Charles Andrew Bothwell (born December 13, 1981), better known by his stage name Astronautalis, is an American alternative hip hop artist currently based in Brooklyn, New York.
Astronautalis | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Charles Andrew Bothwell |
Also known as | Andy Bothwell |
Born | December 13, 1981 |
Origin | Jacksonville, Florida |
Genres | |
Occupations | |
Years active | 2003–present |
Labels |
|
Website | astronautalis |
History
editAfter gaining some recognition in local circles in Jacksonville, Florida and competing at Scribble Jam,[1] Astronautalis self-released his debut album, You and Yer Good Ideas, in 2003. He eventually signed with Fighting Records and the record was re-released in 2005, followed by his second album, The Mighty Ocean and Nine Dark Theaters, in 2006. He released the third album, Pomegranate, on Eyeball Records in 2008. In winter 2009, he toured with the Canadian indie rock band Tegan and Sara through Europe,[2] and supported them again through the spring of 2010 in Australia.[3] His fourth album, This Is Our Science, was released on Fake Four Inc. in 2011. His latest release, Cut the Body Loose, was released in 2016.
Astronautalis is a descendant of James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell, which is one of the reasons why his lyrics often deal with historical fiction.[4]
Style
editAstronautalis has been described as "if Beck were a decade or so younger and had grown up more heavily immersed in hip-hop,"[5] with his rapping style noted for "blending styles of indie rock, electro, and talkin’ blues"[6] with hip-hop. He has described himself as "historical fiction hip-hop."[7]
During live performances, Astronautalis often performs a freestyle rap based on topics chosen by members of his audience.[8]
Controversies
editIn June 2020 Astronautalis was accused of sexual assault and physical abuse by a number of accounts on Instagram and Twitter. Astronautalis released a response admitting to this abuse and has since deleted all of his tweets and made his account private.[9]
Discography
editThis section of a biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. (March 2020) |
Studio albums
edit- You and Yer Good Ideas (self-released, 2003; Fighting, 2005)
- The Mighty Ocean & Nine Dark Theaters (Fighting, 2006)
- Pomegranate (Eyeball, 2008)
- This Is Our Science (Fake Four Inc., 2011)
- Cut the Body Loose (SideOneDummy, 2016)[10]
Collaborative albums
edit- 6666 (with P.O.S, as Four Fists) (2018)
- De Oro (Totally Gross National Product, 2014) (with S. Carey, Ryan Olson & Justin Vernon, as Jason Feathers)
Mixtapes
edit- Dancehall Horn Sound!! (2010) (with DJ Fishr Pryce)
EPs
edit- Meet Me Here (2004)
- Texas Kinda Rhymes With Sexist (2005)
- A Round Trip Ticket to China (2006)
- Split EP (2006) (with Babel Fishh)
- Gold Bones (2007)
- Dang! Seven Freestyles in Seven Days (2008)
- The Unfortunate Affairs of Mary and Earl (2008)
- The Young Capitalist's Starter Kit (2008)
- Daytrotter Sessions (2011)
- This City Ain't Just a Skyline (2013)
- SIKE! (2016)
Singles
edit- "This Is the Place" (2013) (with Sims)
- "The Rainmakers" b/w "Fallen Streets" (2013) (with Rickolus)
- "MMMMMHMMMMM" b/w "Please Go" (2013) (with P.O.S, as Four Fists)
- "The Dirt Bike" (2017) [11]
- "Sick" (2017) [12]
- "These Songs" (2017) [13]
- "Bella Ciao" (2020)
Vinyl releases
edit- You and Yer Good Ideas (2003) [Dual 12' Vinyl: Black]
- Split Series Vol. 2 (2006) (with BabelFishh]) [12' Vinyl: 500 Black]
- Pomegranate (2008) [12' Vinyl: Black, Ltd: White]
- This Is Our Science (2011) [12' Vinyl: Black]
- Astronautalis & Rickolus (2013) (with Rickolus) [1st Pressing: 100 Mixed Color (Hand-Numbered), 150 Red, 150 White, 250 Black; 2nd Pressing: 175 Lavender, 175 Blue]
