Sounwave | |
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Birth name | Mark Anthony Spears |
Born | Los Angeles, California, U.S. | February 28, 1986
Origin | Compton, California, U.S. |
Genres | |
Occupations |
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Children | 1 |
Years active | 1999–present |
Labels | |
Member of |
Mark Anthony Spears (born February 28, 1986), known professionally as Sounwave, is an American record producer and songwriter. He is a frequent collaborator of rapper Kendrick Lamar, having worked on all of his projects since his 2009 self-titled extended play. Sounwave has also worked with artists such as Beyoncé, Taylor Swift, Kali Uchis, Schoolboy Q, Mac Miller, and Bleachers. He has won three Grammy Awards, including two for Best Rap Album.
Sounwave was born Mark Anthony Spears on February 28, 1986, in Los Angeles, California.[1][2] His parents are elementary school sweethearts from Selma, Alabama, and relocated to Los Angeles in the 1970s so his father could pursue a dancing career for Soul Train.[3] Spears has two older brothers and was raised in Compton.[3] He was first inspired to pursue music after hearing the instrumentals on "Up Jumps da Boogie" by Timbaland. As a child, Spears used a Korg drum machine and a karaoke machine to create music.[4] From there, he purchased a 4-track machine and began using the PlayStation video game MTV Music Generator (1999) to produce songs.[4]
Spears was discovered by Terrance "Punch" Henderson, co-president of Top Dawg Entertainment (TDE), when he was 13 years old.[3] After meeting with rapper Bishop Lamont, he produced a song for him using MTV Music Generator, which later received radio placement.[4] He graduated from Compton High School in 2005 and was gifted an Akai MPC by his cousin; it soon became one of his primary production tools.[4] Spears first met rapper Kendrick Lamar in a recording studio in Gardena, California. Lamar was silent until Spears played a spin of Aalon's 1977 song "Rock and Roll Gangster", which made him rush to the recording booth and rap for two minutes straight.[3]
One year later, Spears met TDE's founder and chief executive officer Anthony "Top Dawg" Tiffith, who was originally unimpressed with him, but Spears persisted and honed his craft, and later blew Tiffith away.[5] Spears later reconnected with Lamar and became a member of TDE's in-house production team Digi+Phonics, alongside Tae Beast, Dave Free and Willie B.[5] His earliest work for the label includes production credits on Lamar's 2009 self titled extended play and Flo Rida's second album R.O.O.T.S.[6][4]
Spears was one of the primary producers of Lamar's final mixtape Overly Dedicated (2010) and his debut studio album Section.80 (2011). For his work on the latter album, he was highlighted by Complex on their 15 New Producers to Watch list.[7] He produced three songs on Lamar's second album Good Kid, M.A.A.D City (2012): "Bitch Don't Kill My Vibe", "M.A.A.D. City", and "Sing About Me, I'm Dying of Thirst". As a member of Digi+Phonics, he was highlighted by Complex for a second time and earned his first Grammy Award nomination for Album of the Year for his work on Good Kid, M.A.A.D City.[8][6] Spears also made contributions to Schoolboy Q's second album Habits & Contradictions (2012),[9][1] his third album Oxymoron, and Isaiah Rashad's debut album Cilvia Demo (both 2014).[10][11]
Spears produced a majority of Lamar's third album To Pimp a Butterfly (2015), which several publications have named as one of the best albums of the 2010s decade.[12][13] At the 58th Annual Grammy Awards, he won Best Rap Song for co-writing the album's fourth single "Alright" and received a second nomination for Album of the Year.[14] For Lamar's fourth album Damn (2017), Spears won Best Rap Album and picked up a third Album of the Year nomination at the 60th Annual Grammy Awards.[15] In 2018, he co-wrote, produced, and handled A&R for the film soundtrack Black Panther: The Album,[16] and contributed to singer-songwriter Kali Uchis' debut album Isolation.[17] Black Panther: The Album received five nominations at the 61st Annual Grammy Awards, including for Album of the Year, marking the first time a soundtrack album was nominated for the honor since O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000).[18] Its lead single, "All the Stars", earned nominations for Best Original Song at the Academy Awards, Golden Globe Awards, and Critics' Choice Movie Awards.[19][20][21]
