Vast Aire
Vast Aire | |
---|---|
Birth name | Theodore Arrington III |
Also known as | Vast Heir |
Born | February 5, 1978 |
Origin | Manhattan, New York City, United States |
Genres | Hip hop |
Occupation(s) | Rapper, producer |
Instruments | Mean Left Hook |
Years active | 2000–present |
Labels | Definitive Jux Eastern Conference Chocolate Industries |
Associated acts | Cannibal Ox Atoms Family The Weathermen |
Website | Myspace |
Theodore Arrington III (born February 5, 1978), better known by his stage name Vast Aire, is an American rapper from New York City. He is one half of the New York hip hop duo Cannibal Ox, which consists of him and fellow rapper Vordul Mega. He is also a member of the rap group Atoms Family. He was born in Mount Vernon, New York, then lived in Jamaica, Queens before moving to Harlem,[1] and became acquainted with the underground rap scene, performing in many clubs while still a teenager. He was once a part of the underground hip hop group The Weathermen.
Contents
Career
Vast Aire's fame increased significantly as part of Cannibal Ox with Vordul Mega. Together with producer El-P, it recorded its debut album, The Cold Vein, and released it in 2001. The album was a critical success. Since then, Vast Aire has pursued solo interests. His first solo album Look Mom... No Hands was released in April 2004. This was followed by The Best Damn Rap Show, a collaborative effort with DJ Mighty Mi from The High & Mighty in 2005. These solo projects did not break Vast Aire from his obligations at Definitive Jux with Cannibal Ox. Vast has since gone on to work with members from the Megahertz crew, and was a member of The Weathermen alongside Copywrite, Yak Ballz, Cage, Aesop Rock, the late Camu Tao, and Tame One. However, he was kicked out of the Weathermen by Camu Tao after allegedly stealing from both Yak Ballz and Tame One. In 2009 he denounced the Weathermen group as a whole. This followed rapper and Weathermen founder Cage writing the song "Nothing Left to Say" about Vast Aire trying to profit from Camu Tao's death and then calling him out on his Myspace page.[2][3] Vast Aire is also a part of a group called LXG, the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen.[citation needed]
When asked about the meaning of his name, Vast Aire explained: "I guess it means mad styles. I think it means a lot of attitude. Vast Aire. I have a very wordy type of style. Vast was given to me by a friend of mine I went to school with and the Aire pretty much came from me being a junior. My name is Theodore Arrington II. I used to spell it proper. H-E-I-R. But, in the past couple of years, I switched it to A-I-R-E."[attribution needed]
Discography
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Studio albums
- Look Mom... No Hands (2004)
- The Best Damn Rap Show (2005) (with DJ Mighty Mi)
- Empire State (2007) (with Karniege, as Mighty Joseph)
- Dueces Wild (2008)
- OX 2010: A Street Odyssey (2011)
Compilation albums
- Best of the Best Vol. 1 (2013)
EPs
- A Space Iliad EP (2013)[4]
Singles
- "Look Mom...No Hands" b/w "Why'sdaskyblue?" (2003)
- "Elixir" b/w "Candid Cam" (2004)
- "Pegasus" b/w "Red Pill" (2004)
Guest appearances
- Aesop Rock - "Attention Span" from Float (2000)
- Techno Animal - "We Can Build You" from The Brotherhood of the Bomb (2001)
- Aesop Rock - "Nickel Plated Pockets" from Daylight (2002)
- El-P - "Dr. Hell No and the Praying Mantis" from Fantastic Damage (2002)
- RJD2 - "Final Frontier (Remix)" from The Horror (2003)
- Diverse - "Big Game" from One A.M. (2003)
- C-Rayz Walz - "The Lineup" from Ravipops (The Substance) (2003)
- Push Button Objects - "Fly" from Ghetto Blaster (2003)
- Jean Grae - "Swing Blades" from The Bootleg of the Bootleg EP (2003)
- S.A. Smash - "Slide on 'Em (Escapade)" from Smashy Trashy (2003)
- Aesop Rock - "N.Y. Electric" from Bazooka Tooth (2003)
- Illogic - "Time Capsule" from Celestial Clockwork (2004)
- Blueprint - "Small World, Big Plans" from Chamber Music (2004)
- Vordul Mega - "Handle That" from The Revolution of Yung Havoks (2004)
- Billy Woods - "Drinks" from The Chalice (2004)
- Mr. Complex - "Calm Down" from Twisted Mister (2004)
- Wu-Tang Clan - "Slow Blues" from Wu-Tang Meets the Indie Culture (2005)
- Dabrye - "That's Whats Up" from Two/Three (2006)
- Oh No - "No Aire" from Exodus into Unheard Rhythms (2006)
- Wisemen - "Iconoclasts" from Wisemen Approaching (2006)
- Toteking - "Jugar Duro" from Un Tipo Cualquiera (2007)
- Vordul Mega - "AK-47" and "In the Mirror" from Megagraphitti (2008)
- Double A.B. - "The Diesel" from The Diesel (2008)
- Mind over Matter - "Clipped Wings" from Keepin' It Breezy (2008)
- Sadistik - "Writes of Passage" from The Balancing Act (2008)
- DJ Bootsie - "Vast Hope" from Holidays in the Shade (2008)
- Atari Blitzkrieg - "The Cry from Within" from 12.31.99 (2009)
- Stress 1 - "Bring It Back" from Eyerockmics Vol. 1 (2010)
- Virtuoso - "Bay of Pigs" from The Final Conflict (2011)
- Lewis Parker - "Murder One" from Dangerous Adventures (2011)
- Chasm - "Intergalactic" from This Is How We Never Die (2012)
- True Believers - "Five Point Star" (2014)
Compilation appearances
- "Cholesterol" from Inside Out Vol. 1: A Fool Blown Compilation (2000)
- "Super Friends (Edan Remix)" from Chocolate Swim (2006)
References
- ↑ :: Culture King Interviews - Vast Aire ::
- ↑ awmusic.ca Vast Aire vs Def Jux.
- ↑ www.wreckthetapedeck.com El-P Dishes Back Beef.
- ↑ https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/a-space-iliad/id593608603
External links
- Vast Aire on Myspace
- Vast Aire on TwitterLua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
- Vast Aire discography at Discogs
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