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Spillage Village

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Spillage Village
OriginAtlanta, Georgia, U.S.
Genres
Years active2010–present
Labels
Members
Websitespilligion.com

Spillage Village is an American musical collective from Atlanta, Georgia. The group is composed of rappers, singers and producers, and was founded by the members of EarthGang. Spillage Village was primarily made up of five initial members with a split-base in both Atlanta and Baltimore.[1]

History

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2010–2015: Formation and early beginnings

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The group was originally founded by Olu (aka Johnny Venus) and WowGr8 (aka Doctur Dot) of EarthGang, who recruited rapper JID to the group during their time at Hampton University. Brothers Hollywood JB and Jurdan Bryant joined the Spillage Village soon after. Doctur Dot and Johnny Venus approached JID after hearing his first mixtape around campus in 2010. The rest of the group also came into Spillage Village through connections including producer Hollywood JB, who met Doctur Dot at a block party and joined soon afterward.[1][2] Their first compilation as a collective, Bears Like This, was released independently on February 2, 2014. The album was an exclusive project between the initial five members of Spillage Village, with no features by outside artists. Later in 2014, they announced that singer Mereba had joined the collective, along with 6LACK who used to live at EarthGang’s house.[3][4] A year later, Spillage Village followed up with their second compilation, Bears Like This Too on July 6, 2015, including 6LACK and OG Maco.[5]

2016–2019: Rise in popularity and Dreamville affiliation

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On July 29, 2016, DJ Khaled’s ninth studio album, Major Key, included a track produced by Hollywood JB titled "Jermaine's Interlude" featuring J. Cole and EarthGang. The track originally came into being after Cole invited EarthGang and JID to his studio, and Hollywood JB played him the beat.[2] The song was later released in full as a Spillage Village single called "Can't Call It" on November 8, 2016.[6] Spillage Village released their third compilation Bears Like This Too Much on December 2, 2016. It soon proved to be their breakout project as a collective. Outside of the Spillage Village initial five, the album featured only three outside artists: J. Cole, Bas, and Quentin Miller. Production was from a variety of contributors, including Mac MillerChildish Major, J. Cole, and Hollywood JB.[1] When describing the collective albums, EarthGang said: "It's the third part to the saga. We use these "Bears" projects like checkpoints, markers in time. The first one came out when we first started fucking around with these sounds. The second one came as niggas had toured a little bit, learned a little bit. At this point now, we've been on tours, we've got a lot of other things we've been working on."[7]

In 2017, it was announced that JID and EarthGang signed to Dreamville Records.[8][9] JID, EarthGang, Mereba, 6lack and Hollywood JB all made an appearance on the Dreamville compilation album Revenge of the Dreamers III.[10]

2020: Breakthrough and Spilligion

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In March 2020, Spillage Village announced their fourth collective album.[11][12] They also announced the addition of Benji to the group, who is the brother of producer Christo.[13] Benji previously toured with EarthGang on the Welcome to Mirrorland tour, and was invited to work on the album in 2020.[14] Spilligion was released on September 25, 2020, and was supported by three singles: "End of Daze", "Baptize", and "Hapi".[15] The album features guest appearances from Ant Clemons, Ari Lennox, Buddy, Chance the Rapper, Masego, Lucky Daye, and Big Rube. The production was handled primarily by Olu, Benji, Christo, and Hollywood JB, among others.[16]

Musical style

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Spillage Village incorporates many genres in their music such as neo soul and elements of southern hip hop. The collective has drawn comparisons to groups such as Dungeon Family, Soulquarians, Native Tongues, and Fugees with "combinations of diverse flows, trap rap, disembodied folk, jazz and ethereal vocals" that developed a sound of their own.[17]

Members

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  • EarthGang (2010–present)
  • JID – vocals (2010–present)
  • Hollywood JB – vocals, production (2010–present)
  • Jurdan Bryant – vocals (2010–present)
  • Mereba – vocals (2014–present)
  • 6lack – vocals (2014–present)
  • Benji – vocals, production (2020–present)

