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Count Bass D was born on August 25, 1973, and was raised in [[The Bronx]] and [[Canton, Ohio]]. At the age of four, his father, a [[West Indian]] minister, encouraged him to play music at his church. Count thereafter learned to play the [[piano]], [[Organ (music)|organ]], drums, and [[bass (instrument)|bass]]. He then started gaining interest in hip-hop, becoming better at rhyming while rapping with friends.
Count Bass D was born on August 25, 1973, and was raised in [[The Bronx]] and [[Canton, Ohio]]. At the age of four, his father, a [[West Indian]] minister, encouraged him to play music at his church. Count thereafter learned to play the [[piano]], [[Organ (music)|organ]], drums, and [[bass (instrument)|bass]]. He then started gaining interest in hip-hop, becoming better at rhyming while rapping with friends.


In his late teens, Count Bass D enrolled at [[Middle Tennessee State University]] in [[Murfreesboro, Tennessee|Murfreesboro]], to take advantage of the school's instruments to finish his demo tape. He then broadcast his first hip-hop video on campus.
In his late teens, Count Bass D enrolled at [[Middle Tennessee State University]] in [[Murfreesboro, Tennessee|Murfreesboro]], to take advantage of the school's music equipment and studio facilities to finish his demo tape. He then broadcast his first hip-hop video on campus.


== Career ==
== Career ==

Revision as of 23:40, 13 September 2021

Count Bass D
Count Bass D San Francisco 2007 Tooth Decay
Background information
Birth nameDwight Farrell
Born (1973-08-25) August 25, 1973 (age 51)
OriginThe Bronx, New York
GenresHip hop
Occupation(s)Rapper, record producer, multi-instrumentalist
Years active1993–present
LabelsFat Beats, High Times Records, Chaos Recordings
Websitecountbassd.bandcamp.com

Dwight Conroy Farrell (born August 25, 1973), better known by the stage name Count Bass D, is an American rapper, record producer and multi-instrumentalist who resides in Atlanta, Georgia. His production style is characterised by layers of short MPC samples and film snippets complemented with live instrumentation, and eccentric lyrics laid atop.[1][2]

Early life and education

Count Bass D was born on August 25, 1973, and was raised in The Bronx and Canton, Ohio. At the age of four, his father, a West Indian minister, encouraged him to play music at his church. Count thereafter learned to play the piano, organ, drums, and bass. He then started gaining interest in hip-hop, becoming better at rhyming while rapping with friends.

In his late teens, Count Bass D enrolled at Middle Tennessee State University in Murfreesboro, to take advantage of the school's music equipment and studio facilities to finish his demo tape. He then broadcast his first hip-hop video on campus.

Career

His demo led to a record deal with Chaos Recordings, where he released his first studio album, Pre-Life Crisis, in early 1995.[3] The label found the album difficult to market, and he was dropped from their roster.[4]

In 1997, Count released his first EP, Art for Sale, on independent label Spongebath Records. The album was later released in Japan in 2005, on Octave Records.[5]

In 2002, Count decided to make a more hip-hop themed album. He bought an Akai S-3000 sampler and an MPC-2000 drum machine and quickly learned to create new sounds. With these tools, he released his second and most critically-acclaimed studio album, Dwight Spitz. It features appearances from other well-known indie MCs, such as MF Doom and Edan.[6] In 2004, Count produced and guest appeared on a track ("Potholderz") on MF Doom's MM..Food.

In 2005, Count released his second EP, Begborrowsteel, on Jazzy Sport Records. Act Your Waist Size, his third studio album, was released on Fat Beats Records in 2006. In 2008, Count released L7 (Mid-Life Crisis), a sequel album to Pre-Life Crisis, on 1320 Records.[7] He was 35 at the time of its release.

In 2010, Count teamed up with his old friend, producer and rapper DJ Pocket, to make two collaborative albums that year – In the Loop[8] and Activity[9] – both released on Domination Records. In 2011, Count and Insight the Truncator released a collaborative record, The Risktakers. On August 25, 2011, Count self-released his fifth studio album, #FULLCOUNT,[10] on his personal website. However, it appears that Spotify has since purchased the domain name.

Discography

Studio albums

  • Pre-Life Crisis (1995)
  • Art for Sale (1997)
  • Dwight Spitz (2002)
  • Begborrowsteel (2005)
  • Act Your Waist Size (2006)
  • L7: Mid-Life Crisis (2008)
  • In the Loop (2009) (with DJ Pocket)
  • Activity (2010) (with DJ Pocket)
  • Hartsfield Jaxson (2010) (with DJ Pocket)
  • Fullcount (2011)
  • Mic & Ike (2011)
  • In the Loop: Partie Deux (2011) (with DJ Pocket)
  • The Risk Takers (2011) (with Insight)
  • In the Loop 3: ThanksFam (2012) (with DJ Pocket)
  • Instantly New (2016)
  • CBD (2020)

Compilation albums

  • The Producers Cut: Some Music Part 1 (2004)
  • 2006: Some Music Part 2 (2004)
  • Ear Regardless: Some Music Part 3 (2007)
  • Some Music Part 4: Vinyl Ain't Dead Yet (2007)
  • Some Music Part 5: Slim & Nice (2008)
  • Robbed without a Pistol (2008)
  • Dwight Yoke Them: Some Music Part 7 (2011)
  • Cana (1 of 5) (2012)
  • Hezekiah II (2 of 5) (2012)
  • Kush (3 of 5) (2012)
  • Magnificent (4 of 5) (2012)
  • Gibraltar (5 of 5) (2012)
  • The T.S. (2012)
  • Some Music 6 (The Lost Installment) (2013)
  • Promises (2013)
  • Grandmaz Nutz (2013)
  • Sorrow (2013)
  • That Old Real Shit Suite (3 Track Album) (2013)
  • Handshake vs. Dap (2014)
  • Cloak and Dapper (2015)
  • Dwight Around Your Lips (2016)

EPs

  • Merely the Playas EP (2007) (with J. Rawls)
  • Art for Art's Sake (2007) (with Blake 9)
  • In This Business (2013) (with DJ Crucial)
  • The Count in Cologne (2014) (with Retrogott, Twit One, and Lazy Jones)

Singles

  • "Sandwiches (I Got a Feeling)" (1995)
  • "Violatin' / The World Is Mine" (1999)
  • "On the Reels / Piece of the Pie / Violatin' (Remix)" (1999)
  • "7 Years" (2004)
  • "Down Easy" (2005)
  • "Internationally Known" (2006)

Guest appearances

Productions

References