Ceschi
Ceschi Ramos (born July 24, 1981), professionally known as Ceschi, is an American rapper, singer, and producer from New Haven, Connecticut, renowned for pioneering a progressive hip-hop style that integrates folk, indie rock, punk, and Latin influences.[1][2] Active since the early 2000s, he co-founded the independent record label Fake Four Inc., which has supported underground artists in the indie rap scene, and released his debut solo album Fake Flowers in 2004, followed by critically acclaimed works such as Broken Bone Ballads (2013) in collaboration with producer Factor Chandelier.[3][4] In 2014, Ceschi received the Connecticut Music Award for Best Hip Hop, recognizing his contributions to the genre's evolution through rapid-fire lyricism, introspective storytelling, and genre-hopping experimentation.[4] He has toured extensively with influential figures like Sage Francis and Busdriver, and as a member of the band Codefendants, continues to explore politically charged and personally raw themes in his music, maintaining a DIY ethos amid a career spanning over two decades.[5][6]Early Life
Family Background and Upbringing
Julio Francisco Ramos, professionally known as Ceschi, was born to a Puerto Rican father and an Italian mother born in New Haven, Connecticut, who speaks fluent Spanish and has resided in Puerto Rico.[7] His family heritage includes ties to the Puerto Rican independence movement, influencing his early worldview.[8] Ramos has at least one brother, David Ramos, with whom he later co-founded the independent record label Fake Four Inc. in 2008.[9] Ramos experienced a transient upbringing, with his immediate family relocating across locations including California and Decatur, Illinois.[3] As a teenager, he moved with his family from California to New Haven, Connecticut, where his relatives, including grandparents, had established deep roots as early immigrants.[10] New Haven became the city where he resided the longest, shaping much of his formative years amid a multicultural family environment blending Puerto Rican and Italian influences.[11] Born with only four fingers on his right hand—a congenital condition that partially inspired the name of his record label—Ramos grew up in a household supportive of artistic pursuits, though marked by frequent moves that contributed to his adaptable, DIY ethos.[12] This peripatetic childhood, combined with familial emphasis on cultural identity and resilience, laid the groundwork for his later musical explorations rooted in personal storytelling and independence.[13]Initial Musical Influences
Ceschi Ramos's initial musical influences were shaped by his multicultural family environment in California's East Bay, where his parents exposed him to a diverse array of genres from an early age. His father, originally from Puerto Rico, and mother, Italian-born but fluent in Spanish, were avid collectors of 1970s salsa music, alongside classic rock staples like The Beatles and Cuban folk records.[7] Additionally, his parents introduced him to Nueva Trova, a politicized Caribbean folk tradition, and he formed a deep connection with Tracy Chapman's music by age six.[14] This household immersion also included disco, soul, Talking Heads, and Public Enemy, fostering an early aptitude for music amid a creatively inclined family dynamic.[7] During his boyhood in the late 1980s and early 1990s, Ceschi began emulating prominent hip-hop artists such as N.W.A., MC Hammer, and Heavy D, practicing rapping techniques—including using an old retainer to refine pronunciation—and composing his first song at age nine on a Casio keyboard about departing New Haven after a family visit.[14] He started formal music training with violin lessons at age six or seven, joined a boys' choir, received a toy Casio sampling keyboard around age eight from relatives, and picked up guitar by ages 12 or 13, later experimenting with a four-track recorder.[11][15] Hip-hop remained a foundational influence, though Ceschi initially gravitated toward grunge, early indie rock, hardcore punk, reggae/ska, and metal, inspired partly by his older cousin Opus's involvement in metal bands that toured with acts like Rage Against the Machine.[11][7] By his early teens, around freshman year of high school in 1997, a collaboration with peer Mike King (iCON the Mic King) reignited his interest in hip-hop, introducing him to groups like Boot Camp Clik, Wu-Tang Clan, Redman, and Digable Planets, which expanded his underground rap palette beyond mainstream emulations.[11] These formative exposures blended familial ethnic and rock roots with emerging hip-hop experimentation, setting the stage for his genre-defying style.[7]Musical Career
