Schoolboy Q












































ScHoolBoy Q

Schoolboy Q.jpg
Hanley in July 2012

Background information
Birth name Quincy Matthew Hanley[1]
Born
(1986-10-26) October 26, 1986 (age 32)
Wiesbaden, Hesse, West Germany
Origin
SoutH Figueroa Corridor, SoutH Central Los Angeles, California, United States
Genres Hip Hop
Occupation(s)

  • Rapper

  • songwriter

Years active 2008–present
Labels

  • Top Dawg


  • Interscope (current)

  • G.E.D. Inc. (former)

Associated acts


  • Black Hippy

  • ASAP Rocky

  • BJ the Chicago Kid

  • Danny Brown

  • Jhené Aiko

  • Mac Miller

  • Tyga

  • Tyler, the Creator


Website www.schoolboyq.com

Quincy Matthew Hanley (born October 26, 1986), better known by his stage name ScHoolboy Q, is an American rapper from South Central Los Angeles, California. In 2009, Hanley signed to Carson-based independent record label Top Dawg Entertainment (TDE) and in late 2011, secured a recording contract with major label Interscope Records. Hanley is also a member of the Hip Hop supergroup Black Hippy, alongside label-mates and fellow California-based rappers Ab-Soul, Jay Rock, and Kendrick Lamar.


In 2008, Hanley released His first full-length project, a mixtape titled ScHoolboy Turned Hustla. He later released a follow-up in 2009, titled Gangsta & Soul. He then returned in January 2011, with his first independent album, titled Setbacks. The project, released under TDE, to digital retailers only, reached number 100 on the US Billboard 200 chart. A little over a year later, his second independent album Habits & Contradictions, was also released exclusively to digital retailers. The album received generally favorable reviews and debuted at number 111 on the US Billboard 200.


After signing with Interscope, Hanley subsequently began recording his major-label debut studio album, titled Oxymoron. The album was released on February 25, 2014 and debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200. The album was supported by the singles, "Collard Greens", "Man of the Year", "Break the Bank" "Studio" and "Hell of a Night", with "Collard Greens", "Man of the Year" and "Studio" all charting on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart.




Contents






  • 1 Early life


  • 2 Musical career


    • 2.1 2006–09: Career beginnings


    • 2.2 2010–12: Independent albums


    • 2.3 2012–15: Oxymoron


    • 2.4 2015–16: Blank Face LP


    • 2.5 2016–present: Fifth studio album




  • 3 Musical style


    • 3.1 Influences


    • 3.2 Rapping technique




  • 4 Personal life


  • 5 Discography


  • 6 Awards and nominations


    • 6.1 BET Awards


    • 6.2 BET Hip Hop Awards


    • 6.3 BMI R&B/Hip-Hop Awards


    • 6.4 BMI London Awards


    • 6.5 Grammy Awards


    • 6.6 MTV Video Music Awards




  • 7 References


  • 8 External links





Early life


Quincy Matthew Hanley was born October 26, 1986, on a military base in Wiesbaden, Germany.[2][3] His parents divorced before he was born, and his mother gave him a surname different to those of both his parents, supposedly at random.[4] His father remained in the Army while his mother left and moved with Hanley to Texas for a couple years, before settling in California.[4] He grew up in South Central Los Angeles, California, on 51st Street, neighboring Figueroa and Hoover Street. He attended John Muir Middle School.[5] He claims to have been playing American football from the age of six years, up until he was 21. Hanley played receiver, cornerback, and tailback, and in college he played receiver and returner.


After graduating Crenshaw High School, Hanley went on to attend Glendale Community College, Los Angeles City College, Los Angeles Southwest College and West Los Angeles College, the latter of which is where he played football for the West Los Angeles Oilers.[6]


