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Kickman Teddy is Cruising with a New Hit Song

Kickman Teddy is cruising solo these days.

Teddy, who played drums in the alternative hip-hop/rock band, FreeSol, is now singing, writing, and producing. His single, “Crusin’,” currently is No. 2 on iTunes and No. 23 on the Billboard R&B/Soul charts. 

The single, which he produced last June, is “basically about me and this female just cruising the city, enjoying life, having fun together,” Teddy says.

“Crusin’,” which includes Memphian Mike Sweep and Atlanta-based Kanard Thomas, is on the Hotline Miami compilation.

Teddy and his manager decided to add the song to “make people aware that the song is out there … build momentum around [it]. We got it to the people we needed to and it took off from there.” His new single, “Get the Paper,” will be released in late May.

Born in Memphis, but raised in Julius, Arkansas, where his grandparents lived, Teddy says his family members sang in churches. “They would go around and tour churches and so forth and let us hang around and learn from them.”

As for his drumming talent, Teddy says, “Man, it was in my blood. It’s always been there.”

But he didn’t have a drum set at first. “I was beating on anything I could get my hands on — shoes, my desk. I would just make noise. All the rhythms going. Kids would go crazy over it. It’s just a natural thing for me to do, and I enjoyed it.”

Teddy originally went the “choir scene” route, drumming and touring with community choirs. He says people began saying, “Who is this guy? This little young drummer? He’s got a fast foot and he can play songs fast.”

Teddy began performing for Billy Rivers & the Angelic Voices of Faith. One night, he played Rivers part of a song he’d written. “He was like, ‘Keep going.’ I was making up lyrics on the spot. Before I knew it — I don’t know if he knew this — he was pushing me into being a writer.”

Teddy toured Europe with the group for about a month. But things changed after he met FreeSol at Applebee’s. They struck up a conversation and formed the FreeSol band that day. “I had to make a choice because I started touring with FreeSol pretty heavy.”

The group was signed to Justin Timberlake’s production company, Tennman Records, in 2006. “Man, one of the high points for me was just being in the studio with Justin and learning … his whole work ethic and how he could come in and command a room.”

FreeSol then signed with Interscope Records, but was dropped from the label. “For a minute, I lost my love and drive for what I was doing.”

Teddy reached his low point. “I was locked in a cell overnight. I got locked up for DUI — intoxicated, drinking at a party.”

But, he says, “It changed my life. When I got there, man, I saw murderers around me. I saw drug addicts around me. And nobody cared about who I was or who I worked with. I was just like everybody else.”

When he got out, FreeSol bass player/keyboardist Daniel “Primo Danger” Dangerfield, called and asked him to join him playing on a cruise ship.

“God always has a plan for your life,” Teddy says.

Teddy began writing raps every day. Writing hip-hop came naturally. “I just liked being challenged, doing something different. I was beating on my desks again. It brought me back and grounded me.”

He released his first full-fledged album, Xrayvision, in 2014. “For a solo project on my own, I thought it was pretty dope. That was just me and my writing skills.”

Teddy formed a production company, Martian Boy Music, and he also got the FreeSol members back in the studio to record the song “Out of Love,” which is slated to be released in July. “It brought a feeling over me like, ‘Man, we can still make music and enjoy each other.’”

Now, Teddy says, “I’m not thinking about fame. I’m not thinking about money. I’m thinking about putting out great music.”

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Free at Last: The Story of FreeSol

FreeSol is a free soul again.

After getting his musical start as lead singer of the alternative soul band also known as FreeSol, which formed in 2003, “Free” moved back to Memphis two years ago after several years of ups and downs.

FreeSol was originally signed to Justin Timberlake’s production company, Tennman Records, in 2006. After then signing with Interscope Records, the band debuted its first single,”Fascinated,” on American Top 40 with Ryan Seacrest, and appeared on Late Night with David Letterman. The band was also presented the Memphis Sound Award at the Blues Ball in Memphis. The future looked bright.

Courtesy of FreeSol

FreeSol appeared on Late Night with David Letterman.

Then, in 2012, everything stopped.

