Total Pageviews

Thursday 14 December 2023

Air Supply

Click On Picture Above For Audio Features
Air Supply
Russell, left, and Hitchcock, right, at Paramount Theater in Denver (2023)
Background information
OriginMelbourne, Victoria, Australia
Genres
Years active1975–present
Labels
Members
Past memberssee Members below
Websiteairsupplymusic.com

Air Supply are a soft rock duo formed in Melbourne, Australia, in 1975, consisting of Englishman Graham Russell (vocals, guitar) and Australian Russell Hitchcock (vocals). They had a succession of hits worldwide, including eight top-five hits on the US Billboard Hot 100, "Lost in Love" (1979), "All Out of Love", "Every Woman in the World" (both 1980), "The One That You Love", "Here I Am" (both 1981), "Sweet Dreams", "Even the Nights Are Better" (both 1982) and "Making Love Out of Nothing at All" (1983). In Australia, they had four top ten placements with "Love and Other Bruises" (1976), "All Out of Love", "Every Woman in the World" and "The One That You Love". Their highest charting studio album, The One That You Love (1981) reached number ten in both Australia and the US. The group, which relocated to Los Angeles in the late 1970s, has included many members, with Hitchcock and Russell at the core. The Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) inducted Air Supply into their Hall of Fame on 1 December 2013, at the annual ARIA Awards.

History[edit]

Formation and early years: 1975–1980[edit]

Air Supply's founding members met on 12 May 1975,[1] while rehearsing for the Australian production of the musical Jesus Christ Superstar.[2][3] Chrissie Hammond portrayed Mary Magdalene, while Russell Hitchcock and Graham Russell were in the chorus.[4] With the show they toured Australia and New Zealand for 18 months.[5] In 1958, as a three-year-old, English-born Hammond had migrated to Melbourne with her family, including older sister Lyndsay Hammond, who also became a rock singer.[6] Russell, also English-born, had been a percussionist in United Kingdom group, Union Blues, in 1965.[7] After arriving in Australia in 1968, Russell performed solo and was later a member of Eli Flash with Hammond.[7] Hitchcock left school in 1965 to work as a salesman, also joining a group, 19th Generation, on drums and vocals.

With Hammond and Hitchcock on vocals and Russell on guitar, they formed Air Supply as a harmony vocal group in Melbourne in 1975.[2][7][8] When the show's run finished in late 1976, Hammond departed to form a hard rock group, Cheetah, with her sister.[2][9] Hammond was replaced in the group by Jeremy Paul (ex-Soffrok) who provided bass guitar and backing vocals.[2][7] Paul had joined the cast of Jesus Christ Superstar when it reached Brisbane and continued with the show to New Zealand.[8] According to Paul, the group's name was "indicative of the sound and feeling forming the relationships within the band".[8] The group's first single, "Love and Other Bruises", was released in October 1976 and peaked at No. 6 on the Australian Kent Music Report singles chart.[2][10][11] Russell recalled that they had been unable to promote "Love and Other Bruises" while still performing in Jesus Christ Superstar, due to contractual obligations to the show.[5] It was first aired on weekly teen pop music TV show, Countdown in early December 1976.[12] It remains their highest charting single in Australia.[10][11]

The group followed with their debut album, Air Supply, in December 1976, which reached No. 17 on the Kent Music Report albums chart and achieved gold accreditation for shipment of 20,000 copies.[2][10] It was produced by Peter Dawkins (SpectrumRoss Ryan) with the line-up of Hitchcock, Paul, Russell and drummer Jeff Browne, guitarist Mark McEntee, and keyboardist Adrian Scott.[2][3] Other singles were "If You Knew Me", "Empty Pages" and "Feel the Breeze", but none reached the top 40.[10] McEntee had left Air Supply by the end of 1976 to work as a session musician. In 1980, bandmates McEntee and Paul formed Divinyls alongside Chrissy Amphlett.[2][7][13] Air Supply undertook a national tour in support of their debut album with Hitchcock, Paul, Russell and Scott joined by Nigel Macara (ex–Tamam ShudAriel) on drums and Brenton White (Skintight) on guitar.[2][3] Brenton White rehearsed but did not perform with Air Supply.[citation needed] In April 1977, portions of their music videos for "Empty Pages" and "Do What You Do" were screened on Countdown.[14]

