Meet America Foster — Major Lazer’s Youngest & First Woman Member: ‘Felt Like I Had Known These Guys for Ages’
Since it first roared onto the Billboard charts with 2009’s Guns Don’t Kill People… Lazers Do LP, Major Lazer has established itself as one of the most innovative collectives in mainstream music through its fusion of EDM, dancehall, hip-hop, reggaetón, trap and soca. Now, the group’s three current members — Diplo, Walshy Fire and Ape Drums — have officially added a fourth name to the lineup: America Foster.
A 28-year-old British-Jamaican artist, model and content creator, America Foster hails from the outskirts of London in South Buckinghamshire. As one of seven children in a household dominated by boys, she quickly learned how to lean into her knack for entertaining to ensure her voice was heard. She remembers developing her freestyling as a party trick as young as 10, and around age 15, she started playing around with accents and voice acting, sending friends into laughing fits with prank calls and her imitations of the London Underground voiceover. As she entered the final years of her adolescence and her creative friends started seriously pursuing their dreams, Foster brushed off countless requests to hop in the booth and freestyle over a track.
“I was completely opposed to it,” she recalls. “And then one of my friends [convinced] me to come to their studio session, the producers spun around in their chairs like, ‘Your turn!’ I was like, ‘Not happening!’ That ended up being the first time I ever put my vocals on a studio recording.”
Foster is the first to admit that those early songs weren’t the strongest — “They were very commercial, Chris Brown dance-pop; I call it McDonald’s music” — but she eventually landed on a sound that distilled the authenticity, cultural fluency and bubbly quirk of her off-the-cuff social media content, which garnered her hundreds of thousands of followers pre-Major Lazer and resulted in a Red Rat-informed approach to dancehall toasting and singjaying anchored by her striking charisma.
After a few viral clips caught Diplo’s attention, Foster quickly took advantage of the potential music industry connection. She thanked the Grammy-winning DJ for following her, and the two started exchanging music, culminating in an in-person meeting at his Roundhouse show last September. There, the pair planned a studio session in Jamaica, where Foster met the rest of Major Lazer, and by Paris’ Fête de la Musique in June, she made her live debut with the group. In July, Foster officially announced her addition to Major Lazer via Instagram.
Arriving as the group’s youngest and first woman member, Foster made her official Major Lazer debut with a freestyle remix of August’s “Gangsta,” a shatta-informed track that also features Kybba and Busy Signal. A few weeks later (Oct. 24), Foster joined forces with buzzy Toronto artist Sadboi and Emmy-winning choreographer Parris Goebel for “Bruk Down,” a standout ‘90s dancehall-inspired track that doubles as Goebel’s musical debut. Goebel also co-directed the track’s flashy music video alongside Philippa Price.
“She understands what she’s good at, and she understands that she’s got a market for it. It’s genius to me,” Foster tells Billboard about working with Goebel. “I’ve heard some of her songs that are due to come out, and they are amazing — especially for the dance community.”
In a candid conversation with Billboard, America Foster details her origins, integrating herself into the Major Lazer family, fashioning “Bruk Down” out of a freestyle and what else she’s cooking up with her new groupmates.
What are some of your earliest musical memories?
[They’re] definitely attached to dance. Rhythm and beat [were] my first introduction [to music]; I never really heard lyrics for what they were when I was younger. I’d be able to recite a whole song, but I wouldn’t be able to tell you the content.
Where do you consider home?
Growing up, I lived just on the outskirts of London. But my heart was always in Northwest London; I was always there. That’s where my mum and her sisters were raised, and my gran still lives there. During weekends, half-terms and school holidays, I’d be in London. And then I’d be living in South Buckinghamshire, which is where I was raised.
How did you land on the “America Foster” sound?
Eight years ago, when I first got into the studio, I didn’t understand my sound, so I started trying to develop it. I really captured my sound in the last four years. I made a couple of demos that were getting close, but they weren’t the final sound, which were the demos that I actually sent to Diplo.
You connected with him over Instagram, right?
He came across my page from a viral moment; I’ve had quite a few of those on Instagram from my content creation. I was trying to figure out how to transition into being a respected artist, so I started dropping bits of content surrounded by my music. Whether I’m talking about the weather or my menstruation, I put it in a rhyme pattern and people love it — especially because you don’t expect me to have such a strong Jamaican accent, because I’m light-skinned and from England, and my name’s America. It’s like, “What the f—k is going on?” [Laughs.]
