cells, and keep you youthful. Fitness also clears interference. When the lungs expand, the brain gets signal. It keeps my creative current smooth and my ideas charged constantly.

Raphael J Jones

Q9. Can you share one project that feels the most personal or meaningful to you?

Answer: The M.I.C.R.O.P.H.O.N.E. — Future Hip-Hop Framework. It’s my life’s blueprint. Each letter defines a new branch of futuristic and advanced hip-hop I am currently holding patents to. They are these:

Mechanical Rap, Intergalactic Narrative, Cinematic Rap, Reality Rendering, Omni-Class Expression, Prophetic Design, Hyperweaponized Beats, Operative Flow, Nuclear Particle Rap, and Energy Rap.

These are not just styles — they’re architectures. Entire systems that function in one style. Together they form a living ecosystem of music, science, and imagination that I believe will revolutionize hip-hop as both an artform and a science.

Q10. How do you balance creative work with physical training and fitness coaching?

Answer: Through breath and timing. I work in segments. Between rest I exercise, meditate on the future with new ideas, draw them out, then run analysis.

Training the body is identical to training flow, and creating wonders. Each rep is a beat; each rhythm, a muscle. Fitness is my grounding circuit and power source to create ideas. The brain does the rest.

Q11. What role does fitness play in keeping your mind focused and creative?

Answer: Fitness comes with countless benefits. Advanced societies as a language would likely use this too. It expand brain cells, and keep you youthful. Fitness also clears interference. When the lungs expand, the brain gets signal. It keeps my creative current smooth and my ideas charged constantly.

I express evolution. I want my music to awaken inventors. Every verse is a hypothesis — a living experiment in rhythm. My songs ask listeners not just to feel the beat, but to build with it. You can literally see an entire system operating in my rap. It’s like constructing a verse so good, it looks like it was actually built.

Q12. What does fitness mean to you? Is it just physical training or a mindset as well?

Answer: It’s a philosophy of optimization — a state of being where body, mind, and spirit align to perform impossible task. Its where many of my great ideas come from.

Q13. Many young artists struggle with discipline. What advice would you give them about consistency and mindset?

Answer: You need to prepare time to think, meditate, and prepare a routine. Knowledge is free, but you must build your body up for it. Thus, this will allow you to leverage ideas abd consistency. 

Consistency is emotional gravity. You don’t wait for inspiration; you generate it. Discipline isn’t punishment — it’s propulsion. And when the body exercise, it becomes a machine set up for it.

Q14. When you create — whether a drawing, a beat, or a workout routine — what keeps you motivated?

Answer: Discovery. Each day I’m chasing the unknown. I live for the moment when an idea stops being abstract and turns into a tangible machine. Live to create new ideas, and keep your mind exercised as a muscle too. Fitness isn’t just about look good but its a medium for advancement. Whether it be ideas, creativity, drawing and etc.

Q15. What does your typical day look like? How do you manage time between so many different passions?

Answer: Mornings are for motion — fitness, running, calibration. Afternoons are invention time — building, sketching, or producing. Nights are cinematic — that’s when I record, world-build, and experiment with physics. 

Q16. Are you currently working on any new projects we should watch out for?

Answer: Yes, several — some under active patent development. I can’t reveal everything now, but they involve merging lyrical design with engineering systems. Projects like Cinematic Hip-Hop and Mechanical Rap are in testing stages, alongside the Nuclear Particle Rap patent. Each of these aims to redefine what a song or invention can do, not just how it sounds.

Q17. What’s one lesson you’ve learned from your journey that you wish you knew earlier?

Answer: That innovation needs silence sometimes. The louder your vision becomes, the more you must protect its blueprint until it’s ready to fly. Go and discover the great world you live in and prove it is made as a treasure!

Q18. If you had to describe your creative philosophy in one line, what would it be?

Answer: “Every invention must be centuries ahead — merging physics, technology, and imagination into a living blueprint.” Create for the world but live in the future constantly. It’s where aliens live too!

Q19. Finally, what message would you like to share for upcoming artists around the world?

Answer: Your imagination is technology. Treat your art like a discovery, not a competition. We are the architects of the next civilization — so build something the future can live inside. Your body is a technological marvel too. Robots, A.I. and even actuator systems prove this model after the human body. It’s not only ancient, but it’s highly advanced at once. Once humanity realizes this, the universe is the limit!

Thank you, Raphael J Jones Sir, for sharing your story, ideas, and creative journey with us. Your work in art, music, and fitness shows how passion and discipline can build something truly unique.

To our readers, we hope you enjoyed this conversation and found inspiration in Raphael J Joness journey.

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