Their second album, The Whole Thing's Started, also produced by Dawkins,[7] was released in July 1977, with White replaced on lead guitar by Rex Goh.[2] The album provided three singles, but neither album nor singles charted in the top 40.[10] In mid-1977, the group supported Rod Stewart during his tour of Australia, and he invited them to continue to the United States and Canada.[2] Mid-tour they worked on their third album, Love & Other Bruises, in Los Angeles from July to August. It included re-recordings of tracks from their previous two albums, with Jimmy Horowitz producing, and was released later that year in the US on Columbia Records.[7] At the end of 1977, Paul left and the line-up of Hitchcock, Macara, Goh and Russell, were joined by Joey Carbone on keyboards, Robin Le Mesurier on co-lead guitar and Howard Sukimoto on bass guitar.[2][3] Air Supply performed in London supporting Chicago and Boz Scaggs.[2]

Although their music had some commercial success, Russell claimed, on a 1995 DVD, that he and Hitchcock were so poor that they checked the backs of hotel sofas for change so that they could buy bread to make toast. By early 1978, the line-up was Hitchcock, Macara and Russell, with Ken Francis on guitar, Rick Mellick on keyboards and Bill Putt (Spectrum, Ariel) on bass guitar.[2][3] In April of that year, Russell was considering relocating to Los Angeles: "Even though it's expensive it's the music centre of the world. In Australia you can hit yourself against a brick wall."[15] By mid-1978, only Hitchcock and Russell remained, backed by Ralph Cooper (Windchase) on drums, and former Sailor members Brian Hamilton on bass guitar and vocals and David Moyse on guitar.[2][3]

In April 1979, the band released Life Support,[2][7] a concept album which included a picture disc on its first pressing. It was recorded at Trafalgar Studios, Sydney. The album had a five-and-a-half-minute version of "Lost in Love", written by Russell, which was released as a single and peaked at No. 13 in Australia and No.3 in New Zealand.[2][10][16] The track caught the attention of Arista Records boss Clive Davis, who remixed the song and released it as a single in the US early the following year. The line-up for the album kept Hitchcock, Russell, Cooper, and Moyse, and added Criston Barker (bass guitar) and Frank Esler-Smith (keyboards) with help from other session musicians.[2][7] Esler-Smith had previously known Hitchcock and Russell from working with them in Jesus Christ Superstar.

A re-recorded and remixed version of "Lost in Love" was issued internationally as a single in January 1980 on Arista Records. The associated album, Lost in Love, appeared in March, which was co-produced by Robie PorterRick Chertoff and Charles Fisher.[2][7] It contained three US top five singles, including the title track, which peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100.[17] The others were "Every Woman in the World" (No. 5) and "All Out of Love" (No. 2).[17] The latter two singles were top 10 hits in Australia,[10] with "All Out of Love" also reaching No. 11 on the United Kingdom Singles Chart and No. 17 in the Netherlands.[18][19] The album had the same line-up of Barker, Cooper, Esler-Smith, Hitchcock, Moyse and Russell.[2] It sold three million copies in the US and peaked at No. 22 on the Billboard 200.[20] It reached No, 21 in Australia and No. 22 in New Zealand.[10][16]

1981–1990[edit]

Air Supply's sixth studio album, The One That You Love (July 1981), was produced by Harry Maslin with the title track issued as a single in April.[2][7] It is the group's only No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.[17] The album provided two more US top five hits, "Here I Am (Just When I Thought I Was Over You)" (August) and "Sweet Dreams" (December).[2][7][17] A fourth single, "I'll Never Get Enough of You", a cover version of Samantha Sang's song, was released in Japan in 1981 and achieved top ten status there.[citation needed] During recording, Barker left and was replaced by David Green on bass guitar, while early member Goh returned on guitar.[2][7]

From 1981 Air Supply regularly appeared on US music show, Solid Gold (1980–1988).[21] Hitchcock and Russell also filled-in as co-hosts when resident co-host Andy Gibb was unavailable.[citation needed] Gibb's attendance on the show became problematic and he was fired in 1982.[22] The duo co-hosted the show in October 1983 (with Marilyn McCoo) and September 1985 (with Dionne Warwick).[21]

Their seventh studio album Now and Forever, was released in June 1982 with the line-up of Cooper, Esler-Smith, Goh, Green, Hitchcock, Moyse and Russell; it was produced by Maslin, again.[2][7] It continued the group's popularity in the US with top 5 hit "Even the Nights Are Better" (June) and two top 40 singles, "Young Love" and "Two Less Lonely People in the World" (November).[17] On the Australian singles chart, "Even the Nights Are Better" reached the top 40 and is the group's last single to do so.[10] It also peaked in the top 40 in New Zealand.