Formation and Early Releases
Ceschi Ramos, born Julio Francisco Ramos in 1981, began engaging with music during childhood in California's East Bay area, writing songs as early as age nine using a Casio keyboard.[14] After moving to southern Connecticut in his early teenage years, he immersed himself in the local underground music scene, which blended hip-hop, punk, and hardcore elements.[16] By ages 13 to 14, Ramos started home recording on a four-track device, progressing to samplers around ages 15 to 16, while drawing influences from hip-hop artists such as N.W.A., MC Hammer, and Heavy D, alongside folk and rock traditions.[17] In 1997, Ramos and his brother David released a collaborative cassette tape, distributed primarily at all-ages underground shows in New Haven and their school, marking an initial entry into local performance and distribution circuits.[11] Transitioning to solo work, he recorded material from 2000 to 2004, culminating in his debut album Fake Flowers, self-released on November 24, 2004, featuring 18 tracks that showcased his blend of abstract hip-hop and personal lyricism.[18] This album, limited later to 300 pink vinyl copies in 2015, established Ramos' independent approach amid the indie hip-hop landscape.[19] Ramos followed with They Hate Francisco False on March 21, 2006, a 30-minute LP on Net31 Records that further explored experimental hip-hop themes through tracks like "All Of Us" and "Shame."[20] By 2007, he committed more seriously to music as a profession, leading to the co-founding of Fake Four Inc. with his brother in 2008, which supported early career growth through label operations and releases.[21] These initial efforts positioned Ceschi within Connecticut's burgeoning indie and underground hip-hop communities, emphasizing DIY production and live performances.[17]Imprisonment and Professional Setbacks
In December 2010, Ceschi Ramos (born Julio Ramos) was arrested in New Haven, Connecticut, after police discovered approximately 100 pounds of marijuana hidden in packages at his grandparents' home.[22] [23] The drugs had been delivered unannounced by an acquaintance who had been pulled over during a traffic stop in Illinois and implicated Ramos as the intended recipient, leading authorities to his location.[23] Ramos pleaded guilty to the charges following a multi-year legal battle, during which he claimed police coerced a confession by threatening to arrest his family—including his 98-year-old grandfather—and denying him access to counsel despite requests.[23] He described the confession as scripted and given under duress to protect his relatives from further raids and potential media scrutiny.[22] Ramos began serving an 18-month sentence on September 4, 2013, after a plea bargain reduced what could have been up to nine years of potential imprisonment for the non-violent offense.[9] [22] He was released to house arrest on December 27, 2013, having served roughly three to four months in facility confinement, with the remainder commuted due to good behavior and first-offender status.[22] [24] The incarceration significantly disrupted Ramos's career as an independent musician and founder of Fake Four Inc., the record label he established in 2006 to release experimental hip-hop and related genres.[23] During his absence, label operations were handed over to collaborators including his brother David Ramos and DJ Halo, halting Ramos's direct involvement in artist signings, album production, and promotional activities.[23] Legal fees and lost income strained finances, prompting a crowdfunding campaign on Indiegogo that raised funds to sustain the label and cover costs, though it underscored the vulnerability of his small-scale enterprise.[22] [9] Post-release, Ramos reported experiencing post-traumatic stress symptoms, including readjustment difficulties that delayed his return to touring and recording, further compounding professional momentum loss at a time when the indie music scene demanded consistent output.[9]Post-Release Revival and Collaborations
