D-Sisive
Birth name Derek Christoff
Origin Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Genres Hip hop
Years active 1990s–present
Labels URBnet
Website [1]

D-Sisive is the stage name of Derek Christoff, a prolific Canadian rapper,[1] best known for his Juno Award-nominated EP The Book, his hit single "Nobody with a Notepad" (for which D-Sisive and collaborator Muneshine won SOCAN's fourth annual ECHO Songwriting Prize) and his 2009 Polaris Music Prize-nominated album Let the Children Die (which was launched by the success of "Nobody With A Notepad").[2]

Contents

Beginnings and withdrawal from spotlight [link]

D-Sisive first emerged in the late 1990s with a number of independent singles which were popular in the Toronto hip hop scene, but took a six-year break from performing and writing due to a battle with depression following his mother's death in 2001 and father's death in 2007.[3] The death of his mother inspired him to release the EP J.A.C., named after her,[4] while Christoff's response to losing his parents is heavily documented on releases such as The Book and Let the Children Die.

Despite this absence, his talents were showcased on DJ Format's popular 2005 album If You Can't Join 'Em... Beat 'Em, and Christoff performed alongside fellow Canadian rapper Abdominal in the music video for DJ Format's hit single '3 Feet Deep'. Further, a collection of recordings from the early period of D-Sisive's career has been released on a widely available bootleg entitled Yesterday. The Mixtape.

Return (2008–present) [link]

Christoff's bout of writer's block came to an end when he was unexpectedly inspired by lyrics spontaneously coming to him while singing along to The Beach Boys' "Wouldn't It Be Nice" on the radio — lyrics that became his breakthrough hit, "Brian Wilson".[3] He signed to URBNET Records, which released The Book on June 3, 2008 and Let the Children Die on May 3, 2009. Later that year, D-Sisive took part in an interactive documentary series called City Sonic. The series, which featured 20 Toronto artists, had him reflecting on Planet Mars, an underground hip-hop showcase that changed his life.[5] Christoff capped off his SOCAN award win and closed 2009 with a free album entitled Jonestown.

2010 saw the release of another album, Vaudeville, as well as numerous singles, including a song inspired by the documentary Anvil! The Story of Anvil and a music video entitled 'First Winter' for The C4 Experiment hosted by Christopher Walken.[6] Christoff also began working with rapper Buck 65 for an upcoming collaborative album entitled The Ricardo Christoff Apparatus.[7] In early 2011, D-Sisive continued his Hijacked series with a single entitled 'If I Live To See Tomorrow', based on a song by Sigur Rós.[8] The release of a new album, Jonestown 2: Jimmy Go Bye Bye, scheduled for free distribution online in late 2010, has been pushed back to later in 2011. On January 14, 2011 it was announced via Christoff's Twitter that he was nearly done work on his long-rumoured charity single, "Live Your Life (The World Song)" feat. Buck 65, Punky Brewster, Jamie Hyneman from Mythbusters, 1980s Leonard Cohen, Stompin' Tom Connors, and Gucci Mane. The song is set for a Valentine's Day release.

Name change [link]

In late 2010, D-Sisive announced that he was changing his stage name to Derek from Northcliffe, a nod to his childhood hometown, citing misspelling by venues as a major contributing factor.[9] However, following an apparent change of heart regarding the change, Christoff flirted with the idea of simply operating under his birth name.[10] Currently, it is not known which name Christoff will pursue, an issue that the rapper wryly addressed by crediting his first 2011 release to 'Derek (From Northcliffe) D-Sisive Christoff'.

Lamont Dozier sample controversy [link]

Controversy interrupted D-Sisive's 2009 winning streak when it was revealed that "Nobody with a Notepad" borrowed heavily from "Peddlin Music On The Side," an early-70s solo recording by legendary songwriter Lamont Dozier (who, with Holland-Dozier-Holland wrote many of Motown's biggest hits of the 1960s). "Nobody With A Notepad" contains extensive instrumental, melodic and vocal sections of Dozier's composition and recording, including Lamont's unaltered vocal performance. After Dozier's initial efforts to privately resolve D-Sisive's unauthorized use of his material were rebuffed, Dozier sued D-Sisive (and his producer and label) for copyright infringement in August and the lawsuit was amicably settled a few months later.[11]

Discography [link]

EPs [link]

  • J.A.C. (Just a Child / Joan Anne Christoff) (1997)
  • D-Day (1999)
  • The Book EP (2008)
  • Like This (Plus Three) EP (2008)
  • Nobody With A Notepad (Plus Three) EP (2008)

Albums [link]

Singles [link]