They released their first compilation album, Greatest Hits, in August 1983,[2] which included a new single, "Making Love Out of Nothing at All" (July), written by Jim Steinman. The album reached number one in Australia,[2][10] number two in New Zealand,[16] and number seven on the US Billboard 200[20] – selling 5 million copies in the US by March 1993 according to Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).[23]

"Making Love Out of Nothing at All" was their equal second biggest US hit (with "All Out of Love") at No. 2, behind their only US number-one single, "The One That You Love".[17] The band also released their first live video album, Air Supply Live in Hawaii in 1983. Their song "I Can Wait Forever", which was co-written by Russell with David Foster and Jay Graydon, was featured in a scene of the film, Ghostbusters (June 1984), and was included on its soundtrack album in the same month.[24]

By the mid-1980s, Goh, Green and Moyse had all left, and the band's February 1985 self-titled album had Cooper, Esler-Smith, Hitchcock and Russell joined by Don Cromwell (ex-the Babys) on bass guitar, Ken Rarick on keyboards and Wally Stocker on guitar.[2][7] This album included their last top 20 Billboard hit with their rendition of Rob Hegel's 1982 single, "Just as I Am" (May 1985),[17] which was also their last charting single in Australia.[2][10] They released a cover version of Jennifer Rush's "The Power of Love" in July, which reached No. 21 in New Zealand,[16] and they had a minor US hit with "Lonely Is the Night" from the album Hearts in Motion (August 1986) – their last US charting studio album on the Billboard 200.[17][20]

Russell and Hitchcock recorded a 1987 Christmas Album, containing the holiday single "The Eyes of a Child", before taking a break as a band. During this time, Hitchcock released a solo self-titled album in 1988 which was not a big seller. However, his single "Swear to Your Heart"(1990) – from the soundtrack album for the film Arachnophobia – received significant airplay and reached the top ten on the US Adult Contemporary chart.[25]

1991–2000[edit]

Using previous producer, Maslin and the returning Cooper, the duo recorded The Earth Is ..., which was released in July 1991 by Giant Records/Warner Bros. Records. It contains their rendition of Badfinger's "Without You", which reached the US Adult Contemporary top 50.[26] Other singles from the album are "Stronger Than the Night" and "Stop the Tears". The album is dedicated to Frank Esler-Smith who had died in March of that year,[27] from pneumonia. The official fan club released The Earth Is World Tour video, which contains live footage from the band's global tour.

They followed with their twelfth studio album, The Vanishing Race, in May 1993,[28] which was supported by the single "Goodbye" (September), with lyrics by David Foster and Linda Thompson.[29] Although it did not chart in Australian or the US Top 100,[17][29] it was critically praised in Asia, where in many countries it reached number No. 1.[citation needed] In TaiwanPower Station and Terry Lin, the latter of whom has admitted to have been influenced by Air Supply, covered "Goodbye" but renamed it "Loving you is not like loving the sea" in 2009.[30] "It's Never Too Late" was the album's second single.

They undertook another world tour in 1993 alongside Earth, Wind & Fire guitarist Dick Smith. The album was dedicated to the plight of the Native Americans, the Vanishing Race of the album's title,[31] and sold 4 million copies.[citation needed] Their third album of the decade, News from Nowhere, was released in 1995. It contained the Asian hit singles "Someone", "Always", and a cover of "Unchained Melody".[citation needed]

The duo's popularity continued in South-east Asia,[31] culminating in the release of Greatest Hits Live ... Now and Forever (June 1996), a CD and DVD recording of two live concerts from mid-June 1995 in Taipei, Taiwan, which stayed at the top of the Hong Kong album charts for 15 weeks.[2] Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic rated the album at two-and-a-half stars out-of-five and explained, "it's slick and professional... but the intent is clearly replication, not interpretation... it's not bad — it's pleasant, even — but it's not necessary."[32] Hitchcock combined with Judith Durham (of the Seekers) and Mandawuy Yunupingu (of Yothu Yindi) for a cover version of "I Am Australian" (originally by Bruce Woodley of the Seekers and Dobe Newton of the Bushwackers), which was issued as a single in January 1997.[33] It reached No. 17 on the ARIA singles chart.[33]