Following his early release from an 18-month sentence in late 2014, Ceschi resumed music production under his Fake Four Inc. label, marking a revival through introspective solo work and genre-blending partnerships.[9] His initial post-incarceration release, the collaborative album Broken Bone Ballads with producer Factor Chandelier, emerged on April 7, 2015, featuring tracks like "Choke Parade" and "Forever 33" that grappled with mortality, addiction, and institutional experiences.[25] This project, distributed via Fake Four, underscored Ceschi's resilience, incorporating acoustic elements and hip-hop introspection to rebuild audience connection amid prior setbacks.[26] Subsequent solo efforts sustained momentum, including Sad, Fat Luck in 2019, which explored themes of misfortune and perseverance through folk-infused rap.[27] In 2021, This Guitar Was Stolen With Years Of Our Lives highlighted guitar-driven compositions, reflecting ongoing personal evolution.[28] A pivotal collaboration arrived with the formation of Codefendants around 2021, partnering Ceschi with Sam King of Get Dead— who supported him during incarceration—and NOFX's Fat Mike as producer and bassist.[29] The trio's debut This Is Crime Wave, released in 2023, fused hip-hop verses with punk energy and featured a rare guest verse from The D.O.C., his first in 19 years.[30] This crossover propelled Ceschi into punk headlining slots, extensive tours, and acclaim from diverse audiences, crediting the band's communal living and Fat Mike's resources for revitalizing his trajectory.[30][29]Recent Projects and Releases
In 2024, Ceschi released Bring Us The Head of Francisco False (Part 1) on April 4 through Fake Four Inc., presenting it as the commencement of his concluding solo album series, with tracks produced by collaborators including Child Actor, Danny T Levin, and Factor Chandelier.[31][32] The project features introspective hip-hop elements, guest appearances from artists like Penny and Myles Bullen, and themes of personal closure, as Ceschi described it in announcements framing the work as a capstone to his individual discography.[33] The follow-up, Bring Us The Head of Francisco False (Part 2): One Day They'll Never Know That This Existed, arrived digitally on November 4, 2024, completing the diptych with additional production from Factor Chandelier and contributions emphasizing experimental and conscious rap styles.[34][35] Physical vinyl editions followed in 2025, aligning with Ceschi's pattern of limited-run releases via independent labels.[36] Extending beyond the series, Ceschi issued standalone singles in 2025, including "Change or Die" on August 22 and "Iamnotforeveryone2," maintaining his output in conscious hip-hop amid transitions to collaborative endeavors.[37] These releases underscore his shift toward finalizing solo efforts while prioritizing production and group projects, as evidenced by contemporaneous interviews detailing the cycle's completion.[33]Codefendants
Formation and Band Dynamics
Codefendants formed in 2021 as a supergroup comprising rapper Ceschi Ramos, Get Dead vocalist Sam King, and NOFX bassist Fat Mike (Michael Burkett).[38] The project's origins stemmed from solidarity efforts during Ramos's imprisonment for marijuana-related charges, when King's graffiti crew organized tattoo sessions and flash art sales to raise funds for his legal defense and support.[38] [39] Following Ramos's release, the trio connected at Berkeley's Gilman Street Project, where they bonded over shared interests in hip-hop and punk rock, facilitated by a casual gathering involving alcohol.[38] This encounter, building on the prior support network, prompted Fat Mike to propose formal collaboration, leading to the band's inception as a genre-blending outlet.[38] The band's dynamics reflect an organic, friendship-driven process rooted in the members' divergent backgrounds: Ramos's alternative hip-hop style, King's punk vocal delivery from his Get Dead experience, and Fat Mike's production expertise from decades in punk.[29] [38] Their creative approach emphasizes fluidity, merging elements like hip-hop rhythms, punk energy, new wave, flamenco, and even Beatles-inspired melodies into a self-coined "Crime Wave" sound, often drawing lyrics from personal encounters with the criminal justice system.[38] [29] Internally, the group operates loosely and collaboratively, with decisions emerging from mutual respect and shared outsider perspectives rather than rigid hierarchies, as evidenced by their rapid progression from informal meetings to recording sessions at Fat Mike's studio.[40] This structure allows for experimental songwriting, where Ramos and King handle primary vocals while Fat Mike focuses on bass, production, and occasional contributions, fostering a dynamic that prioritizes innovation over conventional band roles.[16]Key Albums and Tours
