K. Sparks

K. Sparks
Birth name Kyle Hunter
Born Queens, New York, United States
Genres Hip hop
Occupation(s) Rapper, Songwriter, Businessman
Instruments Vocals
Years active 1993–present
Labels Sony Music, IODA, Fat Beats Records, HiPNOTT, Double Up Entertainment
Associated acts KiD CuDi, Sabina Ddumba, Rapsody, Sean Price, Nick Cannon, DJ Envy, Peter Rosenberg
Website kdotsparks.com

Kyle Hunter known under his stage name as K. Sparks, is an American Hip Hop musician, Ghost Writer, and business man. He started making hip hop music in 1993, while he has since released various studio albums, with seven nationwide releases, Definition (2008), Tomorrow Today (2011), Read Between The Lines (2012), Self-Portrait (2013), Vintage Art (2014),[1] The Blue Tape 2 (2014), and Seasons Theme (2016). He has worked with artist such as KiD CuDi, Sabina Ddumba, Ahmad (rapper), Joell Ortiz, DJ Envy, The Pharcyde, Radio Personality for Hot 97 Peter Rosenberg, Jarren Benton, Loaded Lux, Nick Cannon, and Rapsody from the Kendrick Lamar album To Pimp a Butterfly.

K. Sparks has performed at various venues and festivals with several artist including Kendrick Lamar, Kanye West, Joe Budden, Talib Kweli, Sean Price, and Q Tip. He was featured in the Unsigned Hype column of the January/February 2010 issue of The Source Magazine. K. Sparks owns Double Up Entertainment, a music production, licensing, and branding company. In 2009 K. Sparks was nominated for the Best New Artist (Unsigned/Independent) and won first place.[2] The same year K. Sparks and Wiz Khalifa were both nominated for the Best Hip Hop Record (Unsigned/Independent).[3]

Early life and background

Kyle Hunter was born in Queens, New York. His father is an African-American former soldier for the U.S. Air Force, and Jazz Musician. His mother was an African-American school teacher who worked for the New York City Board of Education. His mother was a graduate of Harvard University and instilled the value of education within the household. During his youth, Sparks expressed an affinity for drawing and later received an award to attend Cooper Union College for Architecture. When asked about how going to school for art impacted him, in an interview Sparks commented "It was different. It made me more well rounded to be around so many different races and cultures. Broadened my perspective". He started freestyle rapping when he was thirteen years old and performing at various shows in New York City. As his notoriety increased K. Sparks garnered the attention of Nick Cannon, that signed K. Sparks to record for his Wild Style Champs album.[4] He proceeded to create his own company, Double Up Entertainment, started in 2005, with it being incorporated in Delaware.[5][6] His mother died from breast cancer in 2013.[7] His brother's dead body was found at a hotel in Queens New York in 2015.

Music career

K. Sparks has released 100 mixtapes, during his music career since 1993, and he has released various studio albums, with seven nationwide releases.[6] His major hip hop music recording career began in 2008 with the release of the album Definition produced by Pajozo featuring Kanye West' artist KiD CuDi. The album was released to critical acclaim with over 26,300 downloads.[8] His popularity increased after the single release "Take Em High" went viral and led to him being contacted by an A&R from Steve Rifkin SRC Records, a division of Universal Music Group. He started ghost writing and referencing music for several recording artist while creating his own albums. Receiving numerous beat productions from Bad Boy Records Producer EZ Elpee, K. Sparks wrote and referenced several songs and hooks that were shopped to Sony Music. While generating attention from writing and significant industry buzz, A&R RussPrez signed K. Sparks to a recording contract with IODA, a division of Sony Music to record and release his album entitled Hip Hop 101. He further cemented his work ethic with a weekly series Manic Mondays in which he recorded and released a new original song every Monday for an entire year. After years of securing music placements, he signed a recording contract with Fat Beats Records to release his album Tomorrow Today produced by Pajozo, released April 5, 2011 featuring Warner Bros recoding artist Sabina Ddumba.[9] The album received critical acclaim and was the first album reviewed by Dead End Hip Hop.[10] The album further received 4/5 spins from DJ Booth staff writer Nathan S stating "Now, more than ever, the correlation between being signed and making dope music, which the last time I checked was the actual point of all of this, is tenuous at best. Independent, major, slept on, overrated, whatever. I’m not worries about labels (pun intended), I’m only worried about listening to as much K. Sparks as possible. I suggest you do the same".[11] Exclaim Magazine writer Mark Bozzer noted "This able MC showcases his versatile flow and diverse taste in beats. If he keeps moving in this direction, K. Sparks most certainly will attain what he's striving for tomorrow, today. (Double Up)".[12] K. Sparks received another recording contract with HiPNOTT Records for a two-album deal. He then recorded A Day In The Life, and A Day In the Life Kurser Remix Suite both featuring Duck Down Music recording artist Sean Price . Then in 2013, with the studio album, Self-Portrait, that was released on July 2, 2013.[13][14] The subsequent studio album, Vintage Art, was released on August 23, 2014. The Blue Tape 2 was released on February 20, 2014. He released, Seasons Theme, on February 26, 2016.[15][16][17][18]

