Chicago Sun-Times

Oddisee digs deep emotionall­y for latest album, tour

- By MOIRA MCCORMICK Moira McCormick is a local freelance writer.

As a kid in the early ’ 90s, Sudanese- American rapper and producer Oddisee led an adventures­ome double life. He’d spend the school year in Prince George’s County, Md., near Washington, D. C. ( his mother’s hometown). Then the lad would while away summers in Khartoum with his emigrant father’s side of the family: camping in the desert, exploring Nubian pyramids, swimming in the Nile.

“I loved my childhood in Sudan. I’d feel like Indiana Jones,” reminisced the artist born Amir Mohamed el Khalifa, who headlines Lincoln Hall May 20, along with his five- piece band, Good Compny. He even characteri­zed the crocodiles famously lurking in the world’s longest river as not much more than a minor nuisance: “If you’re from there, you know which parts of the Nile are inhabited by crocs. And you stay clear of those areas.”

In a recent phone interview, Oddisee, 32, credited his dual ethnicity with instilling in him not only “an appreciati­on for what I have,” but also his discipline­d, assiduous work ethic. “I definitely work like an immigrant,” he asserted.

The intrepid indie label Mello Music Group recently released Oddisee’s 11th studio album, “The Iceberg.” Pitchfork magazine applauds it as “a focused beam of live- band and hip- hop soul that rattles loudly in our present political moment” ( one highlight, “Like Really,” is pointedly, sarcastica­lly anti- Trump without mentioning Fearless Leader’s name). Topical and thought- provoking, multilayer­ed and lustrous, it’s Oddisee’s latest entry in a discograph­y teeming with albums, EPs, singles, mixtapes, guest appearance­s and production­s – many, many production­s.

You could say it all started with pictures, because Oddisee had shown considerab­le f lair for visual art practicall­y since infancy. As he entered young adulthood, though, a new creative passion emerged: hiphop. Sparked by the music of rap acts from nascent superstar Jay- Z to the eclectic, Afrocentri­c crew A Tribe Called Quest, “I got into writing lyrics and rapping in school at the lunch table,” he related.

“And then I got into production. When I realized that I could actually make a living from production, I stopped drawing and illustrati­ng and painting, and pursued music,” Odisee said. “I didn’t want to do anything else.” Constructi­ng musical beats for a plenitude of clients “enabled me to have multiple tracks out simultaneo­usly with different artists, without oversatura­ting myself,” Oddisee explained, noting, “[ So] I put my writing on the back burner.” But “once things started to balance out financiall­y, I thought I’d switch the focus back to my own writing.” His fulllength album debut, “People Hear What They See,” received 2012’ s iTunes Music Award for best hip- hop album.

And the accolades have kept coming. One is from Complex magazine — the pop- culture arbiter placed Oddisee at No. 10 on its list of “The 23 Best Rappers Who Started As Producers” ( for comparison, Kanye is No. 1).

“There aren’t many producer/ rappers like Oddisee,” observed Chicago hip- hop figure Verbal Kent, an MC for whom the now Brooklyn- based artist has produced assorted tracks since 2007. “His ear is phenomenal, but his heart and soul might stick out more when listening to him.” Plus, said Kent, “His hustle inspires musicians who do what they do for the love.”

Oddisee and Good Compny are i n t he midst of a massive world tour called Beneath the Surface, a reference to “The Iceberg” and its theme of digging past life’s veneer. A prominent example i s the powerful track “You Grew Up,” a f inely- observed portrait of prejudice inexorably devolving into tragedy.

“We as children are born essentiall­y the same, but we are indoctrina­ted into our fears and our beliefs,” Oddisee said. The song’s main character is his fictionali­zed version of a white childhood friend, one who “may very well have turned into a person fearful enough of black people to shoot on sight” — more the fault of that indoctrina­tion than of the essential person.

“I grew up with people constantly talking about their difference­s, and I felt like I was one of the only ones who knew how similar they were,” Oddisee reflected. “And I try to use my music to bridge that gap.”

 ?? | SUPPLIED PHOTO ?? Oddisee
| SUPPLIED PHOTO Oddisee

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