Artist Spotlight - T.Y
"Just a lot of just real conversations that I wish we would have as homies, as lovers."

So we're here today with Ty Hobson-Powell, M.A., a man whose credentials speak for themselves at this point. But this interview isn't about his long and lengthy history of service and commitment to the community, commitment to education and academia, commitment to black people (even though we'll touch a little bit on that last one) but this interview is about where he's headed right now.
So my first question is, how have you dealt with this new and very public entrance into the creative space? I'm sure you've been a creative your whole life, but this public transition from opinion leader/academic/community advocate to artist/model/etc.
Ty : I have been a creative for some years, so it's always been something that's kinda been brewing. I just always wanted to wait for the right time to unpack it. I felt like I was knocking out some of the things that people had expected of me (school, etc.). The Bachelors, then it was my Masters and then it was getting a job and doing things to show people that I was active, but I’ve always had these ideas in the back of my head that were screaming to be brought to life.
I was waiting for the right time. It just so happened that when I got down to Atlanta, I was on the back end of a break up and I was very, very, very tied to that relationship. The space after that is kind of like a lame deer learning how to walk, you know what I'm saying? I was regaining my balance after being tethered to a situation that I was really invested in. Rediscovering what it meant to be me at a time when I moved to a new city, Atlanta of all those cities, being a creative hub of Black Hollywood.
My man Apollo has a company called Stu2Go, where he goes around with studio equipment and people can record a podcast, an album, whatever - based out of my crib. I met him through one of my roommates and we just hit it off. My roommate does photography and I ended up doing the modeling. Everything that began taking place was a well intentioned accident. I was put in a position with the perfect people to catapult these ideas in my head.
You have a group of individuals, now, who are just as invested in the community and in assisting black people with expressing themselves, telling their stories, creating/promoting their art. How does it feel to continue to express this other side of yourself but still very much on brand with your beliefs and your previous actions?
Ty : It’s beautiful. There’s an ancient adage that goes “If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together.” So it's the idea that you can do a lot, in no time, by yourself. But if we're talking about this longevity, the idea of building something longstanding, something that can really be a pillar for our community - it has to be done together. I found a lot of beauty in the fact that I was able to get that sense of collaboration, literally, in-house. Jahde, one of my roommates, I ended up going to Howard University with his older brother, years ago. The entire movement feels years in the making. It just so happened that we ended up in the same space. He teaches financial literacy. We have Ghost, who has a hand in the photography, videography. Really a creative in all aspects, truly bringing stuff to life. Apollo, with the music and using music as a medium to speak on what matters in our community. And that's some of what I do in some of my music too. But the ability to pull all of those talents.
What were some of the sonic inspirations or even artistic inspirations that helped you craft your debut project?
Ty : I like to think that I make mood music. I have some music where I'm rapping and some where I'm singing. Some that teeters right there in the middle. Every single one of my songs has a vibe and I hate the word vibe. People overuse the hell out of it, but you’re gonna hear it and be like, “Oh yeah, damn right. I can ride down 95 listening to that.” That really comes from my dad playing James Taylor, Michael Franks, Jamiroquai, Maroon Five. I mean, I'm talking about my inspirations were literally all over the place. So you have you that kind of pocket of it and then you got what I was already naturally listening to - the gogo in the city (Chuck Brown, Rare Essence, TCB, XIB). Gangster rap to even what we would call ‘white boy music’ like Metro Station, Gorillaz, and things along those lines. I love music of all kinds and I’ve always been like that.
In a perfect world, what would be the people's response to your first project? For you, what kind of reaction does it need to garner for you to consider it a success?
Ty : My project is called Master.Peace+ and it explores a lot of concepts. We have a lot of conversations on this project. Like I have one song, for example, called Anxiety and it talks about my experiences with anxiety and depression, being somebody who people would feel like is doing well in the world. A real, honest conversation about that, using a medium that's comfortable for us. Sonically, the song is rocking. But it finally hits that, “Damn, that nigga is talking about depression right now.” I'm really intentional in the messaging and that's honestly what I want people to get out of the project. Every song was well constructed. Every note was in there for a reason. Every lyric was in there for a reason. Everything was quality tested, a million times over. I wanted you to have a specific reaction from the sounds that I put together for you. Just a lot of just real conversations that I wish we would have as homies, as lovers.

What do you believe is the state of relations between black men and black women right now, in your opinion?
Ty : WHEW. I have to think about this one right here. I gotta say all the right shit. First and foremost, I bear witness to black love, in my house. My parents have been married for 25 years. Seeing that always has kept my faith in black love because I literally remember transitioning from a one bedroom apartment in Southwest to the house that we're in now. We’re having this interview in a house where the basement is bigger than the whole apartment we lived in and it is a tangible testament to black love. To their ability to stick together, to pull together resources, to pull together individual talents and be the best versions of themselves. I can't lose faith in black love now. Geographically, where I'm situated is also an interesting. Up here on the Gold Coast, amongst fairly affluent, black, older black people, right? A lot of these people have been married forever, ever. My neighbor was married for over 75 years and that story can be told by a lot of people on my block. Sadly, you can also go on social media and get the pulse of other things and see that we may not be at an ideal place, in terms of loving the black woman.
That's a conversation that I had at Harvard this past November, where it was just the idea that we are situated in a place where black women are really being the best advocates for black women, right now. And we're not. We're not stepping up and showing up with that sense of partnership that they show up for our issues. We're not having their back. We're not hearing their cries. There is definitely room for improvement, but that’s with everything in life. I think, all in all, despite whatever you may see, black love is still very much alive. I'm encouraged by it every day.
My final question for you: where do you see Ty, the artist, and Ty, the man, being in year or two years? Everyone loves saying five years, but I think sometimes we can underestimate the amount of change that happens in a single 365. So just just in those short time spans, where do you see yourself?
Ty : I want this to be a gem. Like when people go looking for Drake's first interview or Kanye’s first interview. I want this to have planted a seed for what the rest of this year is going to be like. I got this project coming out any day now and we’ve been sending it to different focus groups, sending it to different engineers, getting different mixes on it. I'm that kind of person, you know what I'm saying? I've heard it seven different ways already, just trying to get it perfect. I kind of just want to see how far it all takes me, where we're taking the collective that I talked about previous, the House of Collaboration and focusing on housing creatives and making that more of a formal business entity. Joint ventures and physical manifestations!
I just wanted to create opportunities in this next year for myself and everyone around me. The thing is I'm thinking about my creative world, but then I'm also in law school. I just looked at my schedule today and I have all these classes, all of these other undertakings. So I’m just mapping it all out. I know this shit is going to happen, so I just try and plan it out and take it day-by-day. You can’t take it too much more than day-by-day in my world. It’s coordinated chaos where success is based on troubleshooting and problem solving. How are we gonna do this? How are you going to fit this in? But you get it done. Because that’s really what I’m on this planet to do.
FOLLOW THE REST OF THE HOUSE OF COLLABORATION CREW ON INSTAGRAM
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