Open Mike Eagle
Michael W. Eagle II (born November 14, 1980), known professionally as Open Mike Eagle, is an American rapper, record producer, comedian, and podcaster based in Los Angeles.[1][2] Born and raised in Chicago, he emerged in the underground hip hop scene during the early 2000s as part of collectives like Project Blowed and Thirsty Fish, developing a distinctive style of alternative rap noted for its literate, introspective lyrics infused with humor and explorations of mental health, identity, and pop culture.[1] Eagle coined the term "art rap" to characterize this avant-garde approach, distinguishing it from mainstream hip hop through progressive, leftfield elements.[3] His breakthrough album Brick Body Kids Still Daydream (2017), a concept record reflecting on his childhood housing project, garnered significant critical praise, ranking number 34 on Rolling Stone's list of the 50 best albums of the year for its blend of personal narrative and sharp social commentary.[4]Early life
Upbringing and family background
Michael Eagle II was born in the fall of 1980 on Chicago's South Side.[5] His parents never married, and he was raised at various points by them, his grandparents, and other relatives in a fragmented family structure amid the city's socio-economically strained public housing environment.[6][5] His grandmother's home stood in the shadow of the Robert Taylor Homes, a massive high-rise public housing complex plagued by poverty, gang activity, and underinvestment, which housed several family members and exemplified the systemic challenges of South Side neighborhoods during the era.[5][7] As a latchkey child often left to navigate unsupervised afternoons in this high-risk urban setting, Eagle experienced early independence shaped by family instability and limited resources, factors that fostered self-reliance while exposing him to the raw undercurrents of community life.[8] Hip-hop permeated his surroundings from around age six or seven, introduced via his mother's car radio and local cyphers near lakefront spots like Promontory Point, where informal rap sessions drew youth from similar backgrounds and provided an accessible outlet amid economic hardship.[9][5][10] This organic immersion in Chicago's emergent hip-hop culture, coupled with the causal pressures of a latchkey existence in decaying public infrastructure, primed foundational coping mechanisms and creative inclinations without formal guidance. Eagle spent childhood summers visiting his father in Los Angeles, where the latter managed a sales fleet, offering glimpses of a contrasting West Coast lifestyle. After completing college in Chicago, he relocated permanently to Los Angeles around 2004, initially for nonprofit work rather than artistic ambitions, marking a pivotal shift from the insular intensity of South Side survival dynamics to a broader, opportunity-laden but culturally disjointed environment.[11][12] This transition, building on prior familial ties, facilitated adaptation challenges like navigating unfamiliar social networks while carrying the residue of Chicago's formative grit.[13]Initial artistic development
Eagle's early exposure to hip-hop occurred during childhood in Chicago's South Side, where he listened to rap music played by his mother during car rides, igniting an initial interest in the genre as a form of personal expression.[9] He attended Southern Illinois University Carbondale, majoring in psychology and working as a resident advisor, experiences that honed his observational skills amid academic and communal responsibilities.[14] Following a brief stint in graduate school, Eagle moved to Los Angeles circa 2004, initially rapping as a recreational outlet while holding odd jobs, without reliance on formal institutional backing.[11][14] In this period, he frequented Project Blowed's weekly open mic workshops, a DIY venue originating in the early 1990s that prioritized raw lyrical experimentation and community-driven feedback, allowing Eagle to develop his nascent rap and comedic sensibilities through unfiltered performance and self-taught resilience.[9][15] Parallel to these pursuits, Eagle engaged with hobbies like professional wrestling fandom and cartoon consumption, which provided escapist mechanisms against the socioeconomic pressures of urban upbringing, reinforcing an individualistic approach to creativity as a bulwark for personal agency.[16]Musical career
Early independent releases and Project Blowed involvement
