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Injury Reserve was an American hip hop group formed in 2012 in Tempe, Arizona. The group consisted of rappers Ritchie with a T (Nathaniel Ritchie), Stepa J. Groggs (Jordan Groggs), and producer Parker Corey.[3] After the death of Groggs in 2020 and the release of the group's second and final studio album, By the Time I Get to Phoenix, the remaining members regrouped under the name By Storm in July 2023.[4]
Injury Reserve | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin | Tempe, Arizona, U.S. |
Genres | |
Years active | 2012–2023 |
Labels |
|
Spinoffs | By Storm |
Past members | Ritchie with a T Stepa J. Groggs Parker Corey |
Website | injuryreserve |
Injury Reserve was initially formed as a duo in late 2012 by rappers Stepa J. Groggs and Ritchie with a T.[5][6] Ritchie first met Groggs as a child through his mother, who managed the Vans store Groggs was employed at in Phoenix. Ritchie later met eventual member Parker Corey through a mutual acquaintance in high school, and the two began collaborating on Ritchie's solo debut, Days Slow Nights Fast, in early 2012, with Corey serving as executive producer.[7][8] Groggs appeared on the mixtape as a featured artist,[9] and the two rappers would begin work on a collaborative full length together, with Corey again serving as executive producer.
On January 16, 2013, the duo released their debut standalone single, "Electric Relaxation," on YouTube, accompanied by a music video. The video has since been removed, and is now considered lost media.[10]
On March 6, 2013, the duo released "On Point," which served as the lead single to their debut mixtape, Depth Chart, which was executive produced by Parker Corey.[11][12] Another single, "Growing Down," followed on March 15, 2013.[13] The mixtape was released on March 27, 2013 to little fanfare or media attention.[14] It was initially billed as Injury Reserve's debut album, but the group no longer acknowledges it as such.[15] It was released through digital platforms such as Audiomack, but was delisted after the subsequent media attention from 2015's Live from the Dentist Office.
On April 26, 2013, it was announced via Ritchie's Twitter account that Corey had joined Injury Reserve as the group's producer.[16]
In 2014, the now-trio released Cooler Colors, a 7-track EP, led by singles, "Black Sheep", "Groundhog Day", and "How Bout You".[3] It was released through digital platforms such as Audiomack, but was delisted in the same fashion as Depth Chart. The group doesn't refer to these projects as their debuts, and instead refers to Live from the Dentist Office as their debut.[17]
Cooler Colors was mostly us trying to replicate our favorite artists, and we found that really corny. When me and Parker critique people, we'll say "Oh that guy sounds like this guy" and then we were realized we're total hypocrites. Live from the Dentist was us finding our own sound, and that's why we call that the first actual Injury Reserve project, because the music's original and it gets at our personalities.
Ritchie with a T, in a 2016 interview with The Daily Texan[17]
In 2015, the group self-released Live from the Dentist Office, their 11-track breakout mixtape with features from Chuck Inglish, Curtis Williams, Glass Popcorn, and Demi Hughes.[18] The mixtape was released through multiple digital platforms such as SoundCloud, iTunes, Tidal, and Spotify.[19] Physical copies of the project were later sold through Injury Reserve's online store.[20] Live from the Dentist Office generally received acclaim from music critics.
On December 15, 2016, Injury Reserve released their second mixtape titled Floss, released again through a variety of digital platforms to similar acclaim. The mixtape featured Vic Mensa and Cakes da Killa. Both projects were actually recorded in a dental office belonging to producer Parker Corey's grandfather.[21]
On September 29, 2017, the group released an EP titled Drive It Like It's Stolen, preceded by the singles, "North Pole" (featuring Austin Feinstein), "See You Sweat", and "Boom (X3)". All of the singles were released with accompanying music videos. They joined Ho99o9 and The Underachievers on separate tours in 2017. In 2018, the group embarked on their first headlining tour, accompanied by Indiana artist Freddie Gibbs for its second half, and were featured on the Aminé single "Campfire".
On September 6, 2018, the group released a statement through their social media, stating they signed a record label with Loma Vista, helmed by A&R, Kyambo "Hip Hop" Joshua, and they'd be releasing their debut album under the label.[2] On May 17, 2019, the group released their self-titled debut album to generally favorable reviews. Following their debut album, the group embarked on a world headlining tour.
Stepa J. Groggs died on June 29, 2020, at age 32. The group announced his death on their Twitter account, mourning "a loving father, life partner and friend."[22][23] No cause of death was released.[24] Since Groggs's death, the group has been featured on songs by Dos Monos,[25] Tony Velour and Aminé.[26]
On September 15, 2021, the group self-released their second studio album, By the Time I Get to Phoenix, led by the singles, "Knees", and "Superman That". The album features Bruiser Brigade rapper ZelooperZ, and was engineered by Zeroh.[27] Shortly following the release, the group embarked on a worldwide tour, alongside Slauson Malone and Colloboh on the US leg. Initially, Zeroh was the supporting act alongside Slauson Malone, but was replaced with Colloboh due to unforeseen circumstances.[28]
In an interview with Huck Magazine, interviewer Thomas Hobbs asked Ritchie with a T if the group could continue without Groggs. Ritchie responded: "I can imagine [Groggs] joking and saying: 'Y'all better still do this shit!'. But then I can also imagine him saying: 'You better not step on a stage without me!'. We're still figuring it out... We've not had an explicit conversation about continuing the group, but me and Parker will continue to create together [in some capacity]."[29]
On September 28, 2022, the group released a remix of "Ghost" by experimental pop musician, Body Meat, marking their first release since By the Time I Get to Phoenix.
On July 6, 2023, the group confirmed on their Instagram story that there would be no new music from Injury Reserve going forward, and that Ritchie and Corey would continue to produce music under the name By Storm.[30] On their Twitter account, they posted an announcement for the premiere of a double music video. The first half of the video is for "Bye Storm", the final track on By the Time I Get to Phoenix and billed as "Injury Reserve's last song"; the second half is for By Storm's debut single "Double Trio".[31]
Title | Album details |
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Injury Reserve |
|
By the Time I Get to Phoenix |
|
Title | Album details |
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Depth Chart |
|
Live from the Dentist Office |
|
Floss |
|
Title | Album details |
---|---|
Cooler Colors |
|
Drive It Like It's Stolen |
|
Title | Year | Main artist | Album |
---|---|---|---|
"Mutual Destruction"[32] | 2017 | TEEKS | Non-album singles |
"Campfire"[33] | 2018 | Aminé | |
"Talkin' Greezy (Remix)"[34] | Cakes da Killa | ||
"745 sticky (Injury Reserve Remix)"[35] | 2019 | 100 gecs | 1000 Gecs and The Tree of Clues |
"Fetus"[36] | 2020 | Aminé | Limbo |
"Robert"[37] | Jockstrap | Wicked City | |
"Aquarius"[38] | Dos Monos | Dos Siki | |
"TED TALK"[39] | Tony Velour | 3M | |
"Ghost (Injury Reserve Remix)"[40] | 2022 | Body Meat | Non-album single |
"Counting Sheep (V2) [2018 Export Wav]"[41] | 2023 | Flume | Things Don't Always Go The Way You Plan |
Headlining
Supporting
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