Homer Steinweiss
Homer Steinweiss (born March 25, 1982)[1] is an American drummer, composer, producer, and songwriter renowned for his contributions to the New York soul revival scene. As a founding member and drummer of Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings, he helped pioneer a raw, retro-infused sound that blended classic soul with modern production techniques, influencing a resurgence of the genre in the 2000s.[2][3] Steinweiss began playing drums at age 16 and quickly rose to prominence through his work with key acts in the Daptone Records collective, including the El Michels Affair and Menahan Street Band. His drumming features on landmark albums such as Amy Winehouse's Back to Black (2006), where he contributed to tracks like "Rehab," as well as Mark Ronson's Version (2007) with "Valerie" and Solange's Sol-Angel & the Hadley St. Dreams (2008).[4][5][6] He has also collaborated with a diverse array of artists, from Charles Bradley and Lee Fields to contemporary figures like Miley Cyrus, Fleet Foxes, and Holy Hive, amassing over 300 credited recordings across soul, R&B, and indie genres.[4][2] In addition to performing, Steinweiss owns and operates The Diamond Mine, a Queens-based recording studio where he produces projects emphasizing analog warmth and live instrumentation.[7] His solo career gained momentum with the 2024 release of Ensatina on Big Crown Records, a reflective R&B and soul album that marks his transition to frontman and songwriter, featuring collaborations with artists like Hether and Michael Rault and exploring themes of personal loss and recovery.[2][5][3]Early life
Birth and family background
Homer Steinweiss was born on March 25, 1982, in New York City.[1] Steinweiss was raised in a family blending artistic creativity with entrepreneurial endeavors. His paternal grandfather, Alex Steinweiss, was a pioneering graphic designer who invented the modern album cover in 1939 while working at Columbia Records and went on to create over 1,000 record sleeves, fundamentally shaping the visual presentation of music.[8] His father, Leslie Steinweiss, maintained a career in the jewelry business while composing music as a personal pursuit, ensuring that a passion for music permeated the family dynamic.[8] This heritage provided an early, indirect exposure to disciplined creative work, from artistic innovation to the precision required in business. During the 1980s and 1990s, Steinweiss grew up amid New York City's thriving urban culture, a period marked by diverse artistic movements and vibrant neighborhood scenes that influenced his formative years.[1]Musical influences and training
Steinweiss began his musical journey in the early 1990s, around age nine or ten, when his parents encouraged him to play an instrument and he chose congas, taking a couple of informal lessons to learn basic techniques, before transitioning to a full drum kit about a year later at age ten or eleven.[9] This shift marked his deeper immersion into percussion, where he received initial instruction on fundamentals like paradiddles from a local teacher for about a year, followed by more structured lessons with drummer Matt Patuto until around age fifteen. His early influences were rooted in the grunge rock scene of the mid-1990s, particularly Dave Grohl's drumming with Nirvana, which captivated him during seventh or eighth grade and led him to emulate those aggressive, dynamic styles.[9] By age fourteen, however, his tastes evolved toward funk pioneers, drawn to the propulsive grooves of James Brown—especially tracks like "Mother Popcorn"—and The Meters' instrumental precision on songs such as "Cissy Strut."[10] Patuto played a pivotal role in this redirection, introducing him to soul and R&B records that expanded his rhythmic palette beyond rock.[9] Largely self-taught after his formal lessons ended, Steinweiss honed his skills through obsessive listening and transcription of vintage recordings, including Booker T. & the M.G.'s "Green Onions," absorbing grooves by ear in his family's home in Manhattan.[9] His practice routines in New York City emphasized feel and pocket over technical exercises, reflecting a blend of inherited familial interest in music and personal experimentation.[9] In 2001, at age nineteen, he enrolled at the State University of New York at Purchase to study philosophy, balancing academic pursuits with his growing musical explorations.Professional career
Early bands and breakthrough