Open Mike Eagle, originally from Chicago, relocated to Los Angeles following graduate school in the mid-2000s, immersing himself in the city's underground hip-hop scene by regularly attending Project Blowed's open-mic workshops at the Good Life Café.[14] Project Blowed, an influential collective and workshop founded in the 1990s emphasizing lyrical skill and community-driven development over commercial appeal, provided Eagle with a platform for honing his craft amid a network of like-minded artists, fostering sustainability through grassroots performances rather than label-backed promotion. This affiliation enabled early exposure without major industry support, relying on the causal dynamics of peer feedback and collective events to build skills and local reputation in an era when independent distribution meant limited physical runs and word-of-mouth dissemination.[9] In 2007, Eagle co-founded the group Thirsty Fish with rappers Dumbfoundead and Psychosiz, releasing their debut album Testing the Waters independently, which exemplified the DIY ethos of self-production and collaborative bootstrapping within Project Blowed's orbit.[17] The following year, as part of the battle-oriented crew Swim Team, he contributed to the mixtape Ocean's 11, distributed through underground channels to cultivate a niche audience amid challenges like negligible mainstream radio play and reliance on venue gigs for revenue.[14] Eagle's solo debut mixtape, Premeditated Folly, followed on September 2, 2008, issued as a limited-edition CD-R via Project Blowed with no formal label backing, highlighting the era's hurdles in digital scarcity and physical logistics that constrained reach but rewarded dedicated listeners through raw, unpolished output.[18] These early efforts underscored the indie landscape's low commercial viability, where sales hovered in the low thousands at best and tours consisted of modest regional drives to open mics and anniversary showcases, yet sustained Eagle via cult followings in LA's hip-hop enclaves.[19] By 2010, this groundwork culminated in his first proper solo album, Unapologetic Art Rap, released on the independent Mush Records, marking a transition from pure self-release to boutique label alignment while preserving the autonomy born from Project Blowed's non-hierarchical model.[20] The collective's emphasis on artistic integrity over marketability proved causally pivotal, enabling persistence in a field where major labels offered illusory stability but often diluted creative control.[21]Breakthrough albums and stylistic evolution
Open Mike Eagle's Dark Comedy, released on June 10, 2014, by Mello Music Group, marked a pivotal moment in his career, earning widespread recognition in indie-rap circles.[22] The album received an 8.0 rating from Pitchfork, praised for its blend of gallows humor, internal rhymes, and improv-style delivery that filtered personal anxieties through comedic lenses.[22] Tracks like "Qualifiers" exemplified Eagle's frank self-reflection on identity and community struggles, transitioning him from underground Project Blowed affiliations to broader spotlight exposure.[22] Building on this momentum, Brick Body Kids Still Daydream, issued on September 15, 2017, also via Mello Music Group, further solidified Eagle's niche acclaim with a Pitchfork score of 8.1.[23] The record delved into personal trauma rooted in Eagle's upbringing in Chicago's Robert Taylor Homes public housing projects, chronicling displacement and tied identity through poetic, reserved sing-rap flows over muted, lush productions featuring diverse instrumentation from ten producers.[23] It critiqued mainstream hip-hop's emphasis on loudness and uniformity, advocating for diverse representations of black experiences beyond dystopian stereotypes.[23] Stylistically, these mid-2010s releases evolved Eagle's approach from dense, wordplay-heavy verses toward more surreal, introspective narratives classified under his self-coined "art-rap" moniker.[22][23] While Dark Comedy overlapped amusing insights with uncomfortable truths on themes like smartphone addiction and body horror, Brick Body Kids Still Daydream intensified this by linking individual histories to systemic critiques of housing demolition and cultural erasure, eschewing normalized rap bravado for nuanced, low-key introspection.[22][23] This shift highlighted Eagle's rejection of orthodox hip-hop tropes, favoring vulnerability and specificity over generic excess.[23]Recent albums and ongoing projects