2001–2011[edit]

Air Supply at the Subic Convention Center, Philippines, on 12 June 2008

From the late 1990s Air Supply toured Asia and select US venues into the new millennium. They released further adult contemporary albums, The Book of Love (1997), Yours Truly (2001), and Across the Concrete Sky (2003).[2] In 2005 they issued live albums both on CD and DVD. They performed in Havana, Cuba, becoming one of the first foreign bands invited to perform in the country. They were scheduled to perform two concerts, and played the first show on 7 July, the day before Hurricane Dennis hit the island. In high winds, that concert had an audience of 175,000. Due to the hurricane, the second show was cancelled. Fans staying at their hotel on 8 July had Russell performing acoustically for them, as there was no electricity. Songs were used in feature films, Bad Company (2002), Mr. & Mrs. Smith and The Wedding Date (both 2005).[34]

In 2006 they issued an acoustic album, The Singer and the Song. To support it they made their first trip to India in May 2006. On 2 December 2006, the duo performed to a capacity crowd in Kingston, Jamaica. This was their second visit, after performing at the Air Jamaica Jazz and Blues Festival in January. In 2007 Russell released his first adult contemporary solo album, The Future.[35] He also made an appearance in the film Believe (2007), a comedy about multi-level marketing. In 2008 based on their chart performances, they were ranked the 83rd best musical act of all time in Billboard Hot 100's 50th anniversary edition.[36]

In May 2010, Air Supply released Mumbo Jumbo, the duo's first studio album in eight years. It was recorded at Russell's home studio near Park City, Utah and at Odds on Records' state of the art facilities in Las Vegas with session musicians and an orchestra. It was produced by Russell and engineered by Sean O'Dwyer (Pink Floyd, Randy Newman and Blink-182). The first single "Dance with Me" reached number 28 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart and "Faith in Love", which peaked at number 30. The music video for "All Out of Love" is seen briefly in the 2010 Australian film, Animal Kingdom.[37]

2011–present[edit]

Air Supply live performance in Napa, California in 2015

In October 2012 Air Supply were honoured by Gray Line's Ride of Fame.[38] A double-decker tour bus was dedicated to them, which roamed the streets of New York City. On 24 October 2013 the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) announced that Air Supply were to be inducted into their Hall of Fame on 1 December 2013 at the same ceremony as the ARIA Music Awards of 2013.[39][40] Speaking on behalf of the duo, Hitchcock declared it was a great honour for them and was totally unexpected.[40] He continued that the pair were due to return to Australia for the ceremony and "have fun with everybody and we want to say thank you to all who participated in our ARIA Hall of Fame induction."[40]

Air Supply live performance, Hard Rock Casino Sacramento, 20 January 2023

In 2014, the group were approached by the Wideboys to remix their single "Desert Sea Sky". Penned by Russell, the UK remix duo created multiple versions of the song to suit Billboard dance club DJs, clubs, radio stations and the Billboard Dance Club Songs chart. On 2 December 2014, Evolution Music Group released Air Supply's first high-definition concert film, Air Supply - Live in Hong Kong on their evosound label. The album was released on blu-ray, DVD, CD and LP formats. The concert was recorded on 11 August 2013 at Asia World-Expo, Hong Kong. It showcased new songs, "Desert Sea Sky", "Dance with Me" and "I Won't Stop Living You", alongside their earlier hits.

