Profile
Clarence Greenwood has come
along way behind his Citizen Cope moniker. From his beginnings as a
DJ for Basehead to his current, wildly popular Every Waking Moment (relased in 2006), the prodigious Cope has seen his star rise sharply.
The sound is unique; few artists can produce such a distinctly Brooklyn
hip-hop sound while strumming guitar and singing like a pony-tailed
Donavon—the singular or Frankenreiter, for that matter. The album’s
sales have been boosted by a boon of mainstream media crossover cash-ins
ranging from Pontiac ads to Fox’s So You Think You Can Dance.
But if dance-show drivel is what it took to catapult Cope into the limelight,
count it as one of very few good deeds Rupert Murdoch has done for us
lately.
Originally from Memphis, Tennessee,
Cope absorbed the sounds from his travels through Texas and Mississippi
before getting his jump-start musically in Washington D.C. There, he
played and recorded with the conga-heavy, go-go funk outfits. So while
Clarence Greenwood began as so many others—a lone teenager with an
acoustic guitar—he became inexorably intertwined with the sounds of
urban funk, soul and hip-hop. To their joint detriment, mainstream radio
networks have had a difficult time pigeonholing the music into a specific
genre, but the lack of airplay has done little to slow his mainstream
exposure.
Discography
Citizen Cope 2000
The Clarence Greenwood Recordings 2004
Every Waking Moment 2006