In 2020, Open Mike Eagle released Anime, Trauma and Divorce on October 16 through Auto Reverse Records, an album that shifted from an initial focus on Black experiences with anime to processing personal divorce and emotional trauma, framed through anime references for a blend of introspection and dark humor.[24][25] The 12-track project, featuring production from artists like Kenny Segal and videos for singles like "Bucciarati," emphasized vulnerability amid a challenging year, with Eagle describing it in interviews as a vehicle for confronting loss rather than resolution.[26] Following this, Eagle maintained a consistent independent output pace, releasing a tape called component system with the auto reverse in 2022 via Auto Reverse, followed by another triumph of ghetto engineering on August 25, 2023, which included collaborations like "WFLD 32" with Hannibal Buress and tied into a supporting tour across North American venues.[27][28] These projects, distributed primarily through Bandcamp and streaming platforms like Spotify, reflect adaptations to digital-first models, enabling direct fan access without major label involvement and sustaining streams in the low thousands per track on average for niche hip-hop releases.[17] Eagle's most recent album, Neighborhood Gods Unlimited, arrived on July 11, 2025, via Bandcamp, featuring tracks like "woke up knowing everything (opening theme)" and narratives centered on everyday ingenuity and personal anecdotes, continuing his self-produced ethos amid broader industry shifts toward algorithmic streaming.[29] Ongoing tours in 2025, including dates bookable through platforms like Songkick and Live Nation, promote these works alongside live interpretations of earlier material, underscoring Eagle's reliance on performance circuits for revenue stability in an era of fragmented digital consumption.[30][31]Other endeavors
Podcasting and audio media
Open Mike Eagle launched Stony Island Audio, an independent podcast network, in July 2020 in partnership with Starburns Industries, to host discussions centered on hip-hop creators and cultural preservation.[32] [33] The network emphasizes long-form interviews that document the genre's evolution through firsthand accounts, prioritizing voices from its formative periods over commercial narratives.[34] Eagle hosts What Had Happened Was under Stony Island Audio, a series dedicated to capturing hip-hop's oral history by profiling legendary figures' careers and influences.[35] Each season focuses on one guest, such as producer Prince Paul in the debut, El-P of Company Flow and Run the Jewels in the second season starting March 31, 2021, and Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson in season four premiering August 15, 2024, where episodes dissect specific albums, production decisions, and personal trajectories from the 1990s golden era onward.[36] [37] These conversations highlight empirical details like the repurposing of samples and beats in early rap production, as well as guests' navigations of industry constraints, fostering a record of causal developments in hip-hop's sound and culture.[21] The podcast's format allows Eagle to probe "golden era" stories, including how creators reconciled conflicting personal or artistic identities amid rap's competitive ethos, contributing to an archival resource for understanding genre origins without reliance on mainstream gatekeepers.[35] Distributed primarily through indie platforms like Apple Podcasts and Spotify, What Had Happened Was has garnered a 5.0 rating from 1,519 reviews as of 2024, indicating sustained niche engagement reflective of hip-hop's fragmented listener base rather than broad commercial metrics.[38] Eagle also co-hosts Past Due with Ana Marie Cox, launched prior to Stony Island, which extends his audio work to broader creative economies but occasionally intersects with hip-hop by examining artists' adaptations to economic and cultural repurposing in music.[39] Through these efforts, Eagle positions independent audio as a counter to rap's historical under-documentation, prioritizing verifiable anecdotes from participants over secondary interpretations.[21]Comedy routines and live performances