Codefendants' debut album, This Is Crime Wave, was released on March 24, 2023, via Fat Wreck Chords and Bottles to the Ground.[41][42] The 13-track record features Ceschi Ramos on vocals and instrumentation alongside Sam King and Fat Mike, with guest appearances from Get Dead, Onry Ozzborn, The D.O.C., and Stacey Dee, incorporating rap rock, punk, and folk influences centered on themes of personal struggle and defiance.[42] In support of the album, Codefendants conducted live performances across North America, including Colorado dates in June 2025 with opening acts The Pawns and Jonster.[43] By late 2025, the band expanded touring efforts with an international slate, encompassing a show in San José, Costa Rica, on November 15 alongside Solocarne and Bufonic, followed by Canadian stops such as Québec on November 17 and additional dates added in October.[44][45] U.S. concerts continued into December, including Cincinnati on December 6 at Riverfront Live and Cleveland on December 7 at Grog Shop.[46] Building on the debut, Codefendants issued singles in 2025, including "Right Wrong Man" on May 8 and a "CODEF Version" of "What Are We Doing This For" in October, signaling preparations for a follow-up full-length album.[47][48][49] These releases have accompanied ongoing tour announcements, with performances scheduled through early 2026 in cities like Las Vegas and Minneapolis.[50]Reception and Impact
Codefendants' debut album This Is Crime Wave, released on March 24, 2023, via Fat Wreck Chords, received widespread critical acclaim for its innovative fusion of punk rock energy, hip-hop lyricism, and raw emotional delivery.[51] Reviewers praised the project's authenticity, with Kerrang! describing it as a "truly stunning debut" that captures real vulnerability and stands as "one of the albums of the year."[51] Similarly, Punknews.org highlighted the band's successful integration of punk attitude with hip-hop and alternative styles, noting the contributions of Fat Mike, Sam King, and Ceschi Ramos in creating a cohesive sound rooted in personal struggle.[52] The album's reception emphasized its lyrical depth addressing themes of incarceration, addiction, and redemption, which resonated with audiences familiar with the members' backgrounds. Distorted Sound commended the accessible yet bold blend of hip-hop beats, new wave elements, and punk aggression, suggesting it appeals to open-minded listeners despite potential genre purist resistance.[53] Ghost Cult Magazine noted the lo-fi production's punchy execution over ten tracks, crediting the heavy lyrical content for melding seamlessly with the music's intensity.[54] Publications like Ghettoblaster Magazine included it among the 100 best releases of 2023, underscoring its role in revitalizing social commentary within punk and hip-hop traditions.[55] In terms of impact, Codefendants has contributed to the ongoing evolution of punk-hip-hop hybrids by prioritizing unfiltered narratives over polished production, influencing niche scenes that value cross-genre experimentation.[56] The band's live performances, including tours supporting the album and subsequent singles like "Fast Ones" in 2025, have been noted for their high-energy delivery that bridges punk mosh pits with rap cadences, fostering a sense of communal rebellion.[57] While broader cultural influence remains emerging given the project's recency, it exemplifies a return to punk and hip-hop's origins in marginalization and defiance, as articulated in reviews emphasizing shared struggle over commercial appeal.[57][56]Activism and Legal Challenges
Marijuana Arrest and Incarceration
On December 25, 2010, Julio Ramos, known professionally as Ceschi, was arrested in New Haven, Connecticut, following a narcotics investigation by the Connecticut State Police. Authorities discovered approximately 100 pounds of marijuana concealed in gift-wrapped packages delivered to the home of Ramos's grandfather, where Ramos was the intended recipient; an additional 221 grams of marijuana and $1,250 in cash were found at Ramos's residence in Guilford.[58][59] He faced charges including possession of marijuana exceeding one kilogram and possession with intent to sell narcotics.[58] Ramos initially entered a not guilty plea but later pleaded guilty to the charges in 2013.