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	<title>The Grey &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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	<title>The Grey &#8211; Baltimore Magazine</title>
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		<title>Making It Big</title>
		<link>https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/section/artsentertainment/evan-wallace-aka-e-dubble-shoots-for-breakout-success/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Jess Mayhugh]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Jan 2014 12:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Arts & Culture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[e-dubble]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Evan Wallace]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[hip-hop]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rap]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Grey]]></category>
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			<p><em>[<strong>Editor&#8217;s Note</strong>: Evan Wallace, aka e-dubble, passed away on February 13 at the age of 34. According to <a href="http://www.xxlmag.com/news/2017/02/e-dubble-has-died/" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">XXL</a>, the rapper was suffering from &#8220;</em><em>an aggressive infection, which spread throughout his body.&#8221; Fans from all over the world have taken to social media to mourn his loss, including one from Ontario, who simply said, &#8220;He will always be a king in our eyes</em><em>.&#8221; In 2014, we recounted his rise to underground fame and detailed the legacy he leaves behind.&#8221;]</em></p>
<p>These days, success is measured in hits, tweets, and likes. So if<br />
we’re talking about a Baltimore musician with 23 million YouTube views, 9<br />
 million streams on sites like Spotify, and 91,000 fans on Facebook, you<br />
 might expect to have heard the buzz. In the case of Evan Wallace, aka<br />
e-dubble, chances are you haven’t. It’s an ironic wrinkle in this<br />
virtual-marketing era that a rising rap star like e-dubble—a short form<br />
of Wallace’s initials—can reach millions of fans around the world yet<br />
remain largely unknown at home. Physically, the 31-year-old Wallace is<br />
hard to miss. Nearly 7 feet tall, he is a mountain of a man with dark<br />
green eyes radiating intensity. In a brown zippered cardigan, 501 jeans,<br />
 and a Polo beanie pulled over his brush cut, he looks more like an art<br />
student or a lumberjack than a typical hip-hop artist.</p>
<p>	His music is atypical, too. Wallace eschews the genre’s classic<br />
themes—street life, mayhem, various ways of spending lots of money—to<br />
write about the trials of a regular guy. “Honestly, I wasn’t sure it was<br />
 a story worth telling,” Wallace says, sitting on the couch in the South<br />
 Federal Hill apartment he shares with his manager, Justin Barker.</p>
<p>	“He’s just a normal person with normal problems, and a lot of<br />
listeners can relate to that,” adds Barker, unpacking Starbucks<br />
breakfast sandwiches in the kitchen. Barker, like Wallace, doesn’t fit<br />
the hip-hop mold. With his pale blue eyes and blond curls, he could be<br />
straight outta Minnesota.</p>
<p>	“I don’t know if I’d say normal,” Wallace replies. The reticent giant<br />
 and his buttoned-up best friend bicker and correct each other<br />
constantly. (“They never stop, they’re like an old married couple,”<br />
notes Brandon Lackey, who records Wallace’s tracks in his Parkville<br />
studio.)</p>
<p>	Their high-ceilinged, modern apartment has a minimalist feel, mostly<br />
because Wallace hasn’t found time to unpack since they moved in six<br />
months ago. Only two things have made it onto the walls so far: a large<br />
whiteboard covered with tour dates and a small painting of a young<br />
Wallace holding a toy gun that was commissioned for an e-dubble album<br />
cover.</p>
<p>	<img decoding="async" alt="" src="https://www.baltimoremagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/mg-4302.jpg" style="width: 303px; float: left; margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px;">There are exactly four books on the shelves: <em>Shel Silverstein’s Where the Sidewalk Ends</em>, <em>The Joy of Sex</em> (a gift from a college girlfriend, Wallace mumbles), <em>Can’t Stop Won’t Stop: A History of the Hip-Hop Generation</em>, and a musician’s guide to PR and marketing.</p>
<p>	While Barker’s room is neat as a pin, Wallace’s is a morass of<br />
clothing and size 15 sneakers interrupted only by home-studio equipment<br />