Open Mike Eagle incorporates stand-up comedy elements into his live rap performances, blending observational humor and narrative digressions with hip-hop delivery to highlight rap's comedic potential beyond conventional bravado. This approach stems from his self-coined "art rap" style, which fuses literate lyricism with alt-comedy influences, allowing for routines that dissect personal and societal absurdities during sets.[17][40] In live sessions, such as his 2014 KEXP performance, Eagle delivers tracks from his album Dark Comedy with timing that evokes stand-up, using self-aware commentary to engage sparse audiences and underscore indie rap's challenges. He has described early tours as low-budget endeavors, pressing CDs sold for $5 apiece while performing persistently, which built resilience through humorous reflections on modest turnouts and non-fan crowds.[41][9][42] Eagle's routines often explore "American nightmares"—contemporary horrors rendered comically in rap form—as seen in thematic live renditions that critique everyday banalities and cultural tensions. Collaborations extending to live contexts, like comedic rap fusions informed by tracks featuring Lizzo on "Extra Consent" and Method Man on "Eat Your Feelings," demonstrate his method of layering consent-themed satire and emotional indulgence over beats, performed with improvisational flair in club and festival settings.[3][43][44]Film, television, and multimedia appearances
Open Mike Eagle co-hosted the Comedy Central series The New Negroes with comedian Baron Vaughn, which premiered on May 3, 2019, and combined stand-up routines from emerging and established Black performers with original musical segments to challenge stereotypes of Black creativity.[45][46] In 2021, Eagle appeared as a guest musician across three episodes of Netflix's documentary series History of Swear Words, hosted by Nicolas Cage, where he provided insights into profanity's role in hip-hop and broader culture alongside linguists and comedians.[47][48] Eagle hosted the Adult Swim television special Juneteenth with Open Mike Eagle, aired on June 19, 2021, which framed screenings of The Boondocks and Black Dynamite episodes with on-air discussions of the holiday's historical context as the effective end of slavery in the U.S. in 1865.[49][50] He contributed to the 2023 documentary film Freestyle 101: Hip Hop History, narrated by Chuck D, examining freestyle rap's foundational techniques through interviews and demonstrations with artists including Ice-T and RZA, positioning Eagle as a modern practitioner bridging indie and battle rap traditions.[51][52] Eagle featured as a music industry commentator in the September 12, 2019, episode of truTV's Adam Ruins Everything titled "Why Musicians Are Forced to Sell Out," critiquing how low royalties and touring economics push artists toward endorsements.[53] In multimedia projects, Eagle starred in the 2019 six-part documentary series Clap Back: When Keeping It Real Goes Wrestling, directed by Lance Bangs, which documented his scripted feud and October 10, 2018, debut match against wrestler Shiloh Jonze at Ohio Valley Wrestling's 1,000th episode event, incorporating hip-hop promos, training footage, and celebrity cameos from figures like Mick Foley to satirize persona clashes between rap and wrestling worlds.[54][55] Eagle's forays into such visual media remain infrequent, reflecting his primary commitment to independent audio releases over sustained mainstream screen pursuits.[56]Artistic style and influences
Core lyrical and thematic elements
Open Mike Eagle's lyrics center on introspective explorations of mental health and personal trauma, often rooted in autobiographical causal chains rather than abstracted bravado. In his 2020 album Anime, Trauma and Divorce, he dissects the psychological impacts of divorce, weaving narratives of emotional disintegration and recovery through references to anime as a coping mechanism, reflecting direct experiences of relational breakdown and isolation.[57] Eagle has articulated an intent to foster empathy for trauma's human dimensions, urging recognition of its pervasive effects on individuals beyond performative toughness.[13] This approach manifests in lines like those in "Wtf is Self Care," where he questions self-preservation amid mental strain, prioritizing raw vulnerability over resolution.[58] Surrealism permeates his thematic palette, blending mundane absurdities with psychological depth to critique hip-hop's entrenched normalization of misogyny and violence. Eagle's half-sung delivery evokes a dreamlike haze, as in early works like Rappers Will Die of Natural Causes (2011), where surreal vignettes underscore the genre's commercial embrace of harmful tropes for sales, such as depictions of aggression and objectification that he contrasts with lived realities.[59][60] In Dark Comedy (2014), tracks reject these elements by highlighting their disconnect from authentic struggle, favoring narratives of racial and emotional marginalization over glorification.[61] Eagle employs a dense yet conversational style that interlaces intricate wordplay with accessible emotional candor, eschewing materialist flexes for grounded personal causality. This balance appears in albums like Brick Body Kids Still Daydream (2017), where motifs of childhood displacement and belonging unpack long-term psychic residues without resorting to boasts of success or excess.[62] His rapping contends with emotional density while maintaining rhythmic appeal, as he balances layered introspection with hooks that sustain engagement through specificity rather than generalization.[63][64]Musical production techniques and inspirations