At the age of 16, Homer Steinweiss joined The Mighty Imperials, a young instrumental funk band formed in New York City as part of the burgeoning soul revival movement.[11] As the band's drummer, Steinweiss provided the driving, percussive foundation that defined their energetic performances, drawing from classic funk grooves while infusing a youthful intensity.[12] The group, which also included organist Leon Michels, bassist Nick Movshon, and guitarist Sean Solomon, quickly gained traction in local underground scenes through live shows that captured the raw spirit of 1960s and 1970s soul and funk.[13] The band's breakthrough came with their debut album, Thunder Chicken, recorded at Desco Records' studios in 1999 and released in 2001 on the Desco label.[14] Steinweiss's drumming on the album—marked by powerful, gut-punching breaks and a loose, groove-oriented style—helped craft its signature raw funk sound, evoking influences like The Meters and Rufus Thomas with a gritty, unpolished edge that resonated in the NYC revival circuit.[12] Tracks such as the title song and "Jody's Walk" showcased his ability to lock into heavy, infectious rhythms, earning praise for the band's authentic, joyfully abandoned approach to instrumental soul.[13] This release marked Steinweiss's transition from a teenage hobbyist experimenting with drums to an emerging professional in New York's soul revival scene, where Desco served as a key incubator for young talents blending vintage aesthetics with modern energy.[12] At under 17 during the sessions, Steinweiss's contributions helped position The Mighty Imperials as pioneers in the movement, bridging high school jam sessions to recorded output that influenced subsequent acts in the genre.[11]Daptone Records era
Steinweiss became a founding member and longtime drummer of Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings in the early 2000s, serving as the house band for Daptone Records, an independent label established in 2001 by Gabe Roth and Neal Sugarman to revive raw funk and soul sounds.[15][16] The group, based in Brooklyn, emphasized organic ensemble playing, with Steinweiss anchoring the rhythm section alongside bassist Nick Movshon, fostering a tight-knit collective that performed extensively and recorded at the label's dedicated House of Soul studio after its 2004 relocation to 115 Troutman Street.[15] His contributions were central to landmark albums that defined Daptone's soul revival aesthetic, including Naturally (2005) and 100 Days, 100 Nights (2007), where his groove-oriented drumming drove tracks blending mid-1960s Motown influences with gritty, live-band energy.[17][16] These releases, produced using all-analog methods, helped establish the Dap-Kings as leaders in the underground soul movement, prioritizing feel and interplay over polished production.[17] Steinweiss's drumming style focused on vintage soul grooves, captured through live, analog techniques at Daptone's Brooklyn studio, which featured vintage equipment like Otari eight-track recorders and minimal microphones—often just one for the entire drum kit, positioned low to blend with the bass drum for a natural, unpolished tone.[17][15] This approach, guided by Roth's "Shitty Is Pretty" philosophy, avoided click tracks and digital fixes to preserve the authentic urgency of 1960s recordings.[15] During this era, Steinweiss participated in Daptone-affiliated side projects, including El Michels Affair's instrumental soul album Sounding Out the City (2005), led by bandmate Leon Michels, and served as a founding drummer for Lee Fields & The Expressions, contributing to their early soul efforts that echoed the label's revivalist ethos.[15][16]Major collaborations
Steinweiss gained prominence for his drumming on Amy Winehouse's breakthrough album Back to Black (2006), where he provided the rhythmic foundation for much of the record, including the hit single "Rehab."[18] His contributions infused the tracks with authentic retro soul grooves, drawing from 1960s Motown and Stax influences to blend seamlessly with Winehouse's raw vocals and Mark Ronson's production vision.[19] This session work marked a pivotal moment, introducing Steinweiss's distinctive pocket—characterized by tight, swinging hi-hat patterns and dynamic fills that evoked vintage R&B without sounding contrived—to a global pop audience.[20] Building on that success, Steinweiss collaborated extensively with producer Mark Ronson, notably drumming on the track "Valerie" from Ronson's album Version (2007), featuring Winehouse on vocals.[21] Here, his playing emphasized crisp snare cracks and laid-back shuffles, adapting soul revival elements to a cover of The Zutons' original and helping propel the song to chart-topping status in the UK.[16] These sessions highlighted Steinweiss's ability to improvise within strict retro frameworks, often using vintage Ludwig kits to achieve a warm, analog tone that bridged classic funk with contemporary pop arrangements.[4] In the 2010s, Steinweiss's session work expanded into mainstream pop, including his drumming on Bruno Mars's "Locked Out of Heaven" from Unorthodox Jukebox (2012).[22] The track's Police-inspired reggae-funk groove benefited from Steinweiss's precise, elastic rhythms, which incorporated soulful ghost notes and offbeat accents to enhance its infectious energy.