Features

Colby O'Donis: Paid Dues

May 6th, 2008 | Author: Jake Paine

Besides the massive success of T-Pain, Akon's Konvict Muzik seems to be more in the business of signing artists than releasing material. With names ranging from Mack 10 and Sway Dasafo to Nivea and Lyfe Jennings, it's a crowded house at Konvict. However, if you ask fresh-faced 20-year-old Colby O'Donis, being on a label is tough business, and you've got to hustle.

With his chart-topping Pop/R&B hit "What You Got" coming to a boil, Colby O will be a self-titled debut that hopes to achieve what Rihanna has, with teen mass appeal, from a male. The New York-born O'Donis speaks to HipHopDX about his two degrees of separation from Michael Jackson, returning Latinos to Pop music, and how he got ahead in the pecking order at Konvict, with a release date and official label backing.

HipHopDX: You had a New York City childhood. Not much has been talked about in that regard. How did you the city you grew up in influence you?
Colby O'Donis:
I love New York City. I lived there for six, seven, eight years. I can definitely say I’m a city boy. [Laughs] Definitely a city boy. I moved out to Florida for a little while, far from the city, and I was having withdrawal symptoms.

DX: Where in New York are you from?
CO:
I was born in Jackson Heights, Queens. At Saint John’s Hospital.

DX: What part of Florida did you move to?
CO:
I actually moved out to Orlando.

DX: Ten years ago, that was a musical genesis for all the pop stars involved with Disney and all that.
CO:
Oh yeah. The whole N’Sync, Backstreet Boys thing.

DX: For you, was that a factor or worthwhile place to be in terms of your career?
CO:
It was pretty cool. With what I was trying to do at that time, that was the place to be at the moment. At nine years old, I got signed to Full Force – you know, Lisa Lisa & The Cult Jam, N’Sync, Backstreet Boys – I got signed to them. Then I got signed to Motown Records at 10 years old. I sang on the Stuart Little Soundtrack. I’ve been at it for a while. There was a point to where we were hustling so much that people were saying, “You guys aren’t getting noticed out here in Florida,” ‘cause my dad, who is my manager, my dad and I were hustling so hard. They said we needed to go to New York, L.A. or Atlanta. So we made that move out to L.A. to chase the career, ‘cause we were really grinding out there hard. As I was starting to get older, it was starting to get less Disney for me. [Laughs] [Orlando is] definitely a Disney-orientated place.

DX: Were you having gigs through Disney?
CO:
I did a few shows and stuff for them. It was a grind. Out there, it’s not as heavy as Atlanta, L.A. or New York when it comes to the music end.

DX: I commend you for admitting you did The Stuart Little Soundtrack. So many artists in urban music try to shake things like that off their portfolio or lie about their past. You embrace it.
CO:
Looking back at all that stuff I did, I’m proud of it. It made me who I am today. Being signed at 10 years old to Motown Records was a big breakthrough for me at the time. There’s a lot of deals…after that, when that fell through for me, I’ve been through a lot of presidents and labels. Full Force really showed a lot of love to me. A lot of things have fallen through on me. All the labels always wanted to sign me, but when it came to the contracts, it was just never exactly what we were looking for.

DX: You mean being a priority?
CO:
Not just being a priority, but percentages, how much someone wanted, how much I was allowed to write. My father was always looking out for my best interest. I think that, everything I’ve experienced, I’m proud of it, ‘cause it made me the man I am today – business savvy and everything. With my father, every business meeting he ever had, he would always include me in it, since I was eight or nine years old. When it comes to business, I’m very into it. When we met Akon, he knew how long we’d been hustling for, how long we’ve been struggling, and he just came correct. He was like, “Yo, if you want, you can write your entire album.” That was definitely a good look on his part, and on my part to be able to do that. We just ran with it.

I’m a songwriter and a producer. I produced most of my album. I like to be a part of the creative process. Akon gave me creative control on my whole album. These labels, they wanted to control every little detail and aspect of what I wanted to do. I just enjoy the creative process. Akon heard my demo, and he loved it. From there, we ran with that. I [also] wrote pretty much every song on my debut album too. I’m excited about that.

DX: Was your father experienced in the music industry before you, or was it something you embarked upon together?
CO:
We started together, from scratch. We started professionally around nine years old. We came into the game, we knew nothing about it – just raw. Everything I experienced, it made us who we are today in terms of business savvy and everything. Every mistake we’ve made has made us that much wiser and that much smarter, when it comes to the business.

DX: The most tangible case to most people is the Knowles family. Have there points over the last 12 years, where business bleeds its way to the dinner table?
CO:
Oh yeah. All the time. [Laughs] He’s the one who does it most of time, like, “We’re eating. I don’t want to talk about business.” Our lives is this. We wake up in the morning and this is it. Continued on page 2 »

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