Open Mike Eagle's production techniques emphasize referential sampling and self-directed beat construction, often drawing from non-rap genres of the 1980s and 1990s to create layered, eclectic soundscapes that prioritize conceptual integration over conventional hip-hop minimalism.[21] A primary inspiration is They Might Be Giants, whose fusion of upbeat, quirky instrumentation with subversive undertones influenced Eagle's approach to juxtaposing playful beats against introspective or absurd narratives; he has specifically highlighted their track "Don't Let's Start" as a pivotal childhood influence for its melodic dissonance.[8] [65] In practice, Eagle samples these non-rap elements to repurpose them within hip-hop structures, as evident in "Sadface Penance Raps" from his 2010 extended play Unapologetic , where he directly lifts melodic and rhythmic motifs from They Might Be Giants' "Don't Let's Start" to underpin a track blending humor and melancholy.[66] This technique reflects hip-hop's core repurposing spirit, which Eagle invokes in discussions of his formative mixtape-era experiments, evolving from early collaborative beats to more autonomous production that evokes analog cassette aesthetics, such as the lo-fi tape hiss and track sequencing in Component System with the Auto Reverse (2022).[21] [67] Over time, Eagle's self-production has shifted toward incorporating catchier, hook-driven elements to align with streaming consumption patterns, while maintaining an indie ethos through high-concept structural nods to multimedia sources like cartoons and comics—manifesting in segmented, vignette-style track arrangements that mimic episodic storytelling.[16] For example, in Hella Personal Film Festival (2016), beats feature fragmented sampling and tempo shifts reminiscent of animated sequence breaks, adapting technological influences from his youth without conceding to mainstream polish.[68] This evolution underscores his commitment to innovation, treating production as an adaptive form akin to evolving media like film or literature.[68]Reception and legacy
Critical reception and accolades
Open Mike Eagle's albums have consistently earned high praise from music critics, particularly for their blend of introspective storytelling, surreal humor, and experimental production within alternative hip-hop. Review aggregators like Metacritic reflect this, with user scores indicating universal acclaim for releases such as Dark Comedy (2014) at 90% positive ratings and Brick Body Kids Still Daydream (2017) at 8.1 overall, lauded for its vivid autobiographical narratives tied to Chicago housing projects.[69][70] Hella Personal Film Festival (2016) similarly achieved strong user endorsement, with 81% positive feedback emphasizing its conceptual innovation.[71] Later works sustained this reception, as seen in Anime, Trauma and Divorce (2020), which drew favorable reviews for examining personal insecurities through anime-inspired metaphors, yielding a 7.9 user score.[72] Pitchfork commended Another Triumph of Ghetto Engineering (2023) for packing obscure countercultural references and concise, chuckle-inducing tracks into a 25-minute runtime, underscoring Eagle's verbal dexterity.[73] His 2025 release Neighborhood Gods Unlimited garnered scores of 85 from Pitchfork and 83 from Paste Magazine, with critics highlighting its confrontation of digital overload through determined self-assertion.[74][75] Accolades include IMPOSE Magazine naming Eagle Rapper of the Year in 2013 for his prolific touring and recording output amid independent constraints.[76] Brick Body Kids Still Daydream was selected as one of NPR Music's best albums of 2017, affirming its cultural resonance despite limited mainstream penetration.[77] Eagle's self-reliant career—marked by steady releases via labels like Mush and Auto Reverse—has cultivated a dedicated cult following, prioritizing artistic experimentation over broad commercial metrics, as evidenced by persistent critical nods without major industry awards.[78]Commercial performance and cultural critiques
