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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