Growing up on Hoover Street, Hanley joined a street gang called the 52 Hoover Gangster Crips: "I was gang-banging at 12. I was a Hoover Crip. My homies were doing it and I wanted to do it. I can't really explain that. I didn't get into it with another hood or anything like that. I was just following the leader." Before turning to music, Hanley became a drug dealer selling Oxycontin, and for a short time crack and marijuana.[7] In 2007, he was arrested for a crime he at the time would not disclose and says he was sent to jail for six months, half of which he finished on house arrest.[4][7] He later revealed on reddit that it was related to a home invasion but did not go into detail.[8] In an interview with Montreality, when asked what jobs he held as a teenager, he noted that aside from selling drugs, stealing, and gang banging, he used to put air in bikes at an auto shop on 49th and Figueroa Street, when he was 10 years old. His first big pay check was around $20,000 from his first rap records.[9]
Schoolboy Q started writing verses when he was in his teen years, but didn't seriously start writing self-proclaimed, fully devoted verses and lyrics until he was 21, stating that as he grew towards his legal years he started to realizing that music allowed "you...to let your aggression out, so you got to get in the booth and let it out." On Quincy's internal struggle to survive the streets and make ends meet, while making a name for himself, he says "I was just lost; I didn't know what I wanted to do. I was just trying to do something. Then I found music and it was just over after that. I made my first little bit of money doing music, after that I wanted to get used to doing it, and I kept rapping. Then it became something that I had to do."[10]



Musical career



2006–09: Career beginnings


Schoolboy Q has said he wrote his first verse when he was 16, but was not serious about music until he was 21. Music became his way of expressing himself.[11] In 2006, he began to work with Top Dawg Entertainment (TDE), a Carson-based independent record label, recording at their studio House of Pain and collaborating with their artists. His first time at TDE's studio, Hanley worked with his soon to be Black Hippy cohorts Jay Rock and Ab-Soul. This eventually led to Hanley signing a recording contract with TDE. On July 29, 2008, Hanley released his first mixtape titled Schoolboy Turned Hustla, with G.E.D. Inc., the same imprint that helped launch the career of fellow West Coast rapper Tyga, with whom Schoolboy Q worked with early in their respective careers. After the release of Schoolboy Turned Hustla, he signed a deal with Top Dawg Entertainment in 2009, where he later formed Black Hippy, with fellow label-mates and frequent collaborators, Kendrick Lamar, Jay Rock and Ab-Soul.[12][13]


In 2009, Hanley was involved in a short-lived rivalry with fellow West Coast rapper 40 Glocc. Hanley released a diss track titled "Ezell (40 Glocc Killa)", where he questions 40 Glocc's gang-banging. Hanley later stated in a video interview as to why they were "beefing": "He made some false statements about my boy, Tyga, that's my little brother. He did a lot of fake stuff with Wayne, a lot of lies, rumors and childish shit that I really didn't like, and I really felt disrespected by this clown saying all this shit so I just had to like air it out". He went on to say "It's over with, I did what I did, I said what I said and I won't diss him no more, because it's obvious he ain't on my level...so why categorize myself with a loser?".[14] Hanley released Gangsta & Soul, his second mixtape on May 14, 2009, which included the aforementioned diss track. The mixtape was his first official project with Top Dawg, which presented the mixtape alongside G.E.D. Inc.



2010–12: Independent albums



Although Hanley did not release a project, 2010 had him touring and in the studio working with the rest of Black Hippy and on his then-upcoming project Setbacks. On January 11, 2011, TDE released Setbacks, his first independent album, exclusively through iTunes, to critical acclaim.[15] The album reached number 100 on the US Billboard 200 chart, selling close to 1,000 digital copies in its first abbreviated week.[16][17] Two weeks after the album's release, Hanley took to Twitter and gave the album away for free.[18] By the time Schoolboy Q's first album Setbacks was released in early 2011, he'd quit gangbanging altogether.[19]


Setbacks propelled Hanley into the spotlight and allowed him to earn a large internet following.[20] Hanley headlined his first show on March 11, 2011, at the Key Club in West Hollywood, California.[21] In March 2011, Hanley was arrested at the 2011 South by Southwest music festival and explained that he was ultimately jailed because of marijuana possession.[22]


Habits & Contradictions was released in 2012 through iTunes, with only a few hard copies being sold and signed by ScHoolboy Q in L.A. In early hours of release, the album moved up to iTunes Top 10 Albums chart and stayed over within days after release. The album debuted at #111 on the US Billboard 200 chart, with first-week sales of 3,900 digital copies in the United States.[23] With only two days at retail the Top Dawg Entertainment release scanned nearly 4,000 units to crack the Top 100, without any marketing or advertising.[23] The album also debuted on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums at number twenty-five, Top Rap Albums at number sixteen, Top Independent Albums at number seventeen and at number three on the Top Heatseekers album chart respectively. Music videos for "Hands on the Wheel" with ASAP Rocky, "NigHtmare on Figg St.", and "Druggys wit Hoes Again" with Ab-Soul, followed the album's release.