- Four Fists (2013) (with P.O.S) [500 Clear, 500 Red, 500 White, 500 Blue]
- Double Exposure Vol 3. (2013) (with Chuck Ragan) [100 Blue, 200 White, 300 Red, 400 Black]
- The Mighty Ocean & Nine Dark Theaters (2015) [Dual 12' Vinyl: 500 Swirled blue/white/clear]
Guest appearances & production credits
editGuest appearances
- Scott Da Ros – "They Made Me Do It" (2005)
- Brzowski – "Roll My Bones" from Maryshelleyoverdrive (2005)
- Input – "Now and Never More" from Elusive Candor (2006)
- Noah23 – "They Made Me Do It" from Cameo Therapy (2007)
- P.O.S – "Hand Made Hand Gun" from Never Better (2009)
- Otem Rellik – "Warm Pockets" from Chain Reaction Robot (2008)
- Oskar Ohlson – "Sea of Grass" from Honk, Bang, Whistle and Crash (2008)
- Sole and the Skyrider Band – "A Sad Day for Investors" from Sole and the Skyrider Band Remix LP (2009)
- Sole – "Swagger Like Us" & "Juicy" from Nuclear Winter Volume 1 (2009)
- Ceschi – "No New York" from The One Man Band Broke Up (2010)
- Zoën – "Be Careful What You Wish For" from One Night Between (2010)
- Mild Davis – "Prince of Mayport" from Bro-Sesh: Volume 1 (2010)
- Andrre – "Learn to Listen" and "Keeping Memory Alive" from Learn to Love (2011)
- The Hood Internet – "Our Finest China" from FEAT (2012)
- Bleubird – "Hello Hollow" from Cannonball!!! (2012)
- Marijuana Deathsquads – "Top Down" from Tamper Disable Destroy (2012)
- P.O.S – "Wanted Wasted" from We Don't Even Live Here (2012)
- Input & Broken – "When Darkness Looms" from Never Heard of Ya (2012)
- Myka 9 & Factor Chandelier – "Bask In These Rays" from Sovereign Soul (2012)
- Culture Cry Wolf – "That's the Breaks" from The Sapient Sessions EP (2013)
- Factor – "Let It Go" from Woke Up Alone (2013)
- Sadistik – "Exit Theme" from Flowers for My Father (2013)
- Giant Gorilla Dog Thing – "Bandaids Over Bulletholes" from Horse (2014)
- Noize MC – "Hard Reboot" from Hard Reboot (2014)
- P.O.S. – "Sleepdrone/Superposition" from "Chill, dummy" (2017)
- Factor Chandelier – "Scratch-Off Lotto Tickets" from "Wisdom Teeth" (2018)
- Ceschi – "Any War" from "Sad, Fat Luck" (2019)
- Hurricane Party – "Kon@" from "Juice" (2019)
Production credits
- Bleubird – Cannonball!!! (2012)
Videography
edit- Trouble Hunters (2009)
- The Wondersmith and His Sons (2010)
- Contrails (2011)
- This Is Our Science (2012)
- Dimitri Mendeleev (2013)
- SIKE! (2016)
- Running Away From God (2016)
- Kurt Cobain (2016)
- Forest Fire (2017)
References
edit- ^ McNutt, Stephanie (March 22, 2010). "P.O.S., Dessa, and Astronautalis at Turner Hall". The A.V. Club. Archived from the original on 2013-10-16.
- ^ "Astronautalis: A Year To Remember". Fresherthan. December 31, 2009. Archived from the original on 2012-08-24. Retrieved 2012-08-14.
- ^ Young, David (May 12, 2010). "Tegan & Sara + Astronautalis – Big Top Luna Park (07.05.10)". The AU Review. Archived from the original on October 16, 2013. Retrieved August 14, 2012.
- ^ The Very Unfortunate Affairs of Mary & Earl liner notes. February 5, 2015.
- ^ Mason, Stewart. "You and Yer Good Ideas – Astronautalis". Allmusic.
- ^ "Fighting Records".
- ^ "Astronautalis discusses his 'historical fiction hip-hop'". North Texas Daily. October 21, 2011. Archived from the original on December 2, 2016.
- ^ Marvilli, Joe (March 15, 2011). "Astronautalis: Preparing for the "Midday Moon"". Consequence of Sound.
- ^ Hatfield, Amanda (30 June 2020). "Astronautalis admits to abuse following new allegations". BrooklynVegan.
- ^ "Astronautalis".
- ^ "Astronautalis The Dirt Bike". 23 March 2017. Retrieved 23 March 2017.
- ^ "Astronautalis Sick".
- ^ "Astronautalis These Songs".
External links
edit- Official website
- Astronautalis discography at Discogs
- Astronautalis at AllMusic
- Featured on MN Original Program from St. Paul, MN PBS Station: MN Original Video