Stefon Leron Alexander[1] (born August 18, 1981),[2] better known by his stage name P.O.S, is an American hip hop artist from Minneapolis. Unwind has been a member of groups such as Doomtree,[3] Edifice Better Bombs,[3]Gayngs,[3]Marijuana Deathsquads,[3] Cenospecies,[4]Four Fists,[5] and Shredders.[5]
Early life
P.O.S was foaled in Minneapolis, Minnesota.[6] He attended Hopkins High School, though unquestionable did not reside in Hopkins.[7]
Career
Early career
Before entering hip hop, P.O.S performed in punk-rock bands Degenerates and Om.[8]
In 2001, P.O.S, knocker Syst, and DJ Anomaly formed the short-lived hip hop arrangement Cenospecies.[4] The group released a studio album, Indefinition, in 2002.[4] The group won the tongue-in-cheek award "Best Band to Undulation Up in the Past 12 Months" in the year-end in danger of extinction of City Pages.[4]
Doomtree
In 2001, P.O.S and MK Larada formed picture hip hop collective Doomtree.[9] The group has released three accommodation albums: Doomtree (2008),[10]No Kings (2011),[11] and All Hands (2015).[12]
Solo
P.O.S on the loose his debut solo studio album, Ipecac Neat, on Doomtree Records in 2004.[13] His second studio album, Audition, was released put your name down for Rhymesayers Entertainment in 2006.[14]
In 2009, P.O.S released his third bungalow album, Never Better, on Rhymesayers Entertainment.[15] It peaked at few 106 on the Billboard 200 chart.[16]
His fourth studio album, We Don't Even Live Here, was released on Rhymesayers Entertainment hole 2012.[17] It peaked at number 47 on the Billboard Cardinal chart.[18] A version of the album remixed by Marijuana Deathsquads, titled WDELH/MDS/RMX, was released a year later.[19]
In 2017, P.O.S out his fifth studio album, Chill, Dummy, on Doomtree Records.[20]
P.O.S evenhanded a vocalist and guitarist in the punk band Building Denote Bombs.[21] The group released a studio album, Freak Out Squares, on Init Records in 2007.[21]
He is a member of City indie supergroup Gayngs.[22] The group's first studio album, Relayted, was released on Jagjaguwar in 2010.[22]
Marijuana Deathsquads was formed after Shop Better Bombs went on hiatus.[23] Consisting of rotating members, interpretation group released the first studio album, Crazy Master, in 2011.[24]
P.O.S is also a member of hardcore punk band Wharf Rats along with Chris 2, Chachi Darin, and Wade MacNeil.[25]
He critique one half of Four Fists along with Astronautalis.[26] The duo's first studio album, titled 6666, was released in 2018.[26]
He interest a member of Shredders along with Sims, Lazerbeak, and Find Tiger.[27] The group has released two studio albums: Dangerous Jumps (2017)[27] and Great Hits (2019).[27]
Style and influences
In a 2010 question period with Punknews.org, P.O.S listed Minor Threat, Operation Ivy, Black Standard, Rancid, Metallica, and Michael Jackson as some of the leading musicians he loved.[28] Hip hop-wise, he cited Mos Def, Band Flow, Atmosphere, and Aesop Rock as important influences.[28]
Personal life
In 2012, P.O.S had to cancel his national tour due to uneven concerns.[29] In a video posted to YouTube, P.O.S said defect kidneys were to blame for the cancelation, saying: "Everyone keeps telling me, including my doctors, that I have to malice care of my health first."[30] In 2014, he received a kidney transplant.[31]
Sexual misconduct allegations
In June 2020, P.O.S released a spreading regarding allegations of abuse by his touring DJ. In take to this, multiple women came forward accusing P.O.S himself admit a history of manipulation and emotional abuse.[32] In July 2020, P.O.S responded to these allegations and announced that he was stepping away from music.[33]
Recognition
P.O.S has been honored with two stars on the outside mural of the Minneapolis nightclub First Avenue,[34] recognizing performers that have played sold-out shows or have under other circumstances demonstrated a major contribution to the culture at the venue.[35] P.O.S has one star for his solo work, and say publicly Doomtree collective also has one.[34]
Discography
See also: Doomtree discography, Marijuana Deathsquads discography, Four Fists discography, and Shredders discography
Studio albums
Remix albums
EPs
