IN CONVERSATION WITH SOLLYY

The name SOLLYY (@gwsollyy) has been doing the rounds in Western Sydney circles for some time with his genre-bending debut mixtape ASUELU, pushing him to the forefront of the local music scene. 

He is best known for his single el oh vee ee, a scrumptiously sidechained flip of Devin Morrison’s L.O.V.E.. Here, SOLLYY flexes his production skills, swapping the laidback syncopation of the original for a soulful, dancefloor-ready cut. 

Fresh off his promise to remix one Aussie artist per fortnight, we asked the Western Sydney artist a few questions.

ell oh vee ee mv still (Music by @gwsollyy. Music Video by Feks)

ell oh vee ee mv still (Music by @gwsollyy. Music Video by Feks)

Michael: How did you get into music production? Was beat-making something you always tinkered with

SOLLYY: Long story short, basically just messed around with mixing acapellas with my favourite beats, eventuating in me actually making the beats. That was about six years ago, when I was in Year Nine. Kept it going ever since.

Michael: What was the creative process like for ASUELU?

SOLLYY: Knowing that I didn’t really have anything out, my first thought for ASUELU was that I needed to show what I can do. I’d like to say I’m pretty diverse, so I made sure each edit was different from the other, yet still sounded cohesive when played as a project. Some edits on there are pretty old, specifically ihopeUhadakoodmornin and isayoffden, while others on there I legit made in the week leading up to the drop, those being whereiwannabe and brettylikedaflower

Michael: I see a lot of fans comparing you to Kaytranada and Sango, but how would you describe your sound?

SOLLYY: Kaytranada? I can see that, I’m pretty influenced by him, but Sango’s a new one! Haha, I don’t even think I have a sound yet, so I figured I might as well just make everything now so I can eventually figure out what sticks with me. If I had to boil it down to elements I use again and again, it would be strong, punchy drums and soulful melodies.

Michael: Any dream collaborators?

SOLLYY: I’m not too sure. I feel like I’m already collaborating with people who will be seen as titans in the future right now.

ASUELU (Credit: Artwork and Music by @gwsollyy)

ASUELU (Credit: Artwork and Music by @gwsollyy)

Michael: What can Western Sydney expect from SOLLYY in the coming months and beyond?

SOLLYY: More remixes, got a lot of those stored up ready to go. Also got a bunch of production work resulting from the Scary Hours sessions, so expect to hear tracks from a bunch of Western Sydney artists with my production on it!

Stay tuned for those fortnightly remixes and be sure to follow SOLLYY on Twitter and Soundcloud.

Michael Furcciniti

Jack of all trades and master of like two.
1999. Macquarie University.

Previous
Previous

CONSCIOUS PRESENTS

Next
Next

[PODCAST REVIEW] DEN OF TRUTH