Rizzle Kicks star on drug abuse amid music comeback
- Published
Jordan Stephens has revealed how a drug addiction contributed towards the break-up of hip-hop duo Rizzle Kicks.
Their debut album, Stereo Typical, which came three years after the group formed in Brighton in 2008, sold more than 600,000 copies.
But following personal battles between Stephens and the other half of the duo - Harley Alexander-Sule - Rizzle Kicks took a hiatus that ended up lasting eight years.
“In that time when we were trying to find ourselves, Harley developed a crippling stage anxiety and I became a drug addict, basically,” Stephens said.
The 32-year-old has outlined his battles with drug abuse, fame, grief, self-harm, masculinity and more in a new memoir titled Avoidance, Drugs, Heartbreak & Dogs.
“At our peak, when we had the most notoriety and fame, the pressure was unbelievable,” he told BBC Radio Sussex.
“That pushed me and Harley apart. But in the last eight years where we put Rizzle Kicks on ice, Harley has fathered two beautiful children, I’ve gone sober and we’re closer than ever.”
Ahead of a tell-all show at the Brighton Dome Corn Exchange in Brighton, Stephens described his 20s as a “whirlwind” in which Rizzle Kicks had hits including Down With the Trumpets and Mama Do the Hump.
Describing himself as “young, aspirational and delusional”, Stephens said he would discourage anyone from reaching the same heights without a support system in place.
“It can be damaging,” he said.
“If I was in a situation where I was fathering a child who was near a potential lifestyle like mine, I would be suggesting and making recommendations different to ones I received.”
Stephens added: “Every high comes with a price, and I paid it. You don’t feel grief less intensely just because you’re well off.”
He said he was able to step away from his previous lifestyle and explored emotional trauma retreats and therapy.
In May this year, the duo announced that they were reforming and have since released a new single, Javelin.
If you are impacted by any of the issues in this article, details of help and support are available on the BBC Action Line.
Follow BBC Sussex on Facebook, external, on X, external, and on Instagram, external. Send your story ideas to southeasttoday@bbc.co.uk, external or WhatsApp us on 08081 002250.
Related topics
Related stories
- Published30 August
- Published10 October 2016
- Published12 September 2018