[23] This collaboration exemplified his role in modernizing retro soul aesthetics, as his contributions helped the single achieve multi-platinum sales and widespread radio play.[24] Steinweiss also drummed on key tracks for other high-profile artists, such as St. Vincent's self-titled album (2014), where his versatile patterns supported the experimental art-rock sound on songs like "Rattlesnake."[25] For Adele's 25 (2015), he laid down the backbeat for the bonus track "Lay Me Down," employing subtle, emotive fills that underscored the ballad's intimacy.[26] On Lady Gaga's Joanne (2016), Steinweiss contributed to tracks including "Just Another Day" and "sINNER'S PRAYER," blending his soul grooves with country-tinged pop elements for a grounded, live-band feel.[27] Earlier, he co-wrote "6 O'Clock Blues" from Solange's Sol-Angel and the Hadley St. Dreams (2008), which features a bluesy, mid-tempo pulse that complemented her neo-soul direction.[28] Across these projects, Steinweiss's improvisational approach—rooted in feel over flash—consistently elevated pop contexts with authentic, groove-centric drumming inspired by soul traditions.[16]Producing and solo endeavors
Following his extensive work as a session drummer, Steinweiss transitioned into more prominent production roles, particularly with the Brooklyn-based folk-soul band Holy Hive, which he co-founded with Paul Spring in 2019. As co-producer on their debut self-titled album Holy Hive (2019), Steinweiss shaped the band's signature blend of acoustic introspection and rhythmic groove, drawing from his Daptone Records background to infuse tracks with warm, analog textures. He continued in this capacity for their sophomore release Float Back to You (2020), where he handled production alongside mixing engineer Chris Connors, emphasizing live instrumentation to capture the duo's evolving sound.[29][30] Steinweiss also contributed to production elements on The Arcs' debut album Yours, Dreamily (2015), collaborating closely with bandmates Dan Auerbach and Leon Michels during the recording sessions at Easy Eye Sound in Nashville. Although primary production credits went to Auerbach and Michels, Steinweiss co-wrote several tracks and played multiple instruments, influencing the album's psychedelic soul direction through his rhythmic and compositional input. This project marked an early step in his shift from pure percussion to broader creative control.[31][32] In 2024, Steinweiss launched his solo project under the moniker Homer, releasing the debut album Ensatina on Big Crown Records, where he served as primary producer, composer, and multi-instrumentalist. The record showcases his evolution toward full-songwriting and arrangement, blending funk grooves, soulful melodies, and experimental leftfield R&B elements across tracks like the hypnotic "Deep Sea" featuring Hether. Recorded as a personal refuge amid personal challenges, Ensatina highlights Steinweiss's command of diverse influences, from electro-tinged trip hop to dreamy acoustics, performed largely by himself with select guest vocalists.[5][33][34] Extending this producer-musician duality into 2025, Steinweiss provided drums and co-writing on tracks for the soundtrack F1 the Album, including RAYE's "Grandma Calls the Boy Bad News," contributing to its high-energy soul-pop vibe under Mark Ronson's oversight. Similarly, on Katie Schecter's Empress (2025), he drummed and co-wrote selections, aiding the album's twangy soul aesthetic during live-to-tape sessions at Diamond Mine Studio in New York. These endeavors underscore his growing emphasis on composing layered, genre-fluid works beyond drumming.[35][36][37][38]Personal life
Interests and hobbies
Steinweiss is an avid dog lover, often expressing enthusiasm for canine companionship in his personal descriptions.[4] He maintains a strong passion for food, influenced by his upbringing in a food-obsessed family, and has documented culinary experiences from his travels, such as savoring chili-dogs during tours in Detroit. As of 2010, Steinweiss blogged about these gastronomic adventures, highlighting regional specialties encountered on the road.[39] Tennis serves as a key recreational outlet for Steinweiss, whom he pursues as an enthusiast to stay active amid his demanding schedule.[4] As of 2010, Steinweiss resided in Brooklyn, New York City, embracing a grounded urban lifestyle that allowed him to balance his musical commitments with periods of personal relaxation, including simple daily routines like casual dressing in cotton and denim.[39] In recent years, Steinweiss experienced the end of a long-term relationship and the breakup of a band, leading to mental health challenges for which he sought professional help.[5]Artistic pursuits outside music