“As soon as we got dropped from Interscope Records I bounced to California,” says Free, now 42. Trying to “re-find himself,” he worked in real estate and became involved with the legal marijuana industry. “I was on the verge of opening my own brand, Sweet Cali,” he says. “We’d been in business since 2014 and we were looking for investors. It’s a marijuana THC/CBD edible brand and street apparel brand.”

But in late 2019 Free decided to move back to Memphis. “I wanted to use some of my new hustle, and the things I learned about business and put that with music. I want to be an inspiration and a motivator for the city. I want to be a personality here. I had only been seen here in a dark, thuggish, rough, sexual light. I came to Memphis to get busy.”

Free, a native Memphian whose real name is Christopher Anderson, is now vice-president of Elite Home Flippers and wants to open a restaurant.

“I’m a hustler, man. I like food and I’m from Memphis. I have always felt I was going to come home and do something for Memphis. And one of those things needed to be Memphis food. Growing up, I loved good Southern food.”

There will be music along with the food, Free says. “If I’m going to be in the business, we’re going to have music there.”

Courtesy of FreeSol

Free

Free says he also will be bonding with young, local musicians. “I really want to connect myself to up-and-coming cats and do whatever I can. And do what I did with FreeSol, just trying to build a network — be connected and throw events and collaborations. If you remember the rise of FreeSol — how we played often at different events.”

Free says the late California rapper Nipsey Hussle was the inspiration for his moving back to Memphis and getting involved here. “He died in 2019. He was shot outside of his store. The cool thing about him was that he had rented out a store in this building and he sold T-shirts, sold suits, while he was building up his music. He ended up buying the whole building. Then he owned a restaurant. He became a local entrepreneur, but he also was a national rapper.

“As soon as he was murdered, it was like his spirit was released and a lot of people built up a Nipsey Hussle mindset. I knew I had to build up an empire, a business, and be an inspiration and motivation in my city. I see myself as a Nipsey Hussle. He made me want to come home, basically, to be here to be an entrepreneur while opening up a restaurant, putting on shows, eventually starting a record company. We can do it all and we can inspire and make friends. And do it all with a smile on our face.”

Free says art was his first creative outlet, but when he was 12, he began rewriting lyrics to the music of Boney James and the Yellowjackets in his mother’s record collection. He began writing his own rhymes when he was 14. “Fourteen was a big year for me. I started smoking weed, lost my virginity, and started rapping — all in the same summer.”

Courtesy of FreeSol

FreeSol was ahead of the curve in rapping over music by a live band.

He gave his first performance during an overnight lockdown at Bishop Byrne High School. His friend, a DJ, told him he was going to get him on stage. “I was so nervous. I’ll never forget. The crowd went crazy.”

Rap music was all he wanted to do after that, he says. “They talk about that ‘drug’ of being on stage. That addiction. That was it. I had 100 kids screaming, having a good time. After it was over it was like I just invented the cure for cancer.”

Free then started his first band, Sol Katz, with two other rappers. Their agent signed them to do talent shows in Atlanta and Texas. A little later, while going to school at Clark Atlanta University, he got a call from Beyoncé’s father, Mathew Knowles. “He heard about us and he called Orin Lumpkin at Elektra, who wanted to work out a deal. But it all fell through. When that didn’t work out, the band kind of broke up.”

FreeSol says he got his name when he was 21. He was teaching Bible class at his church when he came across Galatians 5 verse 1, which “talks about freedom. So that was the birth of me wanting to be called ‘Free.’ Never being held by the yoke of slavery. I lost all religion and became ‘Sol,’ son of light. It just came to me. It had to do with wanting to follow the light. From the darkness comes the light. To be the son of light, the son of goodness, is the highest form of energy.”

In 2001, Free got a $25,000 loan from his cousin and recorded his first solo record, FreeSol

“I got in my car and drove all over the country and sold that record.”

He then ran into drummer James “Kickman Teddy” Thomas at Applebee’s on Union. “He was drinking this big ass beer at 12 on a Monday,” he remembers. He offered his headphones to Thomas and asked him if he’d listen to his record. “He loved it.”

Bass player and keyboardist Daniel “Primo Danger” Dangerfield joined them that afternoon. “That Thursday we had our first rehearsal,” Free says. “Three to six months later we had our full band.”

