NorthWest Invasion Tour Featuring Afroman Seattle

Mon Aug 08 2022 at 06:00 pm to 11:30 pm

Funhouse | Seattle

BettaLife Entertainment
Publisher/HostBettaLife Entertainment
NorthWest Invasion Tour Featuring Afroman Seattle
Advertisement
Afroman Featuring WKND Clique and Caleb Wildcard
ALL AGES
About this Event

Born in Los Angeles, Afroman initially grew up in South-Central Los Angeles. He later lived in Palmdale in the High Desert of Southern California, and then Hattiesburg, Mississippi.[1]


Afroman's musical career began in the eighth grade, when he began recording homemade songs and selling them to his classmates.[2] "The first tape I made was about my eighth-grade teacher", he once recalled. "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."[3] Foreman also performed in his church at a young age, playing both the drums and guitar.[2]


In 1998, Afroman released his first album, My Fro-losophy and later relocated to Hattiesburg, Mississippi,[2] where he met drummer Jody Stallone, keyboardist/bassist Darrell Havard and producer Tim Ramenofsky (a.k.a. Headfridge).


Ramenofsky produced and released Afroman's album Because I Got High in 2000 on T-Bones Records; it was distributed primarily through concerts and the file-sharing service Napster before its title track was played on The Howard Stern Show. Afroman was inspired to write the song's lyrical content by his unwillingness to clean his room, and he ran with the idea of everyday tasks being derailed by drug use.[2] In late 2001, the song became a hit and was featured in the films Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, The Perfect Score, and Disturbia later in the 2000s. "Because I Got High" was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Rap Solo Performance in 2002.


After the single's success, Afroman joined the lineup of Cypress Hill's fall festival "Smoke Out" with the Deftones, Method Man, and others.[5] 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 some new tracks.

Advertisement

Event Venue & Nearby Stays

Funhouse, 109 Eastlake Avenue East, Seattle, United States

Tickets

USD 40.00 to USD 100.00

Sharing is Caring: