Often referred to as “the loudest white boy in showbiz” Fieldz high-energy rasp can drip with honey when it counts.
His soul-driven sound is eclectic and has its own hard edge.
He’s the Big Mac of flow reaching into his own raw heart with cutting edge candor and audiences feel the flow.
He’s about reachin’ down deep where everybody lives.
He’s not the first rapper to come out of a dysfunctional, sometimes violent family, with a raging alcoholic father, but he is among those fast-talking poets who takes responsibility for life and never stops asking the questions only a poet can answer.
He may be angry, but he’s not bitter.
Born in Rochester N.Y. and now a resident of Brooklyn, he’s been writing since he was just a boy living in dreamland. At 11, on the threshold of puberty, he turned his pen to the real world using rhythm and rhyme to conquer hopelessness and despair. He wants to teach other kids to do the same.
He came up the hard way in a city most people have never even heard of but which is littered with the broken lives of those who live in the war zone that is hidden America.
His current CD Lean On Music explores the gamut of emotions a boy faces as he morphs into a man who loves and loses women but who always finds redemption in music. Highlights include Maria, in which two lovers lose each other because their not wise enough to hold each other, and Hold On, a record about choosing life over death even when adversity hits big time. “Music has never turned its back on me even when it seemed like everybody else had,” said Fieldz. |