What is your artist name?
Earleybird
Where are you from?
Northern Virginia, USA
Are you a rapper/beatmaker or DJ?
I rap and I do my own production as well. I have been doing both for over twenty years
and I consider myself prolific in each art.
Do you have a crew?
I had a crew but they all gave up making
music after one album didn’t propel them to whatever level they were expecting
it to propel them too. I have some day
ones who still make music, and good friends who make music, but I am a primarily
a solo artist, basically out of necessity, not desire. I wish I had a crew, but I am always the odd
man out.
How old are you?
Old enough to have come up during hip-hop’s
“golden age”, not old enough to retire yet.
What kind of music do you make?
Meditative, introspective music about
thoughtful topics. Topics like love,
mental illness, feminism, lust, war, masculinity, privilege, God, race
relations, poverty, perseverance & family
What kind of artists are an inspiration to
you?
My favorite artists are Sam Cooke and
Billie Holiday. I own all the music Sam Cooke recorded as a secular artist and
as a gospel artist. I have over 24 hours
of Billie Holiday music on my computer.
Other influences are Stevie Wonder, Prince, Marvin Gaye and Daniel
Johnston. As far as hip-hop, my major influences
would be Special Ed, (for the way he enunciates and pauses between lines), Show
And A.G., Hiero, WuTang, Project Blowed, Gangstarr and Dungeon Family.
How long have you been making music?
I started making music as soon as I heard
hip-hop. I got a Young MC tape for
Christmas in ’89 when I was a little kid, and I went home and transcribed the
lyrics. I have been writing and
performing since 6th grade. I
made my first mixtape in 1997, on a dual cassette tape machine with one
turntable. Three years later I got a
computer and started collaging sounds on a wav editing program called
Soundedit. Now I use Garageband
primarily. Since 2005 I have released 16 official albums.
Is music your job or just a hobby?
This question kind of bothers me. I’m not here to “sell” my music. I hate capitalism. Prince tried to control and limit how his
music was handled and released, and that all went to hell once he died. It is a gift to the world, from an artist to
other artists. The main goal is
communicating, so why do I concern myself with making money off of it, when
that would limit who could hear it? My
main concern is making the music, not the industry of selling it. No, music isn’t my sole source of income,
but we live in a capitalistic society that doesn’t value music or musicians and
the ones they do value tend to be watered down and easily exploited by the
smoke and mirrors of the industry.
I wouldn’t call it a “hobby” because that
cheapens what I do. It is more of a
compulsion or an obsession. I look at it
the way graffiti writers look at graffiti.
I have an addiction to making songs, the way a graf artist is addicted
to getting their name up. I don’t know
how to cure myself, it is therapy and it is helpful to my well-being. I don’t care who listens or how many people
listen, I’m compelled to do it. It would be cool to have a large following, but
then again the trappings of fame seem lame.
I don’t care about a record deal or getting signed, I just do this because
I am compelled to. I used to run with a
lot of graffiti artists when I lived in Brooklyn, so I appreciate their DIY
aesthetic of just doing it. The art of
getting up.
Can we expect some albums of you this
year/next year?
I just released the “Earworms” album last month, the “Earth Day” album drops
next year on Earth Day and I have commissioned Gregg Deal, who is a really cool
artist, to do the cover for the “Earth Day” album. I’m also currently working on a project
called “Content” and working on some experimental songs for an EP titled “Lambo
Calrizzian”. You can check out my music
at www.getthatworm.com or you can
download all 16 of my previous albums at www.audiomack.com/artist/earleybird
Can you name some artists you want to work
with?
I already work with the artists I want to
work with. I have a lot of friends, like
Substantial who I have known for twenty years, who I work with occasionally. I’m more interested in working with cover
artists than rappers right now. I
commissioned a great piece by DJ J Scrilla, I mentioned Gregg Deal and I have
been waiting on a cover from Ibrahim Baaith for about four years now, lol. I’ve been trying to get Ron Wimberly to do a
cover, I’ve known him for twenty years, but he doesn’t seem interested when I
ask him.
When I made my album “Things Are Not What
They Seem” I enlisted The Witchdoctor and Myka Nyne to be on the album. I am past the point of trying to get other
artists who already have followings on my records. That is the only time I enlisted artists who
I never knew personally and paid them to be features. I still look up to them and I enjoyed working
with them, and I love the songs we cut, but as far as artists I want to work
with, I would have to meet them and would want to work with them without paying
them an appearance fee. I would want it
to be a natural situation where they are just as excited to be on my project as
I am to get them on mine. That being
said, I am down to work with just about anyone who has the time to devote to
making music. I work primarily with
artists I know personally and have become friends with, such as Silentmind, who
I hadn’t met until we finished the “Spirit Ciphers” album, but now I consider
him a good friend of mine and you can tell because we have continued to make
music together. But I don’t really want
to work with any big name artists unless they want to work with me first. That
being said, if anyone wants to collab, feel free to reach out to me on my
website.
Thank you for this interview!
Thank you for this interview!
No comments:
Post a Comment