Spider (musician)

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Spider
Birth nameJennifer Osakpolor Irabor
BornTallaght, Ireland
OriginLondon, England
Genres
Occupation(s)Musician
Member of

Jennifer Osakpolor Irabor, known professionally as Spider, is an Irish musician of Nigerian descent. Born in Tallaght, she moved to London aged eighteen to study at BIMM University; after being railroaded by male producers into releasing synth-pop under the name Jenn, she paused making music for a couple of years as a result of disillusionment, and subsequently released alternative music under the name Spider. She is a member of Loud LDN.

Life and career[edit]

Early life[edit]

Jennifer Osakpolor Irabor[1] was born in Tallaght to a Luas driver and a teacher, and has a brother. She grew up in a strict Nigerian Catholic household,[2] and attended a Catholic school.[3] Her parents played Nigerian gospel music and chart hits;[2] the first pop album she bought was a Gwen Stefani CD, which she happened upon while she and her father were buying groceries.[2] She spent a period acting, though quit aged twelve, before going through phases of writing, YouTube, and graphic design.[4] After being banned from attending concerts, she found Twitter and Tumblr communities,[5] and spent time operating multiple Stan Twitter accounts,[4] including jointly running a 5 Seconds of Summer stan account along with two other women from London.[6]

"I remember being so gassed about Halsey because she was half Black. It was the most white-passing, like, crumbs, but I was like, thank god! Sometimes it was that whole thing of ‘alternative music is white people music’; I was really into alternative music, and I would listen to Bring Me The Horizon and shit but keep it to myself in school because the alternative kids, most of them were white. In my head, I thought there didn’t seem to be a lot of us in the scene, so that really motivated me to be there as a Black woman and make that type of music. I remember going into my dad’s room at 1am, like, ‘I think I’m gonna make alternative music because there’s not enough Black women in it’."

Irabor talking to Dork in July 2023[7]

Around this time, she discovered alternative artists such as Bring Me the Horizon,[7] Halsey, and Lorde;[2] after hearing Halsey's Badlands, she decided to pursue making music.[6] She began writing original compositions aged sixteen,[2] after seeing success from Black Irish artists Soulé and Hare Squead,[5] and after her father bought her a cheap Argos keyboard and a friend gave her lessons; her early efforts were attempts at aping her favourite artists. Aged eighteen, she moved to London in order to study at BIMM University, and began releasing synth-pop under the name Jenn;[2] at the time, male producers were unwilling to allow her sound to diversify beyond R&B,[5] and she left the music industry disillusioned for just under two years.[4]

Career[edit]

By the time of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom, she was severely depressed, and lockdown forced her to confront her feelings;[5] reenergised, and feeling that that there were not enough Black women making alternative music, she resumed production,[7] adopting the stage name Spider after spiders began appearing in her room on the grounds that they were a sign to resume being creative.[2] One of the first tracks she released after returning to making music was "Water Sign",[4] a track partly inspired by Olokun, an androgynous Nigerian deity.[8] The track went viral online in spite of blogs declining coverage; by April 2023, the track had been liked over 160,000 times on TikTok.[6]

Her follow-up,[9] "I'm Fine! I'm Good! I'm Perfect", was written following an emotional breakdown on her twenty first birthday;[8] a music video for the song was released, which was inspired by staples of teenage pop culture such as house parties, Tumblr, and Skins. A TikTok video used to promote the single became very popular with people of colour before receiving large amounts of negative comments and then deleted by TikTok, prompting Irabor to upload a video accusing TikTok's reporting system of being used against marginalised communities.[6] She then released an EP, "C.O.A.", which stood for "Coming of Age"; intended as an authentic representation of Black teenage life, the album included "Water Sign", "I'm Fine! I'm Good! I'm Perfect", and focus track "U Get High/I Get Nothing",[10] which was written about her experiences of poor treatment by a partner.[5] She then joined Loud LDN,[11] a collective of London-based women and genderqueer musicians founded in May 2022.[12]

Shortly after taking a break from TikTok, she entered into a session with Earl Saga, who she had met via industry connections she had made following the success of "Water Sign". After taking the view that music should be used to make radical statements, she wrote "America's Next Top Model",[6] a belligerent response to those who had attempted to shut her down, which she released in February 2023;[13] a music video for the song was released, in which Irabor dances while ignoring white men screaming at her.[13] A subsequent single, "Growing Into It",[14] detailed her contempt for her friends' clout-chasing ex-boyfriends,[15] and in April 2023, she released the EP Hell or High Water,[16] which included "America's Next Top Model" and "Growing Into It".[17] She then supported Blackpink on their Born Pink World Tour.[18] In November 2023, she released the single "Straight Out the Oven", a song which queried her desires to be conventionally attractive and for toxic men to validate her, and announced a third EP, An Object of Desire, which contained her take on her experience of objectification, desire, and intimacy as a young adult who had grown up in a Catholic environment.[3] She released a further single, "Daisy Chain", a track about having her personal space invaded,[19] followed by An Object of Desire in February 2024.[20]