(computer, microphone, MIDI keyboard, and pre-amp) for recording demos<br />
and rough mixes.</p>
<p>	The apartment includes one other inhabitant, Wallace’s beloved dog,<br />
Lewis, a golden retriever/mutt he rescued. “I think she knows I saved<br />
her,” he says, as she gazes at him devotedly.</p>
<p>	It’s taken Wallace and Barker years of work to get to this point: the<br />
 impressive Internet presence, steady concert bookings, and a revenue<br />
stream that supports both of them and pays the rent. The next step is a<br />
big one, though—the one where e-dubble steps into the spotlight.</p>
<p>	And there have been unexpected stumbling blocks in the past.   </p>
<p>	Wallace<br />
 grew up outside of Philadelphia, the youngest child of a principal and a<br />
 schoolteacher. Like a lot of boys in the early 1990s, he and his<br />
friends fell under the spell of hip-hop cast by Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre.<br />
He played center—of course—on the Wissahickon High basketball team and<br />
dreamed of being a rapper. As a white guy, he didn’t have many role<br />
models for being a solo MC. In fact, the only one he knew about was the<br />
much-maligned Vanilla Ice.</p>
<p>	Then, Eminem hit it big with the <em>Slim Shady LP</em> in 1999. “I<br />
remember how hyped we were,” recalls Wallace. “Eminem showed that a<br />
white rapper could have a career. It was about skills, whether or not<br />
you could do it.”</p>
<p>	By then, Wallace had begun making his own beats using a drum machine<br />
and sampler from RadioShack. But writing rhymes to go with them didn’t<br />
come as easily.</p>
<p>	“There’s a kind of outgoing, boisterous MC personality that wasn’t me<br />
 at all,” he explains. “I was never the guy who was gonna take over a<br />
room.”</p>
<p>	He kept thinking he’d meet a rapper to work with, but by the time<br />
he’d graduated from St. Mary’s College of Maryland with a degree in<br />
political science, no one had materialized. Finally, he started writing<br />
himself. And if his story—sensitive white boy from the suburbs drinks<br />
beer, likes girls, is alienated—wasn’t as dramatic and violent as those<br />
of the rappers he admired, maybe those differences gave it legitimacy.</p>
<p>	Wallace’s first album, 2009’s <em>Hip-Hop Is Good</em>, was virtually<br />
 a one-man effort, written, recorded, and produced while living in a<br />
Hampden warehouse with college friends. One of them helped with the<br />
cover art. Barker took on marketing and business duties.</p>
<p>	To get attention, he and Wallace developed an ambitious strategy that<br />
 involved releasing a new e-dubble track every Friday for an entire<br />
year, starting in  January 2011. They bombarded key rap bloggers with<br />
the weekly releases, hoping to get exposure via social media.</p>
<p>	It started slowly, one Myspace post and Facebook comment at a time,<br />
as listeners noticed that Wallace’s version of hip-hop was a little<br />
different from anything they’d heard. He sampled Guns N’ Roses, The<br />
Black Keys, and Tom Petty; recorded long, idiosyncratic outros in which<br />
he mentioned NCAA scores, current events, or football news; and, where<br />
other rappers peppered their songs with shout-outs to Biggie and Tupac,<br />
Wallace rapped about Diane Rehm and name-checked John Cusack, Carrot<br />
Top, and Tracy Chapman.</p>
<p>	“Honestly, I didn’t like him at first,” says Jacob Moore, founder of the influential <em>Pigeons and Planes</em> blog. “I thought he was kind of corny.”</p>
<p>	But, by the 37th installment of Freestyle Fridays, Moore had changed<br />
his mind. “The sample translates perfectly into a contagious<br />
I’m-gonna-hum-you-all-day beat,” Moore wrote about that track (simply<br />
titled “Get On Board”). “E-dub’s message and delivery is as clear and<br />
sharp as a shard of glass.”</p>
<p>	Once converted, Moore became a key ally, posting praise and featuring<br />
 Wallace at a showcase in New York. By the time Wallace and Barker<br />
released a mix-tape of the Freestyle Friday songs, titled<br />
	<em>Written Thursday</em>,<br />
 on their Black Paisley Records label, their plan was working. The<br />
compilation was downloaded 10,000 times the first month it was posted,<br />
T-shirts were printed, and shows were booked at The 8&#215;10 Club and out of<br />
 town. Wallace quit his day job at a Fells Point bar.</p>
<p>	But just when Wallace’s career was gathering speed, it took a sudden<br />
U-turn. The intense schedule of Freestyle Fridays had gotten Wallace<br />
into a “routine I can’t recommend to anyone,” he says, noting that he<br />
was working furiously for half the week and celebrating the other half.<br />
