In the Studio with Danny Singh

Read the full interview below.
Matthew Yoscary: Danny, it's a pleasure seeing you. Thank you for having me at the studio today.
Danny Singh: Thanks for pulling out bro.
For those who don't know, where are you from?
From Queens, New York. Ozone Park to be exact.
Do you have a secret superpower as a Native New Yorker?
Well, I'm super speedy. I can hop trains like nothin’...and ultimate nonchalantness.
Tell me about this On The Radar freestyle. What really happened with the blood?
That was just me trying to talk about an experience that happened to me after I graduated. I used to do DoorDash to make bread, and I got hit by a car while I was on the way to complete an order and fell on my face.
How long ago was this?
This was right after I graduated, so probably six to seven years ago – pre-pandemic. It was the same day I was supposed to meet PnB Rock for the first time and play some beats for him. So I was just like, “Damn, this shit would happen at a time like this.” But I still went because I'm not trying to ride no bike all day bro...
So your On The Radar performance was like an artistic interpretation of that experience?
Yeah and I also feel like I'm at a different point in life. You know when you go through phases and feel like you've been doing the same thing over and over? I wanted to do something that was going to shock me and that was that. Let me do some ballsy shit. Fuck it.
Have you been feeling some extra attention from that?
Yeah. I've been seeing the diehard fans…they get it now. They're seeing me take that extra step and in the beginning, I was low-key uncomfortable with it. Once it was over, I knew my mom was going to say something and I knew my cousin would be like, “Yo, bro, you okay?” I actually found that video a few weeks ago.
Amongst all of this buzz you have a project coming out, can you tell me about that?
It's called Man of the Year. It was an idea I had because I’ve always done alt-rock (like on my last album F3V3RDR3AM) but for Man of the Year, I wanted to do a project where I did an interpretation of a classic record.
You know those old albums with the artist posed up and chilling? I wanted that kind of vibe for this album. Straight classics. And of course, Lunas is the producer god. He’s got hits on hits on hits and just turned 21 and he’s just crazy. Straight from Columbia. I was working with him on this and trusted his process.
Describe the sound we can expect to hear on your next project.
Alt-Futuristic-Pop…if I can make that.
What's different about Man of the Year than F3V3RDR3AM?
As far as songwriting goes, I followed more structure so it wasn't just verse, verse, verse, hook. Now it's like; you get a verse, you get in the hook, here comes the verse again, and so on. On some Taylor Swift type shit.
What are we doing in the studio now, by the way?
We're working on F3V3RDR3AM 2. We just finished the intro.
You’re working on what comes after Man of the Year? Wow, Okay. Non-stop work.
Non-stop (laughs).
Are you more comfortable working non-stop?
Yeah. I can't stop working. I can't.
Who or what has influenced Man of the Year?
To be honest, seeing Charli xcx rock the stage at the Barclays Center inspired me to make a tape that I could spin at a club and have fun with. Experiment with Moogs and synths like I’m Mike Dean and pop my shit real quick.
What snacks in the studio helped influence Man of the Year?
So, right now, in this cup, I have a White Claw mixed with Celsius.
I’ll have to try it. Tell me how growing up around music prepared you for this path.
I've been in the studio for a while. I get my chops from the church...How does that apply to now? I guess it's just experience and consistency at this point. Trying to be better than the last time I came into the studio…Yeah, that's exactly it. I'll do what I did last year, better.
Do you have any live performances coming up for Man Of the Year?
Peppermint Club in LA.
When is that?
The 23rd [of September] and I have another one on the 28th in Brooklyn.
Can you explain the kind of energy at your shows?
It's a little bit of a mix and I try to do a different set every time. I'll try out different songs, different instruments, different hairstyles.Sometimes that might be spikes, sometimes I might braid it, or sometimes I really fro’ it. It just depends. It will always have to be different for me to make it fun.
I quit my job for this so I don’t want to treat this like a job, you know? I'm trying to treat this with the same energy I take to go play ball with my brother, I'm trying to treat it with that type of energy. Before I used to feel like, “Oh damn, I gotta make sure I get this amount of streams, I gotta do this and that.” And that just kills everything for me, bro.
Is there anything you want people to take away from you or be inspired by?
I want people to see what I'm doing and know that it's okay to just be yourself, 100%. No corny shit, just deadass be yourself. Don't try and listen to this A&R that said he’s gonna “put you on”. Don't listen to no manager. Sometimes, don't even listen to your parents, bro.Just do your own thing and don't be scared to do it. Give it all you got, and don't expect anything from it.
Just do that, and see where it takes you. Fall in love with the journey of it, and I think you're gonna be all right, bro.
Well, thanks Danny I appreciate this talk. I'm looking forward to your project. Comes out when?
September 12th. Appreciate you, bro!






