In 2019, Spears contributed to several singer-songwriters, including Beyoncé's soundtrack album The Lion King: The Gift, Taylor Swift's seventh album Lover, and Mary J. Blige's single "Know".[22][23][24] The same year, he formed the synth-pop supergroup Red Hearse with musician and producer Jack Antonoff and singer-songwriter Sam Dew.[25] Their self-titled debut album was released through RCA Records.[26] For his work as the primary producer of Lamar's fifth album Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers (2022), Spears won Best Rap Album for the second time at the 65th Annual Grammy Awards, and earned a fourth nomination for Album of the Year.[27]
Spears resides in West Hills, Los Angeles with his partner, poet and songwriter Reyna Biddy, and their son, Umi.[28][29]
‡ | Indicates songs solely written or produced by Sounwave |
Year | Song | Artist | Album | Written with | Produced with |
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2011 | "A.D.H.D" | Kendrick Lamar | Section.80 | Kendrick Duckworth | Sole production ‡ |
2012 | "Bitch, Don't Kill My Vibe" | Good Kid, M.A.A.D City | Kendrick Duckworth, Robin Braun, Vindahl Friis, Lykke Schmidt | ||
"M.A.A.D City" (featuring MC Eiht) | Kendrick Duckworth, Ricci Riera, Axel Morgan, Aaron Tyler, Quincy Hanley | THC, Terrace Martin | |||
"Sing About Me, I'm Dying of Thirst" | — | Skhye Hutch | |||
2015 | "Alright" | To Pimp a Butterfly | Kendrick Duckworth, Pharrell Williams | Pharrell Williams | |
"King Kunta" | — | Terrace Martin, Michael Kuhle | |||
2016 | "That Part" (featuring Kanye West) | Schoolboy Q | Blank Face LP | Quincy Hanley, Kanye West, Ronald LaTour, Daveon Jackson, Kevin Gomringer, Tim Gomringer | Cardo, Yung Exclusive, Cubeatz |
2017 | "Yah" | Kendrick Lamar | Damn | Kendrick Duckworth, Dacoury Natche, Anthony Tiffith | DJ Dahi, Top Dawg, Bekon |
"Element" | Kendrick Duckworth, James Blake, Ricci Riera, Daniel Tannenbaum | James Blake, Ricci Riera | |||
"Feel" | Kendrick Duckworth | Sole production ‡ | |||
"Loyalty" (featuring Rihanna) | Kendrick Duckworth, Dacoury Natche, Anthony Tiffith, Robyn Fenty Bruno Mars, Philip Lawrence, Christopher Brody Brown, Robert Diggs, Russell Jones, Shawn Carter, Ricardo Thomas, Malik Cox, Calvin Broadus | DJ Dahi, Top Dawg | |||
"Lust" | Kendrick Duckworth, Dacoury Natche, Chester Hansen, Alexander Sowinski, Matthew Tavares, Leland Whitty | DJ Dahi, BadBadNotGood | |||
"Love" (featuring Zacari) | Kendrick Duckworth, Anthony Tiffith, Zacari Pacaldo, Travis Walton, Greg Kurstin | Teddy Walton, Greg Kurstin, Top Dawg | |||
"XXX" (featuring U2) | Kendrick Duckworth, Dacoury Natche, Anthony Tiffith, Michael Williams II, Paul Hewson, David Evans, Adam Clayton, Larry Mullen Jr. | DJ Dahi, Top Dawg, Bekon, Mike Will Made It | |||
"God" | Kendrick Duckworth, Ricci Riera, Dacoury Natche, Anthony Tiffith, Daniel Tannenbaum, Ronald LaTour, Travis Walton, Daveon Jackson, Mike Hector, Brock Korsan | DJ Dahi, Ricci Riera, Bekon, Cardo, Top Dawg, Yung Exclusive, Mike Hector, Teddy Walton | |||
2018 | "All the Stars" | Kendrick Lamar and SZA | Black Panther: The Album | Kendrick Duckworth, Solána Rowe, Al Shuckburgh, Anthony Tiffith | Al Shux |
"King's Dead" | Jay Rock, Kendrick Lamar, Future and James Blake | Kendrick Duckworth, Johnny McKinzie Jr., Nayvadius Wilburn, James Litherland, Samuel Gloade, Anthony Tiffith, Michael Williams, Travis Walton, Antwon Hicks, Axel Morgan | Mike Will Made It, Teddy Walton, Twon Beatz, 30 Roc | ||
2019 | "London Boy" | Taylor Swift | Lover | Taylor Swift, Jack Antonoff | |
2022 | "N95" | Kendrick Lamar | Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers | Kendrick Duckworth, Matthew Samuels, Jahaan Sweet, Hykeem Carter Jr., Sam Dew | Boi-1da, Japan Sweet, Baby Keem |
"Lavender Haze" | Taylor Swift | Midnights | Taylor Swift, Jack Antonoff, Zoë Kravitz, Jahaan Sweet, Sam Dew | Taylor Swift, Jack Antonoff, Jahaan Sweet | |
"Karma" | Taylor Swift, Jack Antonoff, Jahaan Sweet, Keanu Beats | Taylor Swift, Jack Antonoff, Keanu Beats | |||
2024 | "Euphoria" | Kendrick Lamar | Non-album single | — | Cardo, Kyuro, Johnny Juliano, Yung Exclusive |
"6:16 in LA" | Jack Antonoff | ||||
"Not Like Us" | Mustard, Sean Momberger |