Open Mike Eagle's albums have consistently failed to achieve significant commercial benchmarks, with no entries on major charts such as the Billboard 200 or Hot Rap Songs, reflecting the challenges of sustaining visibility in a mainstream-dominated industry. His Spotify profile reports approximately 89,894 monthly listeners as of recent data, and individual tracks like "Ziggy Starfish (Anxiety Raps)" have amassed around 9.7 million streams, indicative of a niche but limited audience rather than broad appeal.[17] Despite this underperformance, Eagle has maintained a career spanning over two decades through persistent touring and releases on independent labels, breaking even financially around 2011 after years of low-paying gigs earning $25–$30 per show in the mid-2000s.[79] This longevity stems from the indie model's emphasis on creative autonomy over mass-market scalability, though it inherently restricts reach due to minimal marketing budgets—Eagle notes that a $30,000 album investment represents a substantial personal risk absent the multimillion-dollar promotions afforded to major-label acts.[79] Eagle has voiced pointed critiques of entrenched cultural flaws in hip-hop, particularly the normalization of misogyny and homophobia, which he argues alienate broader audiences by perpetuating dehumanizing tropes without accountability. In a 2020 interview, he highlighted a perceived "value placed on misogyny," expressing frustration that rap lyrics often include "hateful and demeaning" content toward women, prompting him to scrutinize tracks for their impact on his son and questioning why such elements receive a cultural pass unavailable in other media like television or comedy.[60] He attributes persistence to a "deficit of empathy" among men and low genre standards that excuse internalized biases, including past casual use of homophobic slurs as normalized rhetoric in rap circles. Eagle positions his own work as an evidence-based counterpoint, subverting hyper-masculine bravado through introspective, non-conformist themes—such as everyday vulnerabilities rather than exploitative narratives—effectively rebelling against these norms by prioritizing genuine expression over formulaic aggression.[60] Debates surrounding "art-rap" viability, as embodied by Eagle's self-described style, underscore realism over romanticized notions of underground purity, revealing indie hip-hop's economic precarity as a causal barrier to widespread success rather than an inherent virtue. While autonomy enables artistic experimentation, the sector's resource constraints—evident in Eagle's transition from unpaid shows to modest sustainability via relentless touring—expose how separation from mainstream machinery curtails commercial viability without guaranteeing financial stability or cultural dominance.[79] This contrasts with overhyping of indie scenes as havens from rap's flaws, as Eagle's path demonstrates that underground persistence demands grinding adaptation to capitalist realities, including fan engagement and side hustles, rather than insulated idealism.[80]Personal life
Relationships and family dynamics
Open Mike Eagle, born Michael W. Eagle II, was raised primarily by his grandparents in Chicago's south side alongside two siblings after his parents were unable to serve as primary caregivers.[81] His grandmother's death marked a shift in family structure during his childhood, after which he spent summers visiting his mother in Los Angeles.[81] Eagle has maintained connections to extended family in Chicago's south side communities, reflecting his roots in the city's public housing projects like the Robert Taylor Homes.[82] Eagle was married for 14 years, with the couple separating in 2019 amid personal challenges that disrupted his professional momentum, including the cancellation of a television project.[57][83] The dissolution strained his relational stability during a period of transition from Chicago to Los Angeles-based life.[84] Eagle is a father to a son, whom he has referenced in discussions of family responsibilities intersecting with his creative pursuits.[3] Details on co-parenting dynamics remain private, with Eagle emphasizing paternal roles in interviews without disclosing specifics on custody or daily interactions.[85]Health struggles and public disclosures