He followed me off a viral freestyle, and I was really excited, because I was seriously making music at the time. I knew that he was behind Major Lazer, and I also know he was behind [M.I.A.’s] “Paper Planes.” I grew up to that song, just banging it out constantly. So, obviously, I shot my shot. I thanked him for the follow and sent about four demos. We started exchanging music on WhatsApp, and he’d send me beats he heard my voice on.
Last September, he came to London, and I met him at the Roundhouse while he was performing. The next day, we went to a football game and planned for a studio session in Jamaica, which is where I met the rest of Major Lazer.
What was that first meeting like?
It was amazing, we just clicked. Me and Walshy were bantering left, right and center; it felt like I had known these guys for ages. It didn’t feel like the first initial meeting at all. I went to Diplo’s home in Jamaica, and it’s quite a showroom home, but it still has this beautiful, homely vibe. I had 32 hours in Jamaica, and we made six songs, one of which was “Bruk Down.”
“Bruk Down” started as a freestyle, right?
Diplo just had the beat running, and we all knew it was f—king hard. He kept it running to see if we came up with anything; he even freestyled a little bit, which was quite funny. And then I just heard, “Bruk out, bruk out, waan fi.” I knew I liked that, but I wanted to repeat it twice, and then change it a bit the third time. Walshy was in the room, and he was like, “Yea, man, dat fyah!” Diplo also liked it, so I continued freestyling and writing at the same time.
It’s crazy how the final version sounds like a completely different song from how it first started. My initial freestyle was shared with Parris Goebel and Sadboi, and when I heard it with their parts, it sounded so good. I was only briefly familiar with Sadboi, and I hadn’t connected the dots about who Parris was. I didn’t know she was making music. I was like, “Oh my God, my music video’s gonna be sick!” [Laughs.]
Did you have any initial reservations about pursuing your music career through a collective as opposed to just going solo from the jump?
About two years before Major Lazer was on the table, I thought about being in a girl group. And I was like…. no. I just couldn’t see that for me. Part of me felt like I had to really weigh it up and see what the exit would look like.
When Major Lazer came into the picture, I was like, “Oh my God, this is the best group that could have ever asked me to join them.” Firstly, it’s all boys. Secondly, they’re not vocalists; they’re producers and DJs, so I’d be the only vocalist, which gives me the opportunity to still be a solo artist.
Being the only woman and the youngest, what made you trust these guys?
My familiarity [with them] through their music. Through being a consumer, I felt like I knew them already. That’s why it felt so family-oriented in the first meeting. I’m big on signs, energy and spirituality, and I just followed my gut.
What does your contract look like?
It’s a featured artist agreement. I’m contracted as the fourth member.
So, you’re technically an unsigned artist?
Yes.
Is America a stage name or your given name?
Birth name. I was orphaned by the age of four, and my mum gave me my name. I look at it as if that was the best and final gift that my mum could have given me. I can’t change it, even though I hated the name when I was younger. I’m the only one out of my siblings with the name of a country or state or continent. I don’t have a middle name.
My mum knew something that no one else knew. She knew what she gave birth to. I can’t put a different name on my stardom. I don’t feel like that would be paying homage to my mum. She would have been a performer if she was still about; she had the essence that I do, but I’ve just been able to live and show it.
What else from your childhood do you see reflected in the music you make today?
My inspirations. When I’m freestyling, I hear Beenie Man, Elephant Man, Vybz Kartel, a little bit of Lady Saw, all of that. I hear their attitude in my freestyles. The sound I’m running with at the moment is Red Rat’s; I’m paying homage to him. I’m tuning in to the things that made me love music in the first place, taking elements of all of that at combining it with who I am to produce something that the world will just say “yes” to.
How do you anticipate your content creation might evolve as your artist career grows?
I’m not creating content; I’m capturing moments. There’s a difference for me. It’ll be exactly the same. I’ll just be capturing bigger moments and things that people will want to see: being on the road with the boys, backstage banter and little humorous exchanges.
Do you feel embraced by Major Lazer’s fanbase?
I’m definitely taking it in. With my social media content, I was becoming a little bit more known in London. A year before [joining] Major Lazer, I went to Barbados, and someone recognized me. That was like one of the first moments that I realized how far my reach is.
Major Lazer’s fan base is great. They’ve taken me in like I’ve been a member since day one. It feels like they have literally said, “Oh, Diplo, you like her, yeah? Walshy? Cool, we like you too.”
Top three Major Lazer songs of all time?
“Pon de Floor,” “Hold the Line” and “Watch Out for This (Bumaye).”
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