Underground beat maestro
Anthony Simon, better known as
Blockhead, first lent his production hands in the mid-'90s to then up-and-coming MC
Aesop Rock, who rose to indie rap prominence during the 2000s.
Blockhead's contributions to
Aesop's LPs were a big factor to the indie MC's success, especially those from
Aesop's highly regarded Definitive Jux debut
Labor Days (2001). Nevertheless, in the following years the New York producer garnered his own acclaim as an instrumental rap artiste, turning his sampledelic beats into brooding, trip-hop-like concoctions.
Born and raised in Manhattan,
Simon was one of seven children. The bohemian mentality of his father, a painter and sculptor, and the steadfastness of his mother, a social worker, confounded
Simon's upbringing, but yet informed his musical pursuits. He was aspiring to be an MC -- that is, until he first met
Aesop Rock in 1994, the one year he attended Boston University. After hearing
Aesop spit verses, he hung up the mic and focused on producing.
Blockhead provided most of the beats for
Aesop afterwards, including
Aesop's self-pressed material,
Music for Earthworms (1997) and
Appleseed (1999), as well as his proper full-length debut
Float, released via Mush Records in 2000. In 2001, Mush wound up releasing
Blockhead's first beat tape,
Blockhead's Broken Beats, as well.
Blockhead continued producing
Aesop when the abstract MC signed with New York upstart Def Jux in 2000. Upon the 2001 release of
Labor Days, for which
Blockhead produced nine tracks, critics and indie rap fans alike heavily praised the two's work. It led to the release of the EP
Daylight the following year, which was based around the popular "Daylight" song from the
Labor Days LP.
With this success,
Blockhead began to break out on his own. Though not intended to become a real project, the Manhattan producer formed comedy rap duo
Party Fun Action Committee with longtime friend
Jeremy Gibson, aka
Jer, issuing their debut,
Let's Get Serious, on Def Jux in 2003; he also supplied beats for many of the label's signees, including
Murs,
Hangar 18, and later
Cage. However, for his solo material, he shopped around to other labels, eventually finding a home in U.K. electronic stalwart Ninja Tune.
Blockhead's proper debut, the
Insomniac Olympics EP, arrived in 2003, and led up to the more cinematic and downtempo full-length,
Music by Cavelight in 2004, and the ode to his Manhattan home,
Downtown Science, in 2005. His work with
Aesop diminished considerably during this period, until the recording of
Aesop's 2007 album,
None Shall Pass. That same year, Ninja Tune issued
Blockhead's third long-player,
Uncle Tony's Coloring Book, a more uptempo piece than his previous records. ~ Cyril Cordor, All Music Guide