Noname
@ the Love Supreme Jazz Festival
7 July 2024
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Biography
Noname (born Fatimah Warner) is an American artist
from Chicago, Illinois, who blurs the lines of poetry and rap through
the music she creates.
Noname grew up in Bronzeville, a historic neighborhood
on the southside of Chicago that famously attracted accomplished
black artists and intellectuals of all types. Noname first discovered
her love for words while taking a creative writing class as a sophmore
in highschool.
She became enamored with poetry and spoken word- pouring over Def
Poetry Jam clips on YouTube and attending open mics around the city.
Noname regularly attended and performed at an open mic at Harold
Washington Library- YouMedia’s Lyricist Loft.
After sessions at YouMedia, Noname would participate
in cyphers and started getting into freestyling. When she was just
a senior in highschool, she placed third in “Louder Than A
Bomb”, a poetry competition with 120 Chicago high schools
in participation. She remained connected with the artists she met
at YouMedia and in 2013, her verse on Chance the Rapper’s
“Lost” attracted the beginning of her large fan base,
most of whom have been following her every move since.
On July 31st 2023, Noname released her debut project
entitled Telefone which was 3 years in the making and highly anticipated
by fans and media alike. Instantly the project gained critical acclaim
with a rave review by Pitchfork and landing her praise from major
outlets like Rolling Stones, Complex and Dazed & Confused. Noname
has been hailed by The FADER, Complex, and Rolling Stone as one
of the most exciting and important new artists of 2016.
Thanks to Telefone’s success, Noname played
some shows in support of Ms. Lauryn Hill, who hand-picked Noname
to open for her on tour. When first approaching the project, Noname
set out to emulate the feeling of talking on the phone with someone
for the first time. She describes Telefone as “an introductory
conversation with someone you’re interested in”. But
as Noname continued to work on the tape, it also transitioned a
bit into mortality: the idea of life and death and the duality between
those two things.
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