In 2012, Top Dawg Entertainment closed a joint venture deal with Interscope Records and Aftermath Entertainment, marking the end of Hanley's career as an independent artist.[24] On April 3, 2012, Interscope Records released "Hands on the Wheel" as a promotional single via iTunes and began promoting the song at Urban and Rhythmic radio formats in North America.[citation needed]



2012–15: Oxymoron



In June 2012, Hanley revealed he had begun working on his major label debut, and announced he will be the second member of Black Hippy to release his commercial debut with Interscope, following Kendrick Lamar.[25] From September to November, Hanley appeared alongside Danny Brown and ASAP Mob as supporting acts for ASAP Rocky's 40-date national Long. Live. ASAP Tour. Also Hanley toured with rappers Wiz Khalifa, Mac Miller and Kendrick Lamar on the Under The Influence Tour.[26] In a November 2012 interview, Hanley expressed "Kendrick [Lamar] left me no choice but to drop a classic", referring to Lamar's debut good kid, m.A.A.d city and its impact on his own respective major label debut.[27]




ScHoolboy Q In 2012


In June 2013, Schoolboy Q performed at the 2013 BET Experience Music festival, with Kendrick Lamar, Snoop Dogg and Miguel, immediately preceding the BET Awards show.[28] On June 11, 2013 Schoolboy Q released "Collard Greens", the lead single from his debut album Oxymoron. In July 2013, for their 53rd issue, Mass Appeal called on photographer/director 13thWitness, to shoot Schoolboy Q, alongside friend and fellow American rapper Mac Miller, for their cover story. In the story, the two speak on how they met, their comedic relationship and their respective futures.[29] On August 7, 2013, Hanley appeared on BET's 106 & Park, to premiere the music video for "Collard Greens.[30][31] On August 27, 2013 Hanley appeared on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, alongside Macklemore and Ryan Lewis, to perform "White Walls", the sixth single from the duo's platinum-selling debut album The Heist, which was released in October 2012.[32]


In October 2013, at the BET Hip Hop Awards, Schoolboy Q performed "Collard Greens", his debut album's lead single.[33] Schoolboy Q also appeared alongside his Top Dawg label-mates Kendrick Lamar, Jay Rock, Ab-Soul and Isaiah Rashad, in a cypher presented by BET.[34] On November 5, 2013, it was revealed Schoolboy Q would appear on the soundtrack to the 2013 video game NBA Live 14.[35] A snippet of the song, which is titled "Man of the Year", first surfaced with the release of the music video for Kendrick Lamar's single "Bitch Don't Kill My Vibe".[36] On November 23, 2013 the song was released as a single via the iTunes Store.[37] With the release of the 2014 Grammy Nominations, Q was nominated for Album of the Year for his participation on Macklemore and Ryan Lewis' album, The Heist.[38]


On January 24, 2014, Schoolboy Q made his network television debut, performing "Man of the Year" on NBC's Late Night with Jimmy Fallon.[39] In January 2014, Schoolboy Q announced a three-month tour in support of his major-label debut, set to begin March 1, in Providence, Rhode Island. The tour run came to a close on June 1, in Manchester, England. Schoolboy Q's Top Dawg label-mate Isaiah Rashad and fellow American rapper Vince Staples, made appearances to support Q in domestic dates. Rashad, also supported Q on European tour dates.[40][41][42][43]


In April 2014, before his two sold-out shows in Las Vegas, Schoolboy Q was the musical guest on Jimmy Kimmel Live!. During his time on stage, Schoolboy Q was joined by BJ the Chicago Kid, for a special rendition of Oxymoron's fourth single "Studio," and later returned to perform the album cut "What They Want."[44][45] Also in April, Schoolboy Q made his solo magazine cover debut with the April/May issue of the long-standing hip-hop magazine The Source, which hit newsstands on April 10, 2014.[46][47]



