Aceyalone
Aceyalone | |
---|---|
Aceyalone performing in 2005 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Edwin M. Hayes, Jr. |
Origin | Los Angeles, California, United States |
Genres |
Hip hop Alternative hip hop Underground hip hop Jazz rap Trip hop Experimental hip hop |
Occupation(s) | Rapper |
Years active | 1988–present |
Labels |
Project Blowed Capitol, EMI Records Decon |
Associated acts |
Freestyle Fellowship Haiku D'Etat The A-Team |
Website |
aceyalone |
Edwin M. "Eddie" Hayes, Jr., better known by his stage name Aceyalone,[1] is an American rapper from Los Angeles, California, United States. He is a member of Freestyle Fellowship, Haiku D'Etat and The A-Team and a co-founder of Project Blowed.[2] Aceyalone is best known for his role in evolving left-field hip-hop on the West Coast at a time when the West Coast was dominated by Gangsta Rap.[1][3]
Career
Project Blowed and Freestyle Fellowship
Aceyalone emerged from the legendary Project Blowed collective, considered to be the longest-running open mic hip-hop workshop.[4] He began rapping as part of the group Freestyle Fellowship, which consisted of himself, Myka 9, and Self Jupiter and, later, P.E.A.C.E.. Freestyle Fellowship developed a reputation for influencing a style of fast double-time rap used by rappers like Busta Rhymes and Bone Thugs-n-Harmony.[5]
Solo projects
Following the Freestyle Fellowship releases of To Whom It May Concern... and Innercity Griots as well as a Project Blowed compilation in 1994, Aceyalone signed as a solo artist to Capitol Records after Island failed to break the Freestyle Fellowship on mainstream radio.[5]
Aceyalone released his breakthrough solo debut album, All Balls Don't Bounce, in 1995.[3] He returned three years later with his second album A Book of Human Language, a collaboration with producer Mumbles, which was a dark concept album.[6][7]
His third solo album, Accepted Eclectic, was released in 2001, featuring Abstract Rude and production from Evidence.[8][9][10] He released Hip Hop and the World We Live In in 2002.[11] Aceyalone's next offering came a year later, and was titled Love & Hate.[12][13][14] The track "Find Out" was featured on the soundtrack to You Got Served.[15] In 2006, Aceyalone released Magnificent City, a collaborative album with producer RJD2,[16][17] followed by the Grand Imperial mixtape.[18]
Aceyalone frequently collaborates with producer Bionik such as on the 2007 release Lightning Strikes and the 2009 release Aceyalone & the Lonely Ones. Both albums explored different genres – dancehall and doo-wop respectively – as part of Aceyalone's goal of "exploring the world of music through hip hop."[15] The Phil Spector-inspired Aceyalone & the Lonely Ones followed.[19] Inspired by Spector's Wall of Sound, Motown and Bo Diddley, Aceyalone said: "I'm not from that era, but this is my ode to it. I'm just putting myself into that character as a showman and bandleader."[19] Leanin' on Slick, released in 2013 with Decon Records, continued the retro flow of the previous release, this time taking inspiration from 1960s style-R&B and hot buttered soul.[20][21]
Style and influences
Aceyalone has been noted particularly for his innovative lyrical style and content. Some attribute the double-time rap styles that emerged in the mid-1990s to Aceyalone and Freestyle Fellowship, although this is disputed by others.[22]
Aceyalone and Freestyle Fellowship were noted for their rejection of the West Coast trend in Gangsta Rap. Aceyalone developed strong critiques of rap music’s commercialization and glorification of violence.[6]
Discography
Studio albums
- All Balls Don't Bounce (1995)
- A Book of Human Language (1998)
- Who Framed The A-Team? (1999) (with Abstract Rude, as The A-Team)
- Accepted Eclectic (2001)
- Hip Hop and the World We Live In (2002)
- Lab Down Under (2003) (with Abstract Rude, as The A-Team)
- Love & Hate (2003)
- Magnificent City (2006)
- Lightning Strikes (2007)
- Aceyalone & the Lonely Ones (2009)
- Leanin' on Slick (2013)
- Action (2015)[23]
- Mars (2016) (with Slippers)
Compilation albums
- Grade A (2004)
- Grand Imperial (2006)
Singles
- "Mic Check" (1995)
- "The Greatest Show On Earth" (1996)
- "The Guidelines" (1998)
- "Moonlit Skies" (2003)
- "Lost Your Mind" (2003)
- "Fire" (2005)
- "Supahero" (2006)