“And by celebration, I mean vodka,” he adds.</p>
<p>	Soon he was running on empty, depressed, and questioning his choice<br />
of careers. “I was in euphoria for so long I didn’t realize there was a<br />
ceiling—until I hit it,” he says.</p>
<p>	He went to a therapist, who put him on a cocktail of anti-depressants<br />
 and other drugs. They seriously backfired. The manic episodes that<br />
ensued included wild drives on the Beltway, a crazy night spent painting<br />
 all the mirrors in the house blue, and another night punching holes in<br />
the walls.</p>
<p>	Barker watched the meltdown with extreme concern, before finally<br />
breaking down and calling Wallace’s father for help. After a week in a<br />
psych ward, Wallace spent nine months living in Philly with his parents<br />
and his dog. “Lewis had been with me for every single Freestyle Friday I<br />
 recorded,” he says, “and she was my muse and my sounding board as I<br />
started working again in my parents’ basement.”</p>
<p>	Writing was the best therapy of all, Wallace found. “Not only was it<br />
cathartic to put the feelings into words, but it rebuilt my self-esteem<br />
and confidence,” he says.</p>
<p>	By the time he and Lewis returned to<br />
Baltimore, Wallace had finished Reset, an album telling the story of his<br />
 breakdown and tracking his recovery. </p>
<p>	With its video-game metaphor for getting a second chance—<em>Hit a little button, everything will be all right</em>—the title song is a generational anthem with an infectious melody and a name-check of Han Solo.</p>
<p>	Released in November 2012, Reset  was welcomed by the growing army of<br />
 e-dubble fans. It debuted at No. 8 on the iTunes hip-hop chart and was<br />
pegged as a “Heatseeker” in<br />
	<em>Billboard</em>.</p>
<p>	Since then, Wallace and Barker have been working to expand their<br />
reach. “There’s only so much you can do with two guys and a computer,<br />
working your ass off with three hours of sleep for years on end,” says<br />
Barker. “At a certain point, you need a live show, videos, and a touring<br />
 setup, and that takes money, relationships, and credibility.”</p>
<p>	Those things have begun to come together. Wallace has been gigging<br />
with a backing band just like fellow Philly natives The Roots. (Full<br />
disclosure: my son, Vince, is his bassist.) He’s been touring mostly up<br />
and down the East Coast and into the South, and, in March, he’ll play<br />
South By Southwest, the music industry’s biggest showcase event, in<br />
Austin, TX.</p>
<p>	At this point, Jacob Moore suggests that Wallace’s reserved<br />
personality is the last serious stumbling block he has to surmount. “For<br />
 the first year or so of being familiar with e-dubble,” he says, “I<br />
didn’t know what he looked like, who he was, what he was all about. He<br />
refused to sell himself. He didn’t even have real press pics. For a<br />
while, I remember he was using one where his face was blurry and a dog,<br />
[Lewis], was sitting on his lap. One picture of him, well-styled and<br />
looking 7-feet tall, and he could have gotten a lot of attention.<br />
Instead, he’s sending out iPhone pics of the dog.”</p>
<p>	Wallace admits it’s true. He hates self-promotion, and has always<br />
wanted to believe the music would speak for itself.  But he has come to<br />
understand that image is essential. “For the music to be heard, I need<br />
to be seen,” he says.</p>
<p>	As he talks about upping his profile, Barker pulls out his phone and<br />
pulls up an e-mail that floated a possible Puma endorsement Wallace’s<br />
way. Coming via<br />
	<em>The Fader</em> magazine, it mentioned providing Wallace “cool kicks and gear” for his South By Southwest show.</p>
<p>	Though the Puma connection could reap some reward, Wallace doubts the<br />
 company will have anything in his size. “It would have to be double-X,”<br />
 he says.</p>
<p>	“Double?” repeats Barker dubiously. “You mean triple.”</p>
<p>	“I wear double-X sometimes,” Wallace counters.</p>
<p>	In any case, it’s gonna have to be big. It’s all gonna have to be<br />
big. E-dubble is going big, and it’s not just his sneakers and gear.</p>
<hr>

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			<p><strong>Listen to Wallace’s recent work, including “The Grey (radio edit),” below.</strong></p>
<p><iframe src="https://w.soundcloud.com/player/?url=https%3A//api.soundcloud.com/tracks/126212141&#038;color=ff6600&#038;auto_play=false&#038;show_artwork=true" frameborder="no" height="166" scrolling="no" width="100%"><br />
	</iframe></p>

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