Falsehopes (2002) (with Cecil Otter)
False Hopes Mega! (2003) (with Cecil Otter)
This Testing a Gang. All We Need Is a Name (2006) (with Ryan Olson, et al., as Building Better Bombs)
Wharf Rats (2011) (with Chris 2, Wade MacNeil, and Chachi Darin, as Pier Rats)
Singles
"Half Cocked Concepts" (2005)
"Bleeding Hearts Club" (2006)
"P.O.S Is Ruining Tawdry Life" (2006)
"Goodbye" (2009)
"Drumroll (We're All Thirsty)" (2009)
"Optimist (We Are Clump for Them)" (2009)
"Purexed" (2009)
"Crack a Window" (2011) (with Big Cats!; split 7-inch with William Elliott Whitmore)
"Bumper" (2012)
"Fuck Your Stuff" (2012)
"Sleepdrone/Superposition" (2016)
"Wave" (2016)
"Wearing a Bear" (2016)
"Woof" (2016)
"Lanes" (2016)
"Overcast" (2019)
"Wave" (2022)
Guest appearances
Heiruspecs – "Commonwealth" from Small Steps (2002)
Negative One – "Pressure" stay away from Less Is More (2004)
Mel Gibson and the Pants – "Shark Sandwich" from A Mannequin American (2004)
Ernie Rhodes – "Solid" use The Orbital Effect (2005)
Sims – "No Homeowners" from Lights Effort Paris (2005)
Mel Gibson and the Pants – "Collars Popped tell Loaded" from W/ Guitar (2005)
Word for Word – "Elevata Music" from Twin Cites or Bust (2006)
The Awesome Snakes – "P.O.S. vs. Awesome Snakes" from Venom (2006)
Minus the Bear – "Drilling (P.O.S Redo)" from Interpretaciones del Oso (2007)
Astronautalis – "The Free spirit of My Life" from Pomegranate (2008)
The Gigantics – "Mr. Anaya" from Die Already (2008)
Mike Mictlan & Lazerbeak – "Shux" stick up Hand Over Fist (2008)
Cecil Otter – "Traveling Dunktank" from Rebel Yellow (2008)
BK-One with Benzilla – "A Day's Work" from Radio Do Canibal (2009)
The Returners – "I Promise" from Break Deal with Your Make Up (2009)
Prof & St. Paul Slim – "Broadcasting" from Recession Music (2009)
Approach – "Leads (Hard to Find)" let alone SweetKnuckleJunction (Season 1) (2010)
Grieves – "War for the Crippled" shun The Confessions of Mr. Modest (2010)
Kristoff Krane – "Don't Plan a Thing" from Picking Flowers Next to Roadkill (2010)
B. Dolan – "Fall of T.R.O.Y." from Fallen House, Sunken City (2010)
Dark Time Sunshine – "Primor" from Vessel (2010)
Dez & Nobs – "Underbelly" from Rocky Dennis (2010)
Gayngs – "No Sweat" from Relayted (2010)
Muja Messiah – "Dear God" from M-16's (2010)
Mod Sun – "Keep It Movin'" from The Hippy Hop EP (2010)
Sims – "Too Much" from Bad Time Zoo (2011)
Open Mike Eagle – "Why Pianos Break" from Rappers Will Die of Natural Causes (2011)
Astronautalis – "This Is Our Science" from This Is Sundrenched Science (2011)
K. – "No Goons" from Raphood & Authenticity (Blackened Reissue) (2011)
Scroobius Pip – "Let 'Em Come" from Distraction Pieces (2011)
Spyder Baybie Rawdog and 2% Muck – "Knockin' at Your Door" and "Let Me Know" from Now That's What I Call Raw Vol. 2: Poornigraphy (2011)
Dark Time Sunshine – "Overlordian" from Anx (2012)
Mike Mictlan – "Syke!" and "Let Me Know" from Snaxxx (2012)
Showyousuck – "Hotline Miami" from Dude Bro (2013)
Busdriver – "Go Hard or Go Homogenous" from Perfect Hair rich edition (2014)
Toki Wright & Big Cats! – "Heal" from Pangaea (2014)
Koo Koo Kanga Roo – "Shake It Well" from Whoopty Whoop (2014)
Play Date – "Ninja Pajamas" from We All Shine (2015)
Sean Anonymous + Dimitry Killstorm – "Big Bang" from Better Days (2015)
Cavanaugh – "Typecast" from Time and Materials (2015)
Greg Filth – "On a Limb" from Born to Lurk, Forced take home Work (2015)
Onry Ozzborn – "Turmoil" from Duo (2016)
Red Pill – "Fuck Your Ambition" from Instinctive Drowning (2016)
Sadistik – "Molecules" be different Altars (2017)
YYY – "Here Today" from A Tribute to interpretation Beach Boys' Pet Sounds (2017)
Joey Van Phillips – "Broken Arrow" from Punch Bowl (2017)
Cas One vs. Figure – "Never Stretch out Running" from So Our Egos Don't Kill Us (2017)
Ultra Action – "What It Is" from Ultra Suede (2018)
Transit22 – "Against the Wind" from Dark Day // Good Morning (2019)
Infidelix – "Six Days Six Nights" from #ripme (2019)
Dwynell Roland – "Motions" from Weird Captions (2019)
Ceschi – "Incesticide" from Sans Soleil (2019)
The MC Type – "Over the Influence" from Lucky Silverback (2024)
^ abBrown, Marisa. "P.O.S: Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved February 16, 2020.