  • "Lost Sight" feat. Abdominal (1999)
  • "Like This" (2008)
  • "Nobody With A Notepad" (2008)
  • "Wonderful World" (2009)
  • "West Coast" (2009)
  • "Anvil" (2010)
  • "Ray Charles (Looking For a Star)" (2010)
  • "I Love a Girl" (2010)
  • "First Winter" (2010)
  • "If I Live to See Tomorrow" (2011)

References [link]

External links [link]


https://wn.com/D-Sisive

My Struggle (Knausgård novels)

My Struggle (Norwegian: Min kamp) is an autobiographical series of six novels written in the late 2000s by Karl Ove Knausgård. The books cover his private life and thoughts, and unleashed a media frenzy upon its release, with journalists attempting to track down the mentioned members of his family. The series has sold half a million copies in Norway alone and has been published in 22 languages.

Overview

My Struggle is a six-book autobiographical series by Karl Ove Knausgård outlining the "banalities and humiliations of his life", his private pleasures, and his dark thoughts; the first of the series was published in 2009. It has sold nearly 500,000 copies in Norway, or one copy for every nine Norwegian adults, and is published in 22 languages. The series is 3,600 pages long, and was finished when Knausgård was in his forties. The English translation of the fourth book in the series arrived in the United States in April 2015.

While categorized as fiction, the books situate Knausgård as the protagonist and his actual relatives as the cast, with his relatives' names mostly unchanged. The books have led some of those relatives to make public statements against their inclusion in Knausgård's novels.

FanMail

FanMail is the third studio album by American girl group TLC, released on February 23, 1999 via Arista Records. It was the follow up to their 1994 album CrazySexyCool. The title of the album is a tribute to their fans who sent them fan mail during their hiatus. FanMail debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200, selling approximately 318,000 copies in its first week of release, and spent five consecutive weeks at number one. It is primarily a Pop/R&B album with dance, rock, and trip hop influences.

The album received 8 Grammy nominations at the 42nd Annual Grammy Awards, including one for Album of the Year, and won three. As of 2000, the album has been certified 6× Platinum by the RIAA, and is TLC's second best-selling album after 1994's CrazySexyCool.

Background

After a hiatus following the members of TLC filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on July 3, 1995, TLC eventually entered recording studios in April 1997 to start work on their then-untitled third album with producer Dallas Austin. While Austin contributed most to the album and served as its executive producer, TLC also worked with long-term producers Babyface and L.A. Reid, as well as Kevin "She'kspere" Briggs and Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis. The album was scheduled for release on November 10, 1998 but was pushed back to February 23, 1999.

Podcasts:

PLAYLIST TIME:

D-sisive

by: D-sisive

One day your story will be told
Beneath the likes of your deserted fate
One day they'll make you glorious
One of the lucky ones who's made his name
One day your story will be told
Beneath the likes of your deserted fate
One day they'll make you glorious
One of the lucky ones who's made his name
I hope you can sleep through the night, man
The truth is I can't
Because of you and your hype, man
Quite the show
All that for 19 dollars and a coat
My back to the wall, a knife to my throat
Scared that my life could be over with a slice
Hands in my pocket, wallet out my jeans
Robbed of my jacket, tangled in my sleeves
Knuckles on my cheeks, steps on my spine
Grunts while you punched, laughs while I cried
And I cried like a child, my dignity stripped with my
parka
Bet you are proud of your glorious self
Now we both have a story to tell
But you get to tell yours with a smile,
I get to see mine every night I close my eyes
One day your story will be told
Beneath the likes of your deserted fate
One day they'll make you glorious
One of the lucky ones who's made his name
I hope you can sleep through the night, man
The truth is I can't
It all happened so fast, all I did was walk
Minded my business in silence, innocent
You and your boy had another plan for me,
And a reputation to build
You could see the weakness in my steps,
And was right when you guessed that I was no fighter
I could have been but I wasn't
You took the risk, I was left bloody
I was bruised while you bragged to your buddies
"The weeds on me," paid with my 20
You reenact the scene for your boys,
Imitate my cries from punches thrown
They beg, "Please tell the story once more"
While I'm too afraid to walk out my front door
One day your story will be told
Beneath the likes of your deserted fate
One day they'll make you glorious
One of the lucky ones who's made his name
I hope you can sleep through the night, man
The truth is you have no clue
I bet you don't even remember me
I'm one amongst many in your memories
It's hard work robbin kids of they confidence
It's impossible to remember every pocket picked
Every tear on the sidewalk
Every kid fearin for they life, but
Believe me, every one of us remember you
We all try to forget but we never do
We'll forever see that moment that you let us through
To forgive is not something we intend to do
You turned our shadows into monsters
For a chain, a jacket and some dollars
I hope you can sleep through the night, man
Cause I can't, thanks, goodnight.




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