2015–16: Blank Face LP



On February 24, 2016, TDE founder, Top Dawg, announced Schoolboy Q's fourth album would be released before the summer.[48] On April 5, 2016, Schoolboy Q released a single titled "Groovy Tony".[49] On April 28, 2016, Schoolboy Q announced the album was completed and was turned in for mixing.[50] On May 13, 2016 a follow-up single featuring Kanye West, titled "That Part", was released.[51] On May 31, 2016, Schoolboy Q revealed his second major-label album would be released July 8, 2016.[52] On June 14, 2016, Schoolboy Q revealed that his second major-label album would be titled Blank Face LP, while also unveiling the album's cover art.[53] The album cover makes use of the notorious Crying Jordan meme.[54][55] However, a few days later, in an interview with TMZ, Schoolboy Q revealed he was "trolling" his fans and later revealed the official album cover.[56] In June 2016, Schoolboy Q performed a live rendition of "That Part", in a medley with "Groovy Tony", on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.[57][58]



2016–present: Fifth studio album


On December 18, 2016, Schoolboy Q announced via social media that he would be releasing an album in 2017.[59] In February 2017, Schoolboy Q stopped by Zane Lowe's Beats 1 radio show and revealed that his new album was close to completion. He said he's grown a lot since he started his rap career and said his new project is going to show his evolution: "It’s more so my life after I made it to the point of ScHoolboy Q. I gave you me, but I never gave you the other side of me: the father, the dude that’s actually happy, the dude that doesn’t be in the hood just hanging out. The dude that's trying to put his homies in position now. I'm not a deadbeat father anymore."[60] In June 2017, Schoolboy Q revealed on social media that he had made "like 50 songs" during the recording process of his fifth studio album.[61] On July 31, 2018, Top Dawg confirmed via Twitter that the album was "90-95% done."[62] On September 15, 2018, Schoolboy Q announced that the album has been delayed due to the death of his longtime friend and frequent collaborator Mac Miller.[63] On March 11, 2019, Schoolboy Q announced "2 MORE DAYS" via his instagram. The following day a behind the scenes video of Schoolboy Q working on new music was posted with the caption, "2morrow nigHt we back at it." [64]



Musical style



Influences


ScHoolboy Q cites American East Coast rappers Nas, 50 Cent, Jay-Z and The Notorious B.I.G., along with West Coast rappers Kurupt and 2Pac, as artists who influenced him: "But Biggie, Nas and 50 Cent [are my biggest influences]".[65] He claims Queens rapper Nas, is his all-time favorite rapper.[66] In several interviews, Schoolboy Q has stated 50 Cent is the biggest reason he started to take rapping and his music career seriously, even going as far as saying 50 Cent probably saved his life.[67] He has also stated the person he looks up to the most is hip hop mogul Sean "Diddy" Combs, from whom he adopted the nickname "Puffy".[68]



Rapping technique


In an interview with Complex magazine, he stated he got his "rhyme-style" from Brooklyn rapper Jay-Z: "I got [my rhyme style] from Jay-Z though. If you really listen to Jay-Z, he has a new sound every time he raps. It's never the same. He might use a little swag, but it's always like a different flow. So that's all I try to do."[65] He says he chooses to not always do the traditional style of rapping, having no restrictions when he raps: "But at the same time, its just a feeling I can't really explain. You got to be wiser to stay on the track, but there's no rules. When you start rapping with rules, it’s when you start sounding boring. You may hear me fuck with my voice, you may hear me do a two-bar pause, you may hear me do an odd 33 bars instead of 30. Give you 14 bars instead of 16."[65] Schoolboy Q has said: "what I get from 50 [Cent] is a lot of aggression", in a 2012 interview, adding "he basically birthed my whole style".[2] ScHoolboy Q has been called very versatile with his rapping, as proven on his albums Setbacks and Habits & Contradictions. LA Weekly noted on Setbacks: "His style had begun to take shape, with his penchant for stretching vowels like Silly Putty or slurring a word and then snapping back into double time."[19]



Personal life


Schoolboy Q has one daughter, born in 2010, named Joyce "Joy" Hanley, whom he has mentioned in several of his songs. She has also appeared in several of his music videos, notably "Phenomenon", "Nightmare on Figg St.", "There He Go" and "Break the Bank".[20] Schoolboy Q's daughter was also involved in his major-label debut album Oxymoron, where she appeared on the album cover and had various speaking parts throughout the album.[69]


