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The Vinyl Guide - Artist Interviews for Record Collectors and Music Nerds

Ep554: Everlast - From Rhyme Syndicate to Embers to Ashes

44 min29 juni 2026

Everlast traces his journey from Rhyme Syndicate graffiti kid to House of Pain to solo artist, revealing how Jump Around's success gave him the freedom to never chase a hit again.

New LP "Embers to Ashes" available here

Topics Include:

  • Everlast's new album Embers to Ashes drops August 28th with vinyl available
  • He collects art and guitars, not records — leaves vinyl to the DJs
  • His guitar collection spans vintage Fender Strats, Gretsch Falcons, and Martin acoustics
  • Grew up immersed in graffiti culture, his kids are graffiti artists too
  • His house is essentially a private gallery of graffiti and street art
  • Music was always on — mom loved R&B and doo-wop, dad loved Southern rock
  • His dad had a guitar; Everlast taught himself basic chords by watching TV
  • Hip hop took over at 15, but guitar quietly stayed in his life
  • He plays guitar like a drummer — rhythm-first, not melody-first
  • The breakthrough came post-House of Pain: suddenly he could play and sing simultaneously
  • Whitey Ford Sings the Blues was conceived as hip hop — "What It's Like" changed everything
  • Jump Around's success gave him the financial freedom to never chase it again
  • He and Muggs deliberately made each subsequent record darker and more distant from it
  • Soul Assassins kept management out of sessions — artistic control was non-negotiable
  • His first ever rhyme came from tagging alongside Divine Styler and the Rhyme Syndicate crew
  • Danny Boy introduced him to punk — Bad Brains and the LA hardcore scene
  • His debut solo record split between pure artistic vision and label-pleasing compromises
  • Tommy Boy won his loyalty over bigger-money offers purely on cultural credibility
  • Just Another Victim with Helmet emerged organically on the Judgment Night soundtrack
  • Lethal sampled and slowed Helmet's track, then sandwiched both versions together
  • After eight-plus years away, Yellow Wolf simply asked "why don't you make a record?"
  • COVID, divorce, and losing his house shaped the emotional landscape of the new album
  • Yellow Wolf pushed him to fully sing — his strongest vocal performance on record
  • A near-miss connection to the Bataclan attack was redirected by a last-minute camera detour
  • He's got shows booked and eyes a final solo acoustic tour as his ultimate bookend

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