About
Hezekiah

Question: What do you get when you
mix a Delaware-raised former choirboy
and preteen Funk singer with a diehard
DIY Hip Hop head who cites country
music, Quincy Jones and Kool G. Rap
as influences in the same breath?
Answer: One of the dopest Emcees-slash-producers-slash-singers-slash-guitar
players-slash-songwriters that you've
never heard. You can call him Hezekiah.
Born into a musical family, and raised
just outside of Philadelphia, Hezekiah
got his chops at an early age, belting
out God's greatest hits at his family's
church, and before long was singing
in his Uncle's band, the Funk Disciples
(who dropped some super hard-to-find
wax in the mid 70's).
Around ‘86, Hezekiah's cousin
brought home a track machine and a
drum machine, and he was instantly
hooked. Predating the live Hip Hop
trend by plenty of years, Hezekiah
spent much of his early days in front
of the two machines, rocking sellout
shows in the living room with his
Cousin on bass and Uncle on guitar.
Once out of High School, Hezekiah
linked up with arguably the only Hip
Hop crew to ever exist in Delaware,
and put together a mixtape called
"Exit Wound Status" which
sold an impressive 2,000 hand-to-hand
copies on the streets and at shows.
But it was getting up with the Legendary
Roots Crew in '93 that spurred him
to get down to business. He began
to work his way up through the ranks
of the Philly’s ever-strong
Hip Hop scene with his on point wordplay,
superior songwriting, and lovely production
skills—working with the likes
of Musiq Soulchild, Bilal, The Jazzyfatnastees,
and Bahamadia.
Fast forward to 2005, and Hezekiah's
finally finished new album—Hurry
Up & Wait (a title dedicated to
the woes of the independent artist),
is dropping on New York's Soulspazm
Records. Put together in full-on Hip
Hop hermit mode, Hezekiah produced
the record locked up in his home studio,
and penned all of its lyrics lost
amongst crowds in the chaos of Philly.
What’s resulted is a collection
of luxurious, smoked out Hip Hop beats,
and minimal synth Funk produced by
the man himself (with notable exceptions
coming from Illmind and Anthony Accurate)
with Hezekiah flowing beautifully
atop it every second of the way. And
although the record is intended to
let Hezekiah shine, the guestlist
is impressive—Bahamadia, Scratch
(The Roots), Grand Agent and Santi
White (Stiffed) all make appearances.
This is an album intended for headphones,
getting deep tissue massages, and
eating fruit smorgasbords at dusk—straight
up.
In addition to the release of Hurry
Up & Wait, 2005 finds Hezekiah
managing to keep himself busy, working
on albums for Philadelphia singer
and sandwich-making mastermind Aaron
Livingston and Musiq's backup twin
singing sensations Aaries, due out
on Def Jam. In addition, he's the
driving force behind Beat Society,
an open forum and club night that
focuses on putting Hip Hop producers
center stage, and has recently been
tapped to co-produce the music for
a Showtime original series, Street
Time. And he also juggles mountain
lions. Seriously. |