Artistry[edit]

In an April 2022 interview with Notion, Irabor noted that Spider was predominantly inspired by Lorde, Halsey, and Taylor Swift, specifically citing Swift's way with words, and noted that she gravitated towards artists with thriving online communities.[4] For Hell or High Water, she compiled her sound by analysing what she making notes on songs she liked, such as the bassline from Charli XCX's "Vroom Vroom" and the guitar from Grimes' "Flesh Without Blood";[6] the notes for the music video for "America's Next Top Model" were nineteen pages long.[6] In February 2024, The Irish Times wrote that much of her current influence was coming from women-fronted 1990s rock and alternative bands such as Veruca Salt and Hole, with further inspiration taken from Wet Leg, Gus Dapperton, and Momma.[2] In addition, Tara Joshi of The Guardian described Hell or High Water as "throb[bing] with dissonant punk energy".[21]

Irabor is noted for having a confident on-stage persona; during her performance at the 2023 The Great Escape Festival, she called out her audience several times for responding unenthusiastically,[7] while during one performance as part of DIY's "Hello 2024" series at The Old Blue Last in London, she used one track to call for the audience to name their "shitty exes" and ended by telling the audience "to tell bigots to go fuck themselves".[22] In July 2023, Dork attributed her brashness to going viral during the pandemic, and therefore not having to perform live until later, which meant she had longer to develop confidence in being herself on stage.[7]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Irabor Jennifer Osakpolor". ASCAP. Retrieved 19 April 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h "Spider: 'I want to be the biggest rock star in the world'". The Irish Times. Retrieved 19 April 2024.
  3. ^ a b "Listen to SPIDER's fun new "over-the-top cheerleader rock song"". Kerrang!. 24 November 2023. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  4. ^ a b c d e Cassidy, Isabelle (8 April 2022). "SPIDER: Coming of Age and Throwing Out The Rule Book". Notion. Retrieved 19 April 2024.
  5. ^ a b c d e "SPIDER's anthemic "U GET HIGH / I GET NOTHING" unpicks the desire for validation". The Line of Best Fit. Retrieved 19 April 2024.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Chaudhry, Aliya (18 April 2023). "SPIDER is shaping alt-pop in her own delightfully surreal image". NME. Retrieved 19 April 2024.
  7. ^ a b c d e Firth, Abigail (13 July 2023). "Spider: "I was really into alternative music; I would listen to Bring Me The Horizon and shit"". Dork. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  8. ^ a b "New music for 2022: here are the rising artists to check out this year". The Face. 7 January 2022. Retrieved 19 April 2024.
  9. ^ "The 1883 Brightest Light Playlist". 1883 Magazine. 17 September 2021. Retrieved 19 April 2024.
  10. ^ Ackroyd, Stephen (25 March 2022). "Newcomer SPIDER has arrived with a debut mixtape 'C.O.A'". Dork. Retrieved 19 April 2024.
  11. ^ "DIY, March 2023 by DIY Magazine - Issuu". issuu.com. 6 March 2023. Retrieved 19 April 2024.
  12. ^ Wilson, Sophie (19 December 2022). ""We're taking over the scene": meet Loud LDN, dance music's most vibrant new collective". NME. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  13. ^ a b "Song You Need: SPIDER refuses to accept the status quo on "America's Next Top Model"". The FADER. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  14. ^ Brayden, Kate. "Dublin artist SPIDER shares raw new single 'Growing Into It'". Hotpress. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  15. ^ Chaudhry, Aliya (18 April 2023). "SPIDER is shaping alt-pop in her own delightfully surreal image". NME. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  16. ^ "SPIDER - Hell Or High Water". DIY. 26 April 2023. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  17. ^ "Spider details new EP 'Hell or High Water'". DIY. 4 April 2023. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  18. ^ Dunworth, Liberty (1 June 2023). "BLACKPINK announce more support acts for London BST Hyde Park show". NME. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  19. ^ "SPIDER releases new track, 'daisy chain' • WithGuitars". www.withguitars.com. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  20. ^ "SPIDER drops new EP 'an object of desire'". DIY. 26 February 2024. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  21. ^ Joshi, Tara (27 May 2023). "One to watch: Spider". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 20 April 2024.
  22. ^ "Shelf Lives, Spider and more kick off DIY's Hello 2024 series in raucous style". DIY. 11 January 2024. Retrieved 20 April 2024.