Schoolboy Q revealed why he capitalizes the letter H in all his words when he tweeted: "wHy my H always capitalized???? HIIIPOWER X HIPPY X HOOVER X HEAVEN & HELL AKA MY LIFE."[70]



Discography





  • Setbacks (2011)


  • Habits & Contradictions (2012)


  • Oxymoron (2014)


  • Blank Face LP (2016)



Awards and nominations



BET Awards



















Year
Nominee / work
Award
Result

2014[71]
Himself

Best New Artist
Nominated


BET Hip Hop Awards



























Year
Nominee / work
Award
Result

2014
"Studio"
Best Collabo, Duo or Group
Nominated

Oxymoron
Album of the Year
Himself
Rookie of the Year


BMI R&B/Hip-Hop Awards




























Year
Nominee / work
Award
Result
2014
"White Walls" (with Macklemore)
Most Performed R&B/Hip-Hop Songs
Won
[72]
2015
"Studio"(featuring BJ the Chicago Kid)
Most Performed R&B/Hip-Hop Songs
Won
[73]
"2 On"( with Tinashe)


BMI London Awards





















Year
Nominee / work
Award
Result

Ref.
2017
"That Part"
London Pop Award Songs
Won
[74]


Grammy Awards








































Year
Nominee / work
Award
Result

2014

The Heist (as featured artist)

Album of the Year
Nominated

2015
"Studio" (featuring BJ the Chicago Kid)

Best Rap/Sung Collaboration
Nominated

Oxymoron

Best Rap Album
Nominated

2017

Blank Face LP
Nominated
"That Part" (featuring Kanye West)

Best Rap Performance
Nominated


MTV Video Music Awards



















Year
Nominee / work
Award
Result

2014
"Man of the Year"

Artist to Watch
Nominated


References





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  61. ^ "SchoolBoy Q Has Recorded "Like 50 Songs" For Upcoming Album". hotnewhiphop.com.


  62. ^ Nembhard, Candice (August 2, 2018). "Top Dawg Says ScHoolboy Q's Album is "90 – 95 % Done"". Highsnobiety.


  63. ^ P, Milca (September 15, 2018). "ScHoolboy Q Announces Album Delay Following Mac Miller's Death". HotNewHipHop.


  64. ^ ScHoolboy Q via his instagram @GroovyQ


  65. ^ abc Insanu Ahmed (February 3, 2012). "Who Is Schoolboy Q? – Influences". Complex. Retrieved February 6, 2012.


  66. ^ "ScHoolboy Q On Not Wanting To Work w/ Nas, Reveals New Project for 2012 (Video)". 2DopeBoyz. November 3, 2012. Retrieved November 3, 2012.


  67. ^ "ScHoolboy Q On 50 Cent's Influence (Video)". 2DopeBoyz. 2012-04-13. Retrieved 2012-04-15.


  68. ^ "INTERVIEW: ScHoolBoy Q x Music Talks - TDEnation". archive.org. 30 November 2012.


  69. ^ Vasquez, Andres (2013-06-17). "ScHoolboy Q Says Kendrick Lamar Inspires Him, Talks Parenting & "Oxymoron" | Rappers Talk Hip Hop Beef & Old School Hip Hop". HipHopDX. Cheri Media Group. Retrieved 2013-08-25.


  70. ^ "Twitter / ScHoolBoyQ: wHy my H always capitalize". Twitter. 2011-09-26. Retrieved 2012-06-27.


  71. ^ "Beyonce & Jay Z Lead 2014 BET Awards". Billboard. 2014-01-26. Retrieved 2014-05-14.


  72. ^ "2014 BMI hip hop r&b awards". BMI.com. August 23, 2014. Retrieved January 19, 2019.


  73. ^ "Complete List of The 2015 BMI R&B/Hip-Hop Awards". Retrieved August 29, 2015.


  74. ^ "2017 BMI London awards". BMI.com. October 13, 2017. Retrieved January 19, 2019.




External links




  • Official website


  • ScHoolboy Q at AllMusic









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