[60] His sentence was originally four years in prison but was reduced to 18 months following negotiations; he began serving the term on September 4, 2013, at a facility in Connecticut.[22][9] Ramos was released after approximately 13 months, with the remainder of his sentence converted to parole, which he completed by early 2015.[29] The case drew controversy, as Ramos alleged a coerced confession during interrogation and described the charge as involving a "fake marijuana" setup, though court records confirm the guilty plea and conviction for the actual substance.[23][61] Despite New Haven's decriminalization of small amounts of marijuana in 2010—subsequent to the arrest but prior to sentencing—no retroactive leniency was applied, leading to a public petition for his release highlighting disparities in enforcement.[62] The incarceration disrupted Ramos's music career, including operations at his label Fake Four Inc., though supporters maintained the label's activities during his absence.[17]Advocacy Efforts and Political Views
Ceschi has utilized his post-incarceration platform to advocate for drug policy reform and criminal justice changes, drawing directly from his 2010 marijuana distribution conviction and subsequent 18-month sentence (serving four months in prison followed by house arrest). Supporters, including fans and fellow musicians, initiated a MoveOn.org petition during his imprisonment, arguing that Connecticut's evolving marijuana laws—decriminalizing possession—rendered his continued detention unjust, as the state no longer treated simple possession as a crime.[62] This effort underscored broader calls for retroactive relief in non-violent drug cases, reflecting Ceschi's implicit critique of punitive sentencing disparities.[63] Through his band Codefendants, formed with NOFX's Fat Mike and Get Dead's Sam King, Ceschi has amplified advocacy for prison reform and awareness of the prison-industrial complex. The group's 2023 debut album This Is Crime Wave confronts themes of wealth disparity, racism, the opioid epidemic, and systemic incarceration failures, informed by members' personal encounters with drugs and the justice system—Ceschi noting that such issues "aren’t just political points to talk about for us" but lived realities.[29] They produced a five-part video series, scripted by Fat Mike and directed by the activist collective INDECLINE, examining police power abuses and providing a therapeutic outlet intended to represent the voiceless.[29] These efforts aim to humanize affected individuals and challenge entrenched inequities without prescriptive political agendas.[51] Ceschi's political views align with an anti-authoritarian, socio-politically engaged strain of independent hip-hop, positioning himself as a proponent of "progressive hip-hop" that retains an edge against corporate dilution of rap's original critical bite.[64] In a 2014 interview, he lamented mainstream rap's mid-1990s shift away from anti-corporate and challenging content toward commercialization, crediting indie rap's enduring influence on artists like Kendrick Lamar for preserving lyrical depth and rebellion.[64] His work critiques institutional overreach in drug enforcement and incarceration, favoring personal redemption and artistic expression over ideological absolutism, as evidenced in Codefendants' fusion of punk and hip-hop to spotlight redemption amid adversity.[29]Discography
Studio Albums
Ceschi's studio albums blend experimental hip-hop, folk, and indie rock elements, often featuring introspective lyrics addressing personal struggles, social issues, and mortality. His early works were self-produced or issued via small indie labels, while later releases primarily appeared on Fake Four Inc., the label he co-founded with his brother David Ramos in 2008.[65] These albums typically include collaborations with underground artists and producers, reflecting Ceschi's roots in New Haven's DIY scene.| Title | Release Date | Label |
|---|---|---|
| Fake Flowers | November 24, 2004 | Beyond Space |
| They Hate Francisco False | March 21, 2006 | Net31 |
| The One Man Band Broke Up (with DJ Scientist) | June 29, 2010 | Fake Four Inc. |
| Broken Bone Ballads | April 7, 2015 | Fake Four Inc. |
| Sad, Fat Luck | April 5, 2019 | Fake Four Inc. |
| Bring Us The Head Of Francisco False (Part 1): The Day You Realize That You Mean Nothing Is Everything | April 4, 2024 | Fake Four Inc. |
| Bring Us The Head Of Francisco False (Part 2) | November 4, 2024 | Fake Four Inc. |