Open Mike Eagle has incorporated themes of depression and anxiety into his lyrics since early in his career, reflecting ongoing personal experiences with these conditions.[86][87] In a 2022 podcast appearance, he described these issues as persistent elements in his work, including tracks like "Ziggy Starfish (Anxiety Ruin My Life)," which became one of his most streamed songs.[87] His 2020 album Anime, Trauma and Divorce marked a deeper public exploration of trauma, including the emotional fallout from his divorce and broader life upheavals, which he characterized as the worst year of his life.[88][84] Following advice from his therapist to document his feelings directly, Eagle channeled these experiences into raw, introspective songwriting, emphasizing self-directed processing over external interventions.[88] He has described trauma as causing "mental scarring," a concept he unpacked in interviews, framing rap as a mechanism for confronting and humanizing such scars rather than evading them.[89][90] Anime served as a key coping strategy during this period, with Eagle citing series like Tokyo Ghoul for helping him navigate personal demons by providing narrative parallels to his struggles.[91] This integration of pop culture escapism with therapeutic expression underscores his approach to recovery, prioritizing individual agency in managing mental health adversities.[92] In a 2025 interview promoting Neighborhood Gods Unlimited, Eagle discussed lingering creativity blocks tied to unprocessed losses, noting that he could only advance artistically after explicitly addressing the grief over abandoned ideas through new material.[63] Such disclosures highlight his continued use of music for empirical self-examination, treating artistic output as a tool for resolving internal conflicts without reliance on broader institutional frameworks.[93]Discography
Studio albums
Open Mike Eagle's debut studio album, Unapologetic Art Rap, was released on July 13, 2010, by Mush Records, marking his entry into the independent hip-hop scene with production handled primarily by himself and collaborators like Exile.[94] His follow-up major release, Dark Comedy, came out in 2014 via Mello Music Group, featuring beats from producers including Has-Lo and L.A. Jacobs.[1]| Title | Release date | Label | Key production notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hella Personal Film Festival | March 25, 2016 | Mello Music Group | Produced entirely by Paul White, emphasizing experimental electronic elements.[95] [96] |
| Brick Body Kids Still Daydream | September 15, 2017 | Mush Records | Self-produced with contributions from Kenny Segal, noted for its conceptual structure tied to Chicago housing projects.[97] [98] |
| Anime, Trauma and Divorce | October 9, 2020 | Auto Reverse | Features guest production from artists like billy woods and Elucid, focusing on personal narrative delivery.[99] [100] |
| Component System with the Auto Reverse | March 25, 2022 | Auto Reverse | Incorporates lo-fi aesthetics with production by Open Mike Eagle and Video Dave.[1] [101] |
| another triumph of ghetto engineering | May 19, 2023 | Auto Reverse | Self-engineered with raw, DIY production techniques.[102] [103] |
| Neighborhood Gods Unlimited | July 11, 2025 | Auto Reverse | Explores surrealist themes through layered sampling and minimalistic beats produced by Open Mike Eagle.[29] [104] [105] |
Mixtapes, EPs, and singles
Open Mike Eagle's shorter-form releases, including EPs and promotional singles, have predominantly utilized indie labels and digital platforms like Bandcamp for distribution, consistent with his underground origins in Los Angeles' Project Blowed scene during the 2000s, where formal mixtapes were scarce and focus leaned toward live performances and group affiliations rather than solo tape drops.[14][107] A key EP, A Special Episode Of, emerged in 2015 via Mello Music Group, comprising three tracks such as "Dark Comedy Late Show" (produced by Exile), "Split Pants In Detroit (or Hyrule)," and another untitled cut, serving as an extension of his Dark Comedy era with experimental, narrative-driven content.[108] Singles have often functioned promotionally, tying into broader projects amid the shift to streaming platforms. For instance, "I Rock" was issued in 2010 through Mush Records, highlighting Eagle's self-described "art rap" style ahead of his debut full-length.[109] Later adaptations include tracks like "Dark Comedy Late Show" repurposed as standalone streaming singles post-EP release, reflecting indie hip-hop's emphasis on episodic content over traditional radio pushes.[110]| Release Type | Title | Release Date | Label/Distribution | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EP | A Special Episode Of | February 3, 2015 | Mello Music Group / Bandcamp | 3 tracks; follows Dark Comedy album, indie vinyl reissues in 2024.[108] |
| Single | I Rock | 2010 | Mush Records | Promotional lead from early indie phase.[109] |