Son Little

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Lay Down 03:48 Tools
The River 04:34 Tools
Your Love Will Blow Me Away When My Heart Aches 00:00 Tools
MAD ABOUT YOU 00:00 Tools
Blue Magic (Waikiki) 00:00 Tools
Cross My Heart 00:00 Tools
O Mother 00:00 Tools
O ME O MY 00:00 Tools
Doctor's in 00:00 Tools
Demon To The Dark 00:00 Tools
Alice 00:00 Tools
CARBON 00:00 Tools
I'm Gone 00:00 Tools
Nice Dreams 00:00 Tools
TOES 00:00 Tools
Kimberly's Mine 00:00 Tools
Hey Rose 00:00 Tools
GO BLUE BLOOD RED 00:00 Tools
Joy 00:00 Tools
ALL WET 00:00 Tools
LOSER BLUES 00:00 Tools
THE MIDDLE 00:00 Tools
O Me O My - Gavin Moss Remix 00:00 Tools
suffer 00:00 Tools
About A Flood 00:00 Tools
Letter Bound 00:00 Tools
Real Goodbye 00:00 Tools
Wanted To 00:00 Tools
ASAP 00:00 Tools
Bread & Butter 00:00 Tools
Charging Bull 00:00 Tools
about her. again. 00:00 Tools
Miss Ona 00:00 Tools
Blue Magic (Waikiki) - Eric Krasno Remix 00:00 Tools
Cross My Heart - RJD2 Remix 00:00 Tools
Dub Me To The River - Daniel Scholz Indaba Remix 00:00 Tools
BLUE MAGIC 00:00 Tools
i'm a builder - outtake 00:00 Tools
mahalia 00:00 Tools
Cross My Heart (RJD2 remix) 00:00 Tools
What Child Is This 00:00 Tools
skid 00:00 Tools
Charging Bull (feat. Xenia Rubinos) 00:00 Tools
Your Love Will Blow Me Away 00:00 Tools
The River - Amazon 00:00 Tools
The River - Styx 00:00 Tools
Trampled Underfoot 00:00 Tools
hey rose - Quantic remix 00:00 Tools
about her. again 00:00 Tools
We Come Alive 00:00 Tools
What Child Is This (An Amazon Music Original) 00:00 Tools
i'm a builder 00:00 Tools
The River (Styx) 00:00 Tools
Hotline Bling (Drake Cover) 00:00 Tools
Trampled Under Foot 00:00 Tools
Goddamn 00:00 Tools
The River (Amazon) 00:00 Tools
Bread Butter 00:00 Tools
The River (Once Midnight Remix) 00:00 Tools
Kimberley's Mine 00:00 Tools
Blue Magic (Eric Krasno REMIX) 00:00 Tools
Hey Rose (Quantic Remix) 00:00 Tools
State Trooper (Bruce Springsteen Cover) 00:00 Tools
i'm a builder (outtake) 00:00 Tools
The River ( DGTO remix ) 00:00 Tools
O Me O My (Gavin Moss Remix) 00:00 Tools
Trampled Under Foot (Led Zeppelin Cover) 00:00 Tools
The Christmas Song - Deezer Originals 00:00 Tools
The River (full) 00:00 Tools
Blue Magic (Waikiki) [Eric Krasno Remix] 00:00 Tools
The River (radio edit) 00:00 Tools
The River (Blackmar Remix) 00:00 Tools
The River (DGTO Remix) 00:00 Tools
Miss Ona Henrietta 00:00 Tools
The Christmas Song - Le Grand Noël 00:00 Tools
The Christmas Song 00:00 Tools
The River (IJsbreker) 00:00 Tools
Wanted To (bonus) 00:00 Tools
Blue Magic (Waikiki) (Eric Krasno Remix) 00:00 Tools
The River (Clem Beat'z REMIX) 00:00 Tools
Cross My Heart (bonus) 00:00 Tools
Doctor’s In 00:00 Tools
Oh Mother 00:00 Tools
"Your Love Will Blow Me Away When My Heart Aches" 00:00 Tools
DOCTOR S IN 00:00 Tools
Son Little - The River 00:00 Tools
The River Styx 00:00 Tools
Real Goodbye (bonus) 00:00 Tools
Blue Magic [Waikiki] 00:00 Tools
Doctor's inn 00:00 Tools
The Roots: Guns Are Drawn (Ft. Son Little) 00:00 Tools
"The River" 00:00 Tools
NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert 00:00 Tools
Carbon | FluxFM - Die Alternative im Radio. 00:00 Tools
The Man In Me 00:00 Tools
I’m Gone 00:00 Tools
The Christmas Song - Big Christmas 00:00 Tools
Mad about you (nova edit) 00:00 Tools
State Trooper 00:00 Tools
Blue Magic (Catch Edit) 00:00 Tools
FUV's New Dig: New Magic 00:00 Tools
I M GONE 00:00 Tools
Son Little- Doctor's In 00:00 Tools
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Son Little is the stage name of Aaron Livingston, an American rhythm & blues musician from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. “I was always a writer," says the man formerly known as Aaron Livingston. "Before I really learned music, I was serious about writing. Didn’t matter what it was. Just playing with words.” Considering how long he's been making music, that's saying something. Born in Los Angeles to a preacher and a teacher, as a kid he absorbed songs from dusty family records and learned saxophone and piano, though he felt more at home inventing his own language on those instruments rather than following the lesson plan. Adapt or die, as they say. Cycling through jazz, rock and R&B history, the hungry young son was beginning his true education. A few years later, the