Guest appearances
- The Nonce - "Bus Stops" from World Ultimate (1995)
- Fat Jack - "Gimme Five Feet" and "Golden Mic" from Cater to the DJ (1999)
- Swollen Members - "Consumption" from Balance (1999)
- Nobody - "Faces of the Deep" from Earthtones EP (1999)
- Mystik Journeymen - "Reflections" from The Black Sands ov Eternia (1999)
- Dilated Peoples - "The Shape of Things to Come" from The Platform (2000)
- Anti-Pop Consortium - "Heatrays" from Tragic Epilogue (2000)
- Self Jupiter - "4808-4911-A" from Hard Hat Area (2001)
- Busdriver - "Jazz Fingers" from Temporary Forever (2002)
- Linkin Park - "Wth>You" from Reanimation (2002)
- 2Mex - "3 or 13" and "No Category" from Sweat Lodge Infinite (2003)
- DJ Drez - "Last Show" from The Capture of Sound (2003)
- Zion I - "Cheeba Cheeba" from Deep Water Slang V2.0 (2003)
- Omid - "Live from Tokyo" from Monolith (2003)
- The Grouch & Eligh - "This Is Yo Life" from No More Greener Grasses (2003)
- Wildchild - "Bounce" from Secondary Protocol (2003)
- Abstract Rude - "What Tyme Iz It?" from Showtyme (2003)
- Fat Jack - "Keep Rock'n On" from Cater to the DJ 2 (2004)
- Ellay Khule - "B-Girl Queendom" from Califormula (2005)
- Onry Ozzborn - "What to Do?" from In Between (2005)
- DJ Z-Trip - "Everything Changes" from Shifting Gears (2005)
- Subtitle - "Cray Crazy" from Young Dangerous Heart (2005)
- Thirsty Fish - "Fall Apart" from Testing the Waters (2007)
- Myka 9 - "Options" from 1969 (2009)
- Himself - "Social Drinker" from Feel Like a Star (2011)
- Luckyiam - "For You" from I Love Haters (2011)
- Myka 9 - "Oh Yeah... Alright" from Mykology (2012)
- Abstract Rude - "The Media" from Dear Abbey (2012)
- Abstract Rude - "For tha Luv" from Keep the Feel: A Legacy of Hip Hop Soul (2015)
Compilation appearances
- "Jurassick", "I Think", "Maskaraid", and "Treble and Bass" on Project Blowed (1995)
- "Project Bliznaiznowed" on The Funky Precedent (1999)
- "Future Rockers" on Tags of the Times 3 (2001)
- "Do the Math", "Give It Here", and "Superstars" on Project Blowed Presents the Good Brothers (2003)
- "Doin' My Job" on 2K6: The Tracks (2005)
- "Enter the Kaos", "Do Unto Others", and "Ruff Rhymes" on Project Blowed 10th Anniversary (2005)
- "Let's Go Get It", "Borderline", and "Krazy World" on Calicomm 2004 (2005)
- "Champions" on Dan the Automator Presents 2K7 (2006)
References
- 1 2 Birchmeier, Jason. "Aceyalone - Music Biography, Credits and Discography". Allmusic.
- ↑ Zuñiga-West, Dante (May 17, 2012). "Alone and Still Standing". Eugene Weekly.
- 1 2 Arnold, Paul W (March 20, 2011). "Aceyalone: Bounce These Balls". HipHopDX.
- ↑ Thill, Scott. "Freestyle Fellowship’s Brain-Hop Delivers on Promise". Wired. Retrieved 24 January 2014.
- 1 2 Weiss, Jeff. "Having Already Influenced Every Rapper You Like, Freestyle Fellowship Are Back". LA Weekly. Retrieved 24 January 2014.
- 1 2 Pecoraro, David. "Aceyalone - Accepted Eclectic". Pitchfork. Retrieved 24 January 2014.
- ↑ "Aceyalone - Book of Human Language". Sputnikmusic. May 25, 2011.
- ↑ Clark, Trey (March 1, 2001). "Aceyalone - Accepted Eclectic - Project Blowed". The Daily Nexus.
- ↑ Cowie, Del F. (April 2001). "Aceyalone - Accepted Eclectic". Exclaim!.
- ↑ "Accepted Eclectic". AllMusic. Retrieved 24 January 2014.
- ↑ Shepherd, Julianne (March 2, 2003). "Aceyalone: Hip Hop and the World We Live In". Pitchfork Media.
- ↑ Palmer, Tamara (July 10, 2003). "Aceyalone". Phoenix New Times.
- ↑ Quinlan, Thomas (July 2003). "Aceyalone - Love & Hate". Exclaim!.
- ↑ Cowie, Del F. (July 2003). "Aceyalone - Love & Hate". Exclaim!.
- 1 2 Johnson, Nicole. "Lightning Strikes by Aceyalone". Impose. Retrieved 24 January 2014.
- ↑ Solomon, Eric (February 14, 2006). "Aceyalone with RJD - Magnificent City". Prefix.
- ↑ Patch, Nick (April 2006). "Aceyalone - Magnificent City". Exclaim!.
- ↑ Brown, Marisa. "Grand Imperial - Aceyalone". Allmusic.
- 1 2 "Aceyalone Goes Doo Wopping". IGN. Retrieved 24 January 2014.
- ↑ "Leanin' On Slick". AllMusic. Retrieved 24 January 2014.
- ↑ Quinlan, Thomas (May 27, 2013). "Aceyalone - Leanin' On Slick". Exclaim!.
- ↑ Drake, David. "Hip-Hop's Sonic Doppelgangers". Complex. Retrieved 24 January 2014.
- ↑ 319 (2015-02-25). "Aceyalone & Bionik – “Ghetto Blaster”". UGSMAG.com. Retrieved 2015-06-01.
External links
- Official website
- Aceyalone discography at Discogs