Mandolyn Wind Ludlum (born March 28, 1974),[1] better known by her stage name Mystic, is an American singer and rapper from the San Francisco Bay Area.[2] After touring and recording with Digital Underground, she released her debut solo album in 2001.
Born Mandolyn Wind Ludlum on a hippiecommune in Lower Lake, California to a white mother and African-American father, she was raised by her mother after her parents split up when she was three years old (an experience she explores in her song "Fatherless Child").[3][4] She grew up in rural California, Hawaii, Mexico, and Oregon before settling in her eventual home base, Oakland, California, in 9th grade.[5][6][7][8] Most of her life has been in the Bay Area, and she says that she's from Oakland because it's where she "became a woman" and discovered herself.[9]
Ludlum began taking part in MC Battles in the Bay Area in the early 1990s.[4] After dropping out of high school at the end of 11th grade[9][10] in 1991, she began teaching art in 1996, and also began her recording career, her version of "Gloomy Sunday" appearing on the soundtrack to Abel Ferrara's film The Funeral.[7][11][12]
Early on in her musical career, she collaborated with fellow female producer The Angel and toured with Digital Underground between 1997 and 1999, appearing on Digital Underground's Who Got The Gravy album under the name DU Goddess.[6][13] She worked as a writer for Rude Gal Music before establishing herself as a solo artist.[6]
She signed a solo contract with Goodvibe Recordings in 1999 (signing on the same day her father died of a heroin overdose) after label co-chair Matt Kahane heard her on a mixtape by Bahamadia.[3][14]
She worked with respected underground hip-hop producers including Shock G and A-Plus on her 2001 critically acclaimed debut album, Cuts for Luck and Scars for Freedom, which was labelled as "conscious rap" and saw her receiving comparisons with Lauryn Hill.[2][7][15][16][17][18] She participated in the summer 2001 Tree of Life tour with her labelmates to promote the album,[2][6] whose lead single, "The Life", was featured in the ESPN show The Life and a commercial for Bud Light in 2004. She also toured with The Black Eyed Peas in 2001.[14]
The album track "W" featuring her collaboration with Planet Asia was nominated for a Grammy Award in 2001 for the brand new category, at the time, of Best Rap/Song Collaboration.[7][19] Mystic was also nominated for a BET Award in 2002 in the 'Best female hip-hop artist' category.[20]
The album was reissued with five extra tracks in 2003 on the DreamWorks label, including two new tracks produced by Kanye West, one a collaboration with Mos Def.[7][21]
2007–2011: European tour and digital album release
In August 2011, Cuts for Luck and Scars for Freedom was released as a digital download for the first time via Universal Music Group, with a website also opened featuring stories from fans related to the album.[23]
2013–2019: Music haitus, academia, non-profit work, and return to music with Beautiful Resistance
She became inspired to keep making music by one of her professors at UC Berkeley,[9] and in 2014, she returned to music with the independent release Beautiful Resistance, released through her own label, Beautifull Soundworks.[24]
From 2007-2021, Mystic also worked with the Hip Hop Caucus, a non-profit organization that aims to promote political activism for young U.S. voters using hip-hop music and culture.[27] She held a number of positions over the years, including Organizer, Bay Area Coordinator, Project Manager, Bay Area Advisor, and Program Manager.[28][29][26]
2022: Dreaming in Cursive: The Girl Who Loved Sparklers and A Black Love Trilogy
In 2022, Mystic released her first solo album in eight years, Dreaming in Cursive: The Girl Who Loved Sparklers.[24][30] She described this album as her "healed Black woman music", focusing on affirmation and love.[5][31]
Her latest project, currently in post-production, is a short film called A Black Love Trilogy, which she co-wrote, co-directed and stars in.[30][24][31][32]
The Conscious Daughters - Gamers (1996) Priority Records - vocals on "It Don't Stop" and "All Star Freestyle", background vocals on "Who Got Da Mic" and "TCD Fo' Life (West Coast Bomb)"