Livingstons moved to Queens, introducing Aaron to the active arts of hip-hop, basketball and city life. High school in suburban Jersey left him wanting more, so he headed to Manhattan and Columbia University, where he discovered art, recreational substances, and girls, girls, girls. He dropped out, got a job, got sad, kept journals. He moved to Philly, enrolled at Temple University, met the legendary Roots crew, even played music with them; they put his voice on an album, undun. He had a daughter, then a son. He was happy, still writing all the while. Then, slowly, the music stalled. Faded. He got another dead end job. He checked out of days. He got sad again. He forgot how to adapt. But, as it has the ability to do, the songwriting saved him. It was in his blood, he remembered. Coltrane. Hendrix. Santana. Tribe. And this time he vowed to never let it go. That's not to say he's always happy; he's human, after all. But making music helps keep things in perspective. "I feel the weight of life as I always did, as everyone does," he says. "But I feel the weight lifted, because I love doing this. And the more I do it, the more I love it." Son Little writes everywhere, every day, finding inspiration on the train, in a car, on the street, in the supermarket, with his children. Sometimes the ideas are fresh. Sometimes a tune comes from his past, a single spark. Nothing is off limits. "It could be just a thought, and everything else comes from that," he says. "In one of my books could be a phrase that later is a song, and then the song becomes a whole catalog. It’s gotta germinate from somewhere." Inspiration firmly struck, the song begins to bloom. There are many channels to Son Little's broadcast, varied stops on the dial, from blues to soul to funk to folk, and jook-joint jazz and chamber pop and back again. His voice—raw, weary yet alert, grave and gravelly, Marvin and Otis and Stevie all at once—soars and creeps, cracks and moans. His songs haunt, thrill, yearn and stomp like all the best work of his heroes. And the learning never stops. Little has collaborated with highly respected artists like The Roots and the producer/DJ RJD2, mentoring under the former and creating a duo with the latter called Icebird, which allowed him to flex his considerable vocal chops and song arrangement skills. "I've always loved the studio, but RJ helped me see how I can use it more effectively and find ways to challenge myself, and be inventive with sound. And The Roots, it’s hard to quantify what I’ve learned from them. Everything from how to rehearse to how to occupy the stage and command it…two things that are very fundamental in this business, and they are masters." This fall sees the release of the first recorded output from Son Little for Anti- Records, an EP called, wouldn't you know it, Things I Forgot. Six songs: three babies (released first as videos), two twins, and an RJD2 remix. It's all there, all those misremembered things: Triumph and trophies, hardship and heartache, soft sentences, loud chapters, facts and birthdays, faces and places and scrapes and scales, nights and weeks and years all lost, gone into the ether, slipped away, out-sizing our normal human bandwidth. "The singles, 'Cross My Heart' and 'Your Love Will Blow Me Away When My Heart Aches' and 'The River,' were more or less written consecutively," he says. "And so I think they were sort of internal responses to one other, complements. It's harder to place but I’ve been tinkering with the other two, 'Joy' and 'Alice,' for a long time. They’re sort of akin to one another in terms of mood. This is a small collection and maybe it's not as much a singular vision...it's more of a handful.” A grip of memories; Things He Forgot. Son Little writes to remember, matching the disparate vibes of his full, full life with a patchwork blanket of sound, experience and inspiration. Inventing, observing, adapting. And still, it grows. "I don’t see any end to the learning," he says. "And to understanding more of something that you immerse yourself in. Could be anything, again. Right now I’m immersed in this music and I feel that my understanding appreciates and changes scope and perspective. It's really rewarding in its own way." Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.