"I Want You" reached number 35 on the Billboard Dance Club Songs chart in September 2015. They also released the single "I Adore You" that same month.[41] Air Supply were scheduled to perform in Haifa on 25 November 2016 but postponed due to fires in the region.[42] The band gave 200 free tickets to the wives of the firemen through the Haifa Fire Department workers union.[43]

jukebox musical based on Air Supply's songs, All Out of Love: The Musical (October 2018), was made in the Philippines. It was created and produced by Naomi Toohey and Dale Harrison,[44] and written by Canadian playwright Jim Millan. It starred Mig AyesaRachel Alejandro, Tanya Manalang, Raymund Concepcion and Jamie Wilson. It premiered at the Newport Performing Arts Theater in Resorts World Manila.[45][46][47] It included a new song, "I Was in Love with You", written by Russell.[48][49] In 2020 Air Supply were listed at number 48 in Rolling Stone Australia's list of "50 Greatest Australian Artists of All Time".[50]

Members[edit]

Credits:[2][7]

Current members

  • Russell Hitchcock – co-lead vocals (1975–present)
  • Graham Russell – co-lead vocals, acoustic and rhythm guitar (1975–present)
  • Aaron McLain - lead guitarist, musical director (2011–present)
  • Mirko Tessandori - keyboards (2016–present)
  • Doug Gild - bass guitar (2017–present)
  • Pavel Valdman - drums (2020–present)

Former members

  • Chrissie Hammond – co-lead vocals (1975)
  • Jeremy Paul – bass guitar, co-lead and backing vocals (1975–1977)
  • Mark McEntee – lead guitar (1976)
  • Jeff Browne – drums (1976)
  • Adrian Scott – keyboards (1976–1977)
  • Brenton White – lead guitar (1977)
  • Rex Goh – lead guitar (1977, 1981–1983, 1997)
  • Nigel Macara – drums (1977–1978)
  • Robin Le Mesurier – lead guitar (1977)
  • Joey Carbone – keyboards, clavinet (1977)[51]
  • Howard Sukimoto – bass guitar (1977)
  • Ken Francis – lead guitar (1978)
  • Tim Gaze – lead guitar (1978)
  • Bill Putt – bass guitar (1978)
  • Rick Mellick – keyboards (1978)
  • Brian Hamilton – vocals, bass guitar (1978–1979)
  • David Moyse – lead guitar, backing vocals (1978–1983)
  • Ralph Cooper – drums, percussion (1978–1983, 1983–1988, 1991–1993)
  • Jamie Rogers – bass guitar (1979)
  • Criston Barker – bass guitar, backing vocals (1979–1980)
  • David Green – bass guitar, backing vocals (1980–1983)
  • Frank Esler-Smith – keyboards (1981–1983, 1983–1986, died 1991)
  • Don Cromwell – bass guitar, backing vocals (1983–1987)
  • Ken Rarick – keyboards (1983–1986)
  • Wally Stocker – lead guitar (1985–1986)
  • Robin Swensen – keyboards, backing vocals (1986–1988)
  • Greg Hilfman – keyboards, backing vocals (1986–1988)
  • Tim Godwin – lead guitar, backing vocals (1986–1987)
  • Jimmy Haun – lead guitar (1987–1993, 2001)
  • Larry Antonino – bass guitar (1988–1994, 1997, 2000–2001)
  • Michael Sherwood – keyboards, backing vocals (1988–1994, 1997)
  • David Young – keyboards (1988–1993)
  • Guy Allison – keyboards (1990–1995, 1997)
  • Cliff Rehrig – bass guitar (1992–2000)
  • Michael Thompson – lead guitar (1992–1994)
  • Mark Williams – drums (1992–2002)
  • Hans Zermuehlen – keyboards (1993–1994)
  • Billy Sherwood – bass, vocals (1993–1994)
  • Jed Moss – piano (1995–2009)
  • Christopher Pellani – percussion, backing vocals (1997, 1999)
  • Jonni Lightfoot – bass (2001–2016)
  • Mike Zerbe – drums (2002–2011)
  • Amir Efrat – keyboards (2009–2016)
  • Christian Nesmith – lead guitar (2010–2011)
  • CJ Burton – drums (2009–2013)[52]
  • Tiki Pasillas – drums (2012–2014)
  • Aviv Cohen – drums (2014–2020)
  • Derek Frank – bass guitar (2016–2017)

Discography[edit]

Awards and nominations[edit]

ARIA Music Awards[edit]

The ARIA Music Awards is an annual awards ceremony that recognises excellence, innovation, and achievement across all genres of the music of Australia. They commenced in 1987. Air Supply were inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2013.[53]

Denis Handlin AM, ARIA Chairman & CEO of Sony Music Entertainment Australia & New Zealand and President, Asia said: "On behalf of the ARIA Board we are honoured to induct Air Supply into the ARIA Hall of Fame... at the 27th Annual ARIA Awards. With their many timeless songs that have crossed generations and led to ground-breaking success overseas, Air Supply are one of Australia's most unique and successful musical stories."[54]

