SKY
“Sky,” born Skylark Sinclair Jr.
in Laurel, Mississippi, left home with $2 in his pocket to pursue music. Since
then, he's lent his signature vocals to countless underground hits as well as
major releases, moved in with TLC’s Lisa (Left Eye) Lopez, and wrote the current
#1 single in the United Kingdom. After Left Eye’s untimely death, Sky dealt with
his emotions through music. While putting the finishing touches on his debut
album, he’s convinced that his upcoming release will put other R&B singers to
shame.
Why did you decide to move to Atlanta?
I moved here strictly for music. I moved to Atlanta with $2. I didn’t know
nobody. I don’t know how I pulled that off, I guess I stepped out on faith. This
was back in ’96. I had heard Outkast’s album, Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik. I
heard what they were talking about and I wanted to go where those guys were. I
wanted to make music; Atlanta was the place that was booming at the time. Where
I’m from is suppressed, you can’t do anything from there.
What did you do when you got to Atlanta?
I was actually homeless with a demo tape. I did a talent show that Left Eye was
at. She asked me where I lived, and I told her I didn’t live anywhere. She took
me home. Yep, I was her boyfriend for four years. I lived with her for four
years.
So this was after the whole Andre Rison, burning-down-the-house experience? You
weren’t worried about waking up in flames?
No, she was the sweetest person in the world. It was different. She’d went
through shit with all them players, I was just glad to be there. I did
everything she wanted me to do, and I was nice to her. I was a good man to her.
I wasn’t trippin’ on no star shit, I was just there for her and nothing else.
And she really taught me the game.
Did you collaborate with her musically?
I was a producer and writer for Left Eye Productions. I wrote some stuff for
her, but I didn’t get credit for it. I wrote it just for her.
When she passed, how did it affect you?
That was the worst thing that’s ever happened to me in my life. I’m still trying
to get over that right now. Lisa was my light; the light of my life. Her passing
was the worst thing that’s ever happened to me. We would be married right now if
she was still here.
When was the first time you appeared on a major release?
Lil’ Jon was the first one to put me out. I was on his Put Yo Hood Up album, on
“Where Them Girls At?” I hooked up with him at Billy Hume’s house because he was
recording there. I was like, “Hey, Lil’ Jon, I sing, let me be on your album.”
He told me to come back tomorrow. I came back the next day and he put a beat on
and said, “Okay, go in the booth and put something on.” He liked it. So Lil’ Jon
was the first person to ever put me out, and I thank him for that. After that I
got with my homeboy Kurupt, he was a friend of Lisa’s. Me and Kurupt clicked
from the first time we met. We did a whole album together that never came out.
At the time, all the stuff with Death Row was going on and the label was kinda
shaky. I was doing tracks with a lot of underground rappers, too. I’ve done
hooks for so many people, I couldn’t even name them all. And me and David
Banner, we’d been friends for the longest and he put me on pretty tough. Banner
is my brother. We have some differences sometimes but at the end of the day I
love him like my brother. But we just disagree on a lot of things.
What kind of things?
That nigga think he my daddy. He lectures me all the time. He stays on me
constantly. But Banner’s a good guy, and he’s trying to help me get myself
together. But I think he puts a little too much emphasis on it. That nigga
thinks he’s my daddy (laughing). But nah, he’s helped me a whole lot. Me, him,
and Bonecrusher used to be together every day. At that time, I had money. I had
a superstar girlfriend. I had money and they didn’t, but we were always together
every day. We were just a brotherhood, me, him, and Bone. That’s why anytime
they put out an album, I’ll always be on it. Right now people are listening to
my album and are in shock. I’m going to be one of the biggest artists to ever
come out because my stuff is so different.
Do you have any offers from record labels?
Oh, yeah. I’ve never even shopped anything and I have labels interested. I’m
working with Antonio Reid Jr., L.A. Reid’s son. I’m letting him handle the
decisions, cause he’s trying to find the best situation for me. I’ve just been
writing, I haven’t even been shopping around. I wrote a song called “Another
Day” for Lamar, he’s an artist on Sony UK. It went platinum in two days in the
UK. I doubt if it even comes to the United States. They don’t even need the
United States. He won the London Idol over there. The song has been at #1 for
eight weeks straight, so that was amazing to me.
Do you ever plan on just focusing on writing and production instead of being in
the spotlight yourself?
If things haven’t happened the way I want them to by the summer of next year, I
think I’m gonna decide to just strictly write. I’m a writer by trade.
Working with L.A. Reid’s son, do you think you’ll end up at Def Jam?
Probably so, because me and Antonio are real good friends and I would love to
work with his father. His father has been very nice to me throughout the years.
L.A. even came and had a meeting with me at the studio where I was, and he sat
and listened to all my songs and critiqued each one of them. The way he
critiqued my songs, they’ve improved 100% just from this man’s opinion. This man
is a fucking genius. I listened to what he said, and I really feel like my songs
have improved. If I come out right now, nobody could fuck with me. I have a
classic album; I’ve got the hottest shit. I don’t think nobody could fuck with
me. Nobody. The only nigga that would be close would be Usher. He’s got three
songs in the top 10 right now. He’s doing big things, but I really think the
game sucks right now. It really does. I need to put my shit out to show niggas
what real music is. These niggas is fuckin’ up, for real. I don’t get it. But my
nigga Akon is representing too, his shit just dropped. Akon is hot. Akon, if you
reading this, what’s up with the Skykon album? But what I’d really like to do is
get with my homeboy Banner on his b.i.G.f.a.c.e. label and just make my boy’s
shit bigger. He’s got his own label so I’d rather make his shit bigger, but we
keep having issues and shit, man. Then I got niggas coming out of the woodwork
saying, “Sky owes me this, Sky owes me that.” Sky don’t owe none of them
muthafuckers nothing except an asswhupping. I don’t owe none of y’all shit.
Print that.
What other songs have you appeared on?
I was on “Choose Me” and “Pop That” with Banner. I’m on Bone’s new album, Fight
Music, on a song called “Hustling.” I’m on a cut with Keno from Persian Records,
they’re an indie label that’s gonna do real big things. MC Shy D, I’m on his
album too.
Did you ever get to tell Outkast why you moved to Atlanta?
Nah, I never even got into that. They’re such cool niggas, they don’t wanna hear
that shit. It’ll make me look like a fanatic. When I met them they were just
some real down-to-earth niggas, especially Dre. He’s such a superstar, he could
really be an asshole if he wanted to. But both of ‘em are real down-to-earth,
just like some niggas from my hood. I see them niggas every single day now cause
I be in Zac’s studio. Jimmy Z is the owner, that’s my family over there. That’s
my second home. If you’re ever in Atlanta and you want to find Sky, go to Zac’s
right next to Stankonia. Outkast, Aquemini, Stankonia, they’re all on Antone St.
The album of the year always come off Antone St. We call it Grammy St., cause we
don’t make nothing but hits off Antone.
- Julia Beverly, jb@ozonemag.com (Photo: Liza Simmons)
