Fit Check with Oliver Malcolm
Congratulations on your recent singles, “Switched Up” & “Helen”! You have a debut EP coming out soon? What can you tell us about it?
The EP consists of 8 songs written and produced by me which are a compilation of the favorite songs I’ve made over the past couple of years. They take influence and inspiration from many different places—it’s a very diverse project & I’d say I see the EP as a documentation of my progression and growth in my own artistry. Me finding my sound. The root of the Oliver Malcolm world, sonically.
What led you to music?
I think ultimately music found me. I feel like it went the opposite way around. My grandma tells me stories about how I was 2 years old on the airplane and listening to music on my walkman the entire plane ride. I can’t remember a time in my life when I haven’t been fascinated by music.
Why was it production and then becoming an artist yourself, in that order?
I didn’t think I could sing before. I never believed that I could sing. I saw producing as the closest thing to an artist and so to start with I was happy with that. I felt close enough to the process at that point, but as fate does with everything, I believe that I just became a producer so that I could understand how to be an artist. I always wanted to be an artist subconsciously, I just never had the confidence to do it. I built that confidence in the studio with my beats and then realized I could use my vocals to take things to the next level that I wanted them to be at. You can take a song to a whole new place with vocals. I thought let me try this wild thing called singing and be myself. I believe true artistry is getting as close to one’s self and one’s soul as possible.
What musicians did you look up to growing up?
Eminem. Dr. Dre. 50 Cent. That was the start of everything for me.
How did you go from teaching yourself how to spin records at age 12 to working with artists such as Aluna George, Joey Bada$$, MF Doom, Tinashe, and more?
YouTube. Honestly I learned to make beats off of YouTube. Describe your move to L.A. I’ve read that it was truly game changing, coming from a small town in the English countryside, and I’d like to hear more from you about it! Yeah so when I was 16 I finished high school and two weeks later my parents told me we’re moving to LA. As a kid who grew up listening to west coast hip hop it was unreal. People would be driving down the street playing snoop Dogg or Dr. Dre and I just remember that being so cool. I also remember having my mind blown turning on the radio and hearing that there was a station dedicated entirely to hip hop. As a 16-year-old beat making kid who grew up on west coast hip hop it was the dream.
What is it like to work with such big names?
Especially for the time it was really cool because it felt like validation for all the hard work I had put in. For me it was just like now if someone asked what I’d been working on I could actually show them and feel like I could be taken seriously.
What are you bringing to the music industry that wasn’t there before?
Myself.
How does fashion add to your art?
Fashion is just another form of expression. What’s cool to me is that music is just sound waves and fashion is a physical 3-D form of expression. What I’m wearing can influence how I want to perform on a record. If I’m wearing a suit I’ll want to perform differently than if I’m wearing sweats. If I’m wearing sweats I’ll want to perform differently than if I’m naked. And that has happened before. And it was a good result.
What sort of factors determine the outfit you put on in the morning?
The weather. The music I listen to. The way I feel. How much energy I have.
How have you been spending lockdown?
I was spending it partially in LA making music and partially in the UK chillin.
What does the future hold for you and what are some of your goals for this year?
Goals for this year are to create a healthy work/life balance. And what the future holds, only God knows.