YearNominee / workAwardResult
ARIA Music Awards of 2013themselvesARIA Hall of Fameinductee

TV Week / Countdown Awards[edit]

Countdown was an Australian pop music TV series on national broadcaster ABC-TV from 1974 to 1987, it presented music awards from 1979 to 1987, initially in conjunction with magazine TV Week. The TV Week / Countdown Awards (1979–1980) were a combination of popular-voted and peer-voted awards and were followed by the Countdown Australian Music Awards (1981–1986).[55]

YearNominee / workAwardResult
1980Themselves[nb 1]Most Outstanding AchievementNominated
1981ThemselvesMost Outstanding AchievementWon

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ The 1980 award for Most Outstanding Achievement was won by Cold Chisel, who trashed the set after their final performance during the ceremony's live telecast, held in May 1981.[56]: 157  In the following week the show's host Molly Meldrum asked for Cold Chisel to mail their trophy to Air Supply, as "[it] should have gone to [them]."[56]: 157 

Tours[edit]

  • The Power of Love World Tour (1985)
  • The Earth Is...World Tour (1991)
  • Always World Tour (1995)
  • From the Heart Tour (2008)
  • 40th Anniversary Tour (2016)
  • The Lost in Love Experience (2019)

Afroman


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Afroman
Afroman playing guitar onstage
Afroman performing in 2011
Background information
Birth nameJoseph Edgar Foreman
BornJuly 28, 1974 (age 49)
Los AngelesCalifornia, U.S.
OriginJacksonMississippi, U.S.[1]
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Political candidate
  • rapper
  • singer
  • songwriter
  • comedian
Instrument(s)
  • Vocals
  • guitar
  • drums
  • synthesizer
Years active1997–present
Labels
Websiteogafroman.com

Joseph Edgar Foreman (born July 28, 1974), better known by his stage name Afroman, is an American rapper, singer, songwriter, political candidate, and comedian. He is best known for his 2000 single "Because I Got High", and its follow-up, the 2001 single "Crazy Rap". Both songs were featured on his album The Good Times (2001). Afroman was nominated for a Grammy award a year later.

Early life[edit]

Afroman was born on July 28, 1974, in Los Angeles, California.[2] He initially grew up in the state of Mississippi before moving back to South-Central Los Angeles at an early age. He later lived in the High Desert Southern California city of Palmdale, briefly in Las Vegas, Nevada, and then Hattiesburg, Mississippi.[3]

Career[edit]

The first song Afroman wrote was entitled "Hairy Carrie". He stated it was written during his time in middle school and was a "diss song" about a student known for her cruel harassment of fellow students concerning their appearances.[4]

His musical career began in the eighth grade when he began recording homemade songs and selling them to his classmates.[4] He later recalled: "The first tape I made was about my eighth-grade teacher. She got me kicked out of school for sagging my pants, which was a big deal back then. So I wrote this song about her and it sold about 400 copies: it was selling to teachers, students, just about everybody. And I realized that, even though I wasn't at school, my song was at school, so in a way I was still there. All these people would come by my house just to give me comments about how cool they thought the song was."[5] Foreman also performed in his church at a young age, playing both the drums and guitar.[4]

In 1998, Afroman released his first album, My Fro-losophy, which was described as a "flop". The following year, he released Sell Your Dope and relocated to Hattiesburg, Mississippi,[4] where he met drummer Jody Stallone, keyboardist/bassist Darrell Havard, and producer Tim Ramenofsky (a.k.a. Headfridge). Afroman attributes his musical success in part to his relocation. In a 2023 interview with DJ Vlad, he stated Midwesterners and Southerners were more willing than people in LA to experiment with their taste in music.