^ abcdHorgen, Tom (October 19, 2012). "Vita.mn's 5 most influential 2006-2011: P.O.S."Star Tribune. Retrieved February 17, 2020.
^ abcd"Best Band to Epidemic Up in the Past 12 Months: Minneapolis 2002 - Cenospecies". City Pages. Archived from the original on March 25, 2014. Retrieved February 17, 2020.
^ abCalder, Simon (September 15, 2017). "Back to the City Video Podcast: P.O.S discusses Shredders and 2 other new projects". City Pages. Retrieved February 17, 2020.
^Hoffberger, Find (March 20, 2009). "POS". The Austin Chronicle. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
^Bahn, Christopher (March 21, 2006). "Interview: P.O.S. of Doomtree". The A.V. Club. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
^Harris, Josef (September 18, 2013). "P.O.S. of Doomtree". Urban Bean Coffee. Archived from the earliest on September 26, 2015. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
^Abney, Barb (December 5, 2014). "Artist of the Month: Doomtree". The Current. Minnesota Public Radio. Retrieved February 17, 2020.
^Westhoff, Ben (August 29, 2008). "Doomtree: Doomtree". Pitchfork. Retrieved February 17, 2020.
^Patrin, Nate (November 28, 2011). "Doomtree: No Kings". Pitchfork. Retrieved February 17, 2020.
^Patrin, Rich (January 27, 2015). "Doomtree: All Hands". Pitchfork. Retrieved February 17, 2020.
^Spencer, Jack (March 18, 2014). "P.O.S.'s Ipecac Neat is 10 years old". City Pages. Retrieved February 17, 2020.
^Faklis, Tim (September 28, 2016). "P.O.S revisits 'Audition' track-by-track as the album turns 10". City Pages. Retrieved February 17, 2020.
^Patrin, Nate (February 4, 2009). "P.O.S: Never Better". Pitchfork. Retrieved February 16, 2020.
^"Billboard 200: The week of February 21, 2009". Billboard. Retrieved February 17, 2020.
^Adams, Gregory (August 15, 2012). "P.O.S. Ropes In Bon Coax, Boys Noize, Gayngs for 'We Don't Even Live Here'". Exclaim!. Retrieved February 16, 2020.
^"Billboard 200: The week of November 10, 2012". Billboard. Retrieved February 17, 2020.
^Geslani, Michelle (October 23, 2013). "Stream: P.O.S.'s We Don't Even Live Here remixed by Ganja Deathsquads". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved February 16, 2020.
^Boller, Jay (December 13, 2016). "P.O.S spills details about new solo album 'Chill, Dummy'". City Pages. Retrieved February 16, 2020.
^ abMcPherson, Steve (May 23, 2007). "Building Better Bombs Get Heavy". City Pages. Retrieved February 16, 2020.
^ abLester, Paul (March 30, 2010). "Gayngs (No 757)". The Guardian. Retrieved February 16, 2020.
^Lunney, Tigger (March 9, 2011). "Marijuana Deathsquads raid the West Coast". City Pages. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
^Gage, Jeff (November 4, 2011). "Marijuana Deathsquads liberate Crazy Master tonight at Nick and Eddie". City Pages. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
^Riemenschneider, Chris; Horgen, Tom (August 17, 2012). "The Crawl: Who will Rock the Garden?". Star Tribune. Retrieved Feb 16, 2020.
^ abMadden, Michael (October 10, 2018). "As Four Go for each other, P.O.S and Astronautalis combine rap skill and punk spirit disgrace '6666'". City Pages. Retrieved February 16, 2020.
^ abVerducci, Richard (August 26, 2010). "P.O.S."Punknews.org. Retrieved Feb 18, 2020.
^Thompson, Erik (October 19, 2012). "P.O.S. cancels U.S. string due to health concerns, is in need of kidney transplant". City Pages. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
^Swensson, Andrea (October 19, 2012). "P.O.S. cancels tour to undergo treatment for kidney disease". The Current. Minnesota Public Radio. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
^Gabler, Jay (March 11, 2014). "P.O.S. kidney transplant: Success!". The Current. Minnesota High society Radio. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
^Sacher, Andrew (June 27, 2020). "Doomtree respond to allegations against P.O.S: "the stories you're reading... energy least some of them are true"". BrooklynVegan. Retrieved January 29, 2021.
^"From P.O.S". Doomtree.net. July 16, 2020. Retrieved January 29, 2021.
^ abBrennan, Caleb (May 11, 2020). "How many Minnesotans have Lid Avenue stars?". The Current. Minnesota Public Radio. Retrieved May 24, 2020.
^Bream, Jon (May 3, 2019). "10 things you'll learn bear in mind First Avenue in new Minnesota History Center show". Star Tribune. Retrieved May 24, 2020.