Homer Steinweiss, grandson of pioneering album cover designer Alex Steinweiss, has occasionally explored visual arts as a creative outlet separate from his musical endeavors.[8] No formal exhibitions of his illustrations have been held, and his work remains largely personal without commercial publications up to 2025.[5]Discography
As band member
Homer Steinweiss's contributions as a band member span several influential soul and funk ensembles, where he primarily served as the drummer, providing the rhythmic foundation for their raw, analog sound. His work emphasizes live instrumentation and vintage production techniques, drawing from 1960s and 1970s soul traditions. With The Mighty Imperials, Steinweiss co-founded the group as a teenager and drummed on their debut album Thunder Chicken (2001), a collection of instrumental funk tracks recorded at Daptone Records' early sessions, capturing the band's youthful energy and raw grooves.[14] Steinweiss was a core founding member and drummer for Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings, contributing to their entire studio album output from 2002 to 2017. He played on Dap Dippin' (2002), the band's explosive debut featuring high-energy soul covers and originals led by Jones's powerful vocals.[40] His drumming drove Naturally (2005), an album blending gritty R&B with horn-driven arrangements. On 100 Days, 100 Nights (2007), Steinweiss's precise, pocket grooves supported Jones's emotive delivery across soulful ballads and uptempo tracks. He continued with I Learned the Hard Way (2010), delivering taut rhythms on sophisticated soul compositions. Steinweiss's work appears on Give the People What They Want (2014), a hard-hitting set produced amid Jones's health challenges, and It's a Holiday Soul Party (2015), infusing seasonal tunes with funky backbeats. His final album with the group, Soul of a Woman (2017), posthumously released after Jones's passing, showcases his steady percussion on heartfelt, blues-inflected songs.[40] As a founding drummer for Lee Fields & The Expressions, Steinweiss performed on their breakthrough album My World (2009), where his dynamic playing complemented Fields's veteran soul vocals on tracks blending classic Motown influences with modern funk.[41] Steinweiss drummed on The Olympians' self-titled debut (2016), an instrumental soul project led by keyboardist Toby Pazner, featuring lush, cinematic arrangements with orchestral elements over tight rhythmic sections inspired by ancient Greek mythology.[42] With El Michels Affair, another group he co-founded, Steinweiss provided drums on select releases, including the instrumental album 24 Hr Sports (2025), which fuses soul, funk, and hip-hop elements with contributions from guest artists like Clairo and Norah Jones, emphasizing eclectic grooves and fashion-inspired themes.[43]As solo artist
Homer Steinweiss released his debut solo album, Ensatina, under the moniker Homer on November 15, 2024, via Big Crown Records.[33] The album marks his transition to the forefront as a lead artist and producer, reflecting personal themes of emotional turbulence, resilience, and transformation following significant life changes.[5] Spanning 10 tracks, Ensatina blends retro soul influences with modern R&B and funk elements, characterized by woozy, meditative grooves, haunting vocals, and genre-blending arrangements that evoke introspection and quiet optimism.[44] The record features Steinweiss on drums throughout, complemented by contributions from collaborators including trumpet player Dave Guy, keyboardist Jake Sherman, and guest vocalists such as Hether, KIRBY, girl named GOLDEN, Flikka, MINOVA, and Michael Rault.[45] Its sound prioritizes atmospheric textures, with slow-burning backbeats, acoustic guitar strums, and dreamy trumpet lines creating a hypnotic, soulful ambiance distinct from his band work.[46] Prior to the full album, Steinweiss issued several singles under the Homer name in 2024 to preview the project. The lead single, "Deep Sea" featuring Hether, was released on August 13, 2024, as a woozy love song built over a hypnotic rhythm and ethereal instrumentation.[47] This was followed by "Rollin'" featuring KIRBY on September 10, 2024, a lush, quiet storm-inspired track with mind-bending visuals accompanying its release.[48] The third pre-release single, "So Get Up!" featuring MINOVA and Michael Rault, arrived on October 8, 2024, delivering slick, swaggering funk with upbeat energy.[49] The complete tracklist for Ensatina is as follows:- Rollin' (feat. KIRBY)
- Camera (feat. girl named GOLDEN)
- Deep Sea (feat. Hether)
- Now That It's Over (feat. Hether and Flikka)
- Racecar Driver (feat. MINOVA)
- So Get Up! (feat. Michael Rault and MINOVA)
- Wishing Well (feat. girl named GOLDEN)
- Hide It Behind the Light I’m Shining Through (feat. girl named GOLDEN)
- Forever and Ever and Ever and Ever (feat. Hether)
- Goldie