Ramenofsky produced and released Afroman's album Because I Got High in 2000 on T-Bones Records; it was distributed primarily through local concerts and the file-sharing service Napster before its title track was played on The Howard Stern Show. The song humorously describes how cannabis use is degrading the narrator's quality of life.[4] In late 2001, the song became a hit and was featured in the 2000s films Jay and Silent Bob Strike BackThe Perfect Score, and Disturbia. "Because I Got High" was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Rap Solo Performance in 2002.[6]

After the single's success, Afroman joined the lineup of Cypress Hill's fall festival "Smoke Out" with the DeftonesMethod Man, and others.[7] After this, Universal Records signed Afroman to a six-album deal, and Universal released The Good Times in 2001. The Good Times was a compilation of Afroman's first two albums and also featured new songs.[4]

Afroman started releasing his music independently and mostly through the Internet in 2004,[4] and that year, he recorded Jobe Bells, which satirized traditional Christmas songs.[8]

Afroman was part of the 2010 Gathering of the Juggalos lineup.[9]

In October 2014, Afroman released a remix of his hit song "Because I Got High" in order to highlight the usefulness of cannabis as part of the effort to legalize its sale across the United States.[10]

Personal life[edit]

Religion[edit]

In 2003, Afroman declared himself a Christian.[11] In January 2023, he released an hour-long video on YouTube titled "How To Be Happy In An Unhappy World - Sermon By Afroman" detailing his experiences and understanding on life's issues and how to overcome tribulations through faith in the word of God.[12]

Assault case[edit]

On February 17, 2015, Afroman was midway through his performance at a live music venue in Biloxi, Mississippi, when a woman walked on stage. While dancing and holding a drink, she approached Afroman from behind. Afroman punched her in the face and was eventually escorted offstage by security. He was taken into custody, charged with assault, and released on bond shortly thereafter.

There were reportedly 12 to 15 security guards on duty to manage a crowd in excess of 500 people. According to Afroman's representative, he had punched the woman as an involuntary reaction to the invasion of his personal space. Afroman also stated that he mistook her for another audience member who had been heckling him throughout the performance. He publicly apologized and sought assistance with anger management.[13][14]

Raid on Ohio home[edit]

In August 2022, the Adams County, Ohio Sheriff's department searched Afroman's home on suspicion of kidnapping and drug trafficking. Nothing was found during the search, and according to Afroman he "had nothing more in his house than the ends of a few blunts and unused pipes made for him by fans." No charges were presented against Afroman. [15]

Afroman, who was in Chicago when his neighbors informed him of the raid, posted about the experience on social media, and criticized the officers for raiding his home and causing damage to his property.[16] He also posted about a previous burglary on his home where he was threatened with arrest by the sheriff's department if he kept checking about the progress of the case and was told they did not have time to provide him with an update.[17][18] The search of Afroman's home damaged his door, external gate, and security system wiring, which cost over $20,000 to repair. During the raid officers also seized over $5,000 of cash from his home. The cash was later returned to him, but with $400 missing.[15]

He recorded a trio of songs criticizing the raid, titled "Will You Help Me Repair My Door","Lemon Pound Cake" (also the name of his album, set to the tune of Under the Boardwalk by The Drifters) and "Why You Disconnecting My Video Camera", and released three music videos composed primarily of security camera recordings of the raid, to his YouTube account, on December 29, 2022.[19]

On March 14, 2023, seven police officers from the Adams County Sheriff's office sued Afroman, alleging that his use of their personas from the video of the raid was an invasion of the officers' privacy.[20]

2024 presidential candidacy[edit]

On December 20, 2022, Afroman announced his candidacy in the 2024 presidential election. His campaign manager, Jason Savage, announced his candidacy on his behalf, citing inflation, the housing market, law enforcement corruption, and legalizing marijuana as key issues of his campaign.[21][22]

Discography[edit]

  • My Fro-losophy (1998)
  • Because I Got High (2000)
  • Sell Your Dope (2000)
  • The Good Times (2001)
  • Afroholic... The Even Better Times (2004)
  • Jobe Bells (2004)
  • 4R0:20 (2004)
  • The Hungry Hustlerz: Starvation Is Motivation (2004)
  • Drunk 'n' High (2006)
  • A Colt 45 Christmas (2006)
  • Waiting to Inhale (2008)
  • Frobama: Head of State (2009)
  • Marijuana Music (2013)
  • The Frorider (2014)
  • Happy to Be Alive (2016)
  • Cold Fro-T-5 and Two Frigg Fraggs (2017)
  • Save a Cadillac, Ride a Homeboy (2020)
  • Lemon Pound Cake (2022)[23]
  • Famous Player (2023)

Aerosmith

Adam Faith

Adam Ant

Acker Bilk

Ace of Base

AC/DC