Manic Mondays

During the heightened digital era of blogs (2008-2009) K. Sparks created a series entitled Manic Mondays. Every Monday for an entire year he released an original song to the internet. In a previous interview Sparks stated "I want to push boundaries. Most artist are using unoriginal mixtape beats. I'm using original production from talented producers". The series was initially launched exclusively on DJ Booth, however quickly became critically acclaimed and picked up by several online websites, 2dopeboyz, HipHopDX, okayplayer, Allhiphop, and hundreds of others. Producers that contributed production to K. Sparks songs for the Manic Mondays series include Mark Henry (credits: Fabolous, Fat Joe, Raekwon, Wale, The Game, Cam'ron) Kurser (credits: The Pharcyde) Fero Navi (credits: Jim Jones, Substantial) T-Mos (credits: illmind) DJ Bobby Bob, Pajozo, Moe Productions, D Roof, Dave Barz, Big Drew and several others. In conclusion of the series on week 52 he created a song entitled 10 Minutes. Rapping for ten minutes over three different beats discussing various topics.[19] In total Manic Mondays amassed over 525,000 digital downloads.

Ghost writing

K. Sparks was scouted and signed by a Music Agent in 2012 to create original content for mainstream commercial placements. Creating content for movies, commercials, and television while building his music catalogue. When asked to disclose clients he has written for in a 2016 Interview with NRT he stated "Contractually I can't disclose that information, but I can discuss the approach. It's like writing a cinematic screenplay. Each character has to encompass their own dynamic, so when I'm writing I take that perspective head-on; how can I make this musician genuinely have his or her own voice within this content".[20] K. Sparks continued to elaborate in regards to the creative approach when writing music for mainstream placements behind the scenes "It's really how I prefer to conduct business, low-key and in the background. Some people have to be in the forefront, but that's not my style. That aspect of business allows me to work behind the scenes while retaining content ownership. The product placement advertising is essentially a business card. When people hear my songs in Lebron James or Forever 21 commercials it spreads the message".[20] He continues to work behind the scenes with artist, movie directors, and mainstream brands such as Monster Energy, Powerade, Forever 21, Lebron James, and several others.[20]

Trendy, and Black Cassette

October 1, 2016 K. Sparks released a single entitled #TRENDY. In the song he addressed the extreme racial tension in the United States after numerous incidents of Police brutality. Discussing several acts of violence that involved Trayvon Martin, Mike Brown, Eric Garner and others. The song received notoriety from various mainstream digital outlets. HipHopDX staff writer wrote "K. Sparks utilized symbolism as a method to create positive dialogue and change".[21] January 1, 2017 K. Sparks released a 3-song EP entitled Black Cassette Produced By Kurser from Paris. The EP received numerous praises from critics and was featured on 2dopeboyz.[22] The second song on the Black Cassette entitled "Level Up (Street Fam)" contained song lyrics K. Sparks directed towards an unknown musician. In an interview with WLUW 88.7 FM K. Sparks elaborated in regards to the song "I wrote those lyrics for an artist I use to ghost write hooks for. I don't give negative people promotion so I left the name out. But they know who the record is for." [23]