Songwriter/co-producer Elliott Ives, longtime studio and touring guitarist with Timberlake, recalls how impressed he was with FreeSol when he saw the group perform at Automatic Slim’s. “There were not many rappers performing with bands,” he says. “And not just that, but also having auxiliary members of the bands singing hooks.”

When he joined the band, Ives says, “I pretty much sang every hook. You’ve got this white boy Memphis guitar player singing these hooks and this Memphis rapper with a live band. A few years later, people started doing that. Now you rarely see a hip-hop artist without a band.”

FreeSol “was just different,” Thomas says. “We were on a different vibe at the time. There weren’t too many bands doing what we were doing. We were breaking down so many boundaries and breaking down so many doors as far as being new, energetic. For me, it was special, man. From the day I met Free, there was something special about what he was bringing, what he was trying to do at the time. It was a brotherhood as well as being a band. It was fun times, man.”

Describing their music, Free says, “I don’t believe in race. I don’t believe in labeling music. I think we think too much about things and try to divide things and put things in boxes. I take a little bit of Islam, atheism, Christianity, Buddhism, and find truth in my own lane. I took rock, rap, hardcore rap, hardcore rock, jazz music, pop music, and never tried to label it. And in all our songs I put elements of what we love. We tried to create something new for everyone to fit into.

“Everyone came to our shows, from ‘hood, straight-up crack dealers to the silliest of the white girls. I had everybody included. We were able to wrap it up because we had pieces of everything people wanted and respected in music and art. The real strength we had was our versatility.”

FreeSol’s most popular songs included “Busy Watching Me,” “Don’t Give a Damn,” and “Crazy.”

Lightning struck when they met Timberlake at a private showcase and were subsequently signed to Tennman Records and then, Interscope Records. Between 2006 and 2011, the band released Role Model and Hoodies On, Hats Low. One of their songs “Fascinated,” was co-produced by Timberlake and featured Timbaland.

Timberlake, who also appeared in the video, produced an album with FreeSol for Interscope. But in January 2011, FreeSol was dropped by Interscope.

“The politics of the major label music business got in the way of the actual talent and the music, and had nothing to do with the success we were having or the success we were about to have,” Ives says. “It was pure politics.”

Everybody in the band “took it really hard,” Free says. “We had made it — and to have all it taken from us right then and there, everybody was heartbroken. We did everything we were supposed to do. We had a fan base. We had a work ethic. But things didn’t work out.” 

Courtesy of FreeSol

Christopher “Free” Anderson with his wife, Melissa Anderson

Free and his wife, Melissa, moved to California. They were married three years later. 

In California, Free says his “main bread and butter” was real estate, but that he was also “figuring out how to learn the game with [legal] marijuana and how to get your own brand, your own farm, your own store. My passions have been weed and music. I always cared about those two things a lot. I wanted to be involved.”

But he reached a point when he felt it was time to move back home.

Free says he continues to write music but his subject matter has changed. “A lot of songs in my past are about sex, women, being a player — a young, childish perspective on life. Now I’m an older man. My lyrics are more mature. I’m a prouder. I love a lot of the music I made, but I hadn’t seen anything, and that’s apparent. I was just pulling things out of my head and was trying to make them sound cool.

“Now, I can talk about life. I’m a business owner, a father of two, a husband. Everything I eat comes from my own hustle, my own inventions. I haven’t worked for anybody since I was 21 years old. I take care of myself and my family.”

One recent song is called, “Is It the Way?” It’s about “how I thought I’d never get married. How I met my wife. How it feels after losing the record deal with Interscope and taking that fall. A lot of people lost jobs, chased dreams, weren’t happy, or came up short. I know how you feel. You don’t know how it feels until you walk in those people’s shoes.”

Ives is producing two of Free’s recent songs — “Quit Playin'” and “Money Magnet” — at Ives’ Domination Station studio at Young Avenue Sound. 

Would FreeSol ever reunite? “Absolutely,” Free says. “We talk about it all the time.”

In addition to his music and business ventures, Free also hosts a podcast, Ice to Eskimos, with comedian Rob Love and artist Frances Barry Moreno.

“I’m an extremely happy man,” Free says. “I realized life is what you make it. Your thoughts, your perspective matters a lot. No one is in control of your happiness, your days. I’m where I need to be.”