Timeline

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Discography

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Albums

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List of albums, with selected chart positions
Title Details Peak chart positions
US
Bears Like This[18]
  • Released: February 2, 2014
  • Label: Spillage Village
  • Format: Digital download
Bears Like This Too[19]
  • Released: July 6, 2015
  • Label: Spillage Village
  • Format: Digital download
Bears Like This Too Much[20]
  • Released: December 2, 2016
  • Label: Spillage Village
  • Format: Digital download
Spilligion
(with JID & EarthGang)
  • Released: September 25, 2020
  • Label: Dreamville, Interscope, SinceThe80s
  • Format: Digital download
141

Singles

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Title Year Album
"Can't Call It"
(featuring EarthGang, JID, J. Cole & Bas)[21]
2016 Bears Like This Too Much
"M.O.M"
(featuring JID & Quentin Miller)
2017
"Voodoo"
(featuring EarthGang)
"End of Daze"[22]
(with EarthGang and JID featuring Jurdan Bryant, Mereba & Hollywood JB)
2020 Spilligion
"Baptize"
(with JID and EarthGang featuring Ant Clemons)
"Hapi"
(with Benji and EarthGang featuring Mereba & Big Rube)

References

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  1. ^ a b c Scott, Carter (17 January 2018). "Welcome to Spillage Village: Members, Origins, & Music". Central Sauce.
  2. ^ a b "Hollywood JB Interview With Independent Grind". YouTube.
  3. ^ "KINDA NEAT EPISODE 123: EARTHGANG". YouTube.
  4. ^ ""Did I mention 6lack joined Spillage Village?"". Twitter.
  5. ^ Kramer, Kyle (6 July 2015). "This New Spillage Village EP Is About to Trigger a Worldwide Weed Shortage". Noisey Vice.
  6. ^ Schwartz, Danny (July 28, 2016). "DJ Khaled - Jermaine's Interlude Feat. J. Cole & EarthGang [New Song]". hotnewhiphop. Retrieved November 5, 2016.
  7. ^ Starling, Lakin. "Atlanta-Based Collective Spillage Village Releases Bears Like This Too Much". The Fader.
  8. ^ Weinstein, Max (February 20, 2017). "JID Signs to J. Cole's Dreamville Label". XXL. Retrieved February 20, 2017.
  9. ^ Findlay, Mitch (August 31, 2017). "J. Cole Signs EarthGang To Dreamville Records". HotNewHipHop. Retrieved August 31, 2017.
  10. ^ Joyner, Alfred (5 July 2019). "Who Features on Dreamville's 'Revenge of the Dreamers 3'? A Track-by-track Breakdown". NewsWeek.
  11. ^ "EarthGang & JID. Dropping "Spillage Village" Album Soon". HotNewHipHop. 18 March 2020. Retrieved June 11, 2020.
  12. ^ Marie, Erika (September 9, 2020). "Dreamville Announces Spillage Village Album "Spilligion" Drops This Month". HotNewHipHop. Retrieved September 10, 2020.[permanent dead link]
  13. ^ Ridner, Grant (24 September 2020). "How Spillage Village Hunkered Down in Atlanta and Captured the Chaos of 2020". Rolling Stone.
  14. ^ "It Takes A Village: The Community and Camaraderie of 'Spilligion'". Complex.
  15. ^ "Spillage Village Dropping New Single "End Of Days" This Week". HotNewHipHop. 9 June 2020. Retrieved June 11, 2020.
  16. ^ "EarthGang Reveals Spillage Village's "Spilligion" Tracklist". HotNewHipHop. September 18, 2020. Retrieved September 20, 2020.
  17. ^ A. Berry, Peter (25 January 2021). "Spillage Village Is Hip-Hop's Hottest New Collective". XXL. Retrieved February 2, 2021.
  18. ^ "Bears Like This". iTunes. 3 June 2014.
  19. ^ "Bears Like This Too [Explicit] Spillage Village". Amazon.
  20. ^ "Bears Like This Too Much". iTunes. 2 December 2016.
  21. ^ "Can't Call It (feat. J. Cole, Bas, EARTHGANG & JID) - Single". iTunes. 8 November 2016.
  22. ^ "End of Daze - Single". Apple Music. Retrieved June 11, 2020.