Discography

Studio albums

Mixtapes & Appearances

References

  1. "Album Review: Vintage Art - K. Sparks - DeadEndHipHop -". DeadEndHipHop. 2014-09-14. Retrieved 2017-01-01.
  2. "Best New Artist (Unsigned/Independent) of 2009 | DJBooth". DJBooth. Retrieved 2016-12-31.
  3. "Best Hip Hop Record (Unsigned/Independent) of 2009 | DJBooth". DJBooth. Retrieved 2016-12-31.
  4. "Various - Nick Cannon Presents America's Wildstyle Champs". Discogs. Retrieved 2017-01-01.
  5. DJ Z. "K. Sparks Interview". DJ Booth. Retrieved March 1, 2016.
  6. 1 2 HiPNOTT Records. "K. Sparks Biography". HiPNOTT Records. Retrieved March 3, 2016.
  7. Hathcock, Marcus (March 11, 2016). "K Sparks Flying". New Release Today. Retrieved March 12, 2016.
  8. gubatron (2009-12-30). "FrostClick celebrates it’s first million free legal downloads with Free Music Compilation". FrostWire. Retrieved 2017-01-21.
  9. K. Sparks - Topic (2017-02-01), Alright (feat. Sabina Ddumba & Cat), retrieved 2017-02-18
  10. Dead End Hip Hop (2011-04-28), K. Sparks - Tomorrow Today Album Review | Dead End Hip Hop, retrieved 2017-02-18
  11. "K. Sparks - Tomorrow Today | Album Review, Stream | Hip Hop Albums - DJBooth". DJBooth. Retrieved 2017-02-18.
  12. "K. Sparks Tomorrow Today". Retrieved 2017-02-18.
  13. Maddox, Stephen (August 4, 2013). "K. Sparks – Self Portrait". Jam the Hype. Retrieved March 3, 2016.
  14. Murphy, Branden (July 11, 2013). "Album Review: K. Sparks – Self Portrait". Wade-O Radio. Retrieved March 3, 2016.
  15. Anderson, Dawn (February 15, 2016). "K. Sparks 'Seasons Theme' Challenges and Rewards". No Depression. Retrieved March 3, 2016.
  16. Ryan, Mark (February 18, 2016). "A New Sound for a New Season". New Release Today. Retrieved March 3, 2016.
  17. Fryberger, Scott (March 9, 2016). "K. Sparks, "Seasons Theme" Review". Jesus Freak Hideout. Retrieved March 12, 2016.
  18. Hoiem, Derek (February 26, 2016). "An In-Depth Look at K. Sparks’ "Season’s Theme"". Jam the Hype. Retrieved March 3, 2016.
  19. Shake (2009-08-24). "K. Sparks - 10 Minutes x Manic Mondays (Complete Series)". 2DOPEBOYZ. Retrieved 2017-01-01.
  20. 1 2 3 "K Sparks Flying". www.newreleasetoday.com. Retrieved 2016-12-30.
  21. http://hiphopdx.com, HipHopDX -. "K. Sparks Addresses Racism In "#Trendy"". HipHopDX. Retrieved 2017-01-25.
  22. Shake. "K. Sparks Drops ‘Black Cassette’ EP". 2DOPEBOYZ. Retrieved 2017-01-25.
  23. K. Sparks and WeekendGabe talk Black Cassette, Trump, and Ghostwriting (1.15.17), retrieved 2017-01-25
  24. "Audio Uprising, Vol. 1 - DJ Envy | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved 2017-01-01.
  25. "DJ Lee Majors – The Camera Never Lies (Hosted By K. Sparks)". STRIVIN'. 2008-11-12. Retrieved 2017-01-01.
  26. Luka Kačičnik (2012-12-16), K. Sparks - Take 'Em High ft. Kid Cudi, retrieved 2017-01-01
  27. SemiSenu (2012-06-21), K. Sparks - The Show Starts (feat. Rapsody & Laws), retrieved 2017-01-01
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