AY Young pivots Battery Tour to music festival benefitting those without power

May 17, 2018  |  Tommy Felts and Bobby Burch

AY Young, Battery Tour

With an ear-to-ear grin and his infectious laugh, AY Young admits he’s perhaps an unlikely rapper.

Back from taking a shot at stardom in California, the Kansas City-born Eagle Scout-turned-college basketball player-turned performer is plugging into the entrepreneur community in hopes of more efficiently powering the Battery Tour.

“We’re essentially using the universal language of music to solve universal problems,” Young said of the venture, through which he recently graduated from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation’s FastTrac program.

The vision is to translate the Battery Tour — Young’s street corner social music movement — into a self-sustained music festival from which net proceeds can be used to purchase solar-powered batteries that can be sent to those in need, he said.

“There’s over a billion people who don’t have access to electricity — or maybe they have access, but only for a certain amount of time,” Young said. “Then you have disasters; we still have 800,000 people in Puerto Rico without power.”

Battery Tour already has found a tech partner in Conner Hazelrigg, Young said. Hazelrigg’s startup, 17° 73° Innovation Co., produces the Sunshine Box, a portable solar-charging station that can charge 10 devices at a time.

The Battery Tour endeavor could lend itself well to a nonprofit model, Young said, noting the financial uncertainty of the entertainment business. He’s still working through the structure alongside partner Christen Barber, who acts as executive director and handles much of the day-to-day operations, he said.

And they’ve received no shortage of advice.

“Everybody wants to tell you what to do with what you’ve made,” Young said, laughing.

Keep reading after the video.

Changing charging stations

Homeschooled for most of his childhood, Young didn’t discover music until he was about 16, he said.

The street performer’s creativity began with poetry — some of which was inspired by the divided Kansas City he observed around him.

“I thought it was weird that you could be [in a poorer neighborhood at] 39th and Troost, and then you drive a couple of blocks and there’s nice houses, then the Country Club Plaza — and it’s sudden. It’s ridiculous,” Young said. “But that divide that was there eight or nine years ago is starting to disappear. It’s a lot different now.”

His first song, “Stick This Thing in Your Pocket,” began as a poem spoken over the strumming of his brother AJ Young’s guitar.

“I guess that was rap,” he said. “I didn’t really know at the time because my parents didn’t let me listen to rap. We mostly listened to Christian music — I mean, I was in the church six days a week. So, it’s weird to say, but I was 15 or 16 and I didn’t even know what rap was.”

Young’s parents were civic and neighborhood advocates, helping to found the Ivanhoe Neighborhood Association, he said.

“I learned so much independently by watching my dad, who was an entrepreneur, make his own construction company very successful,” Young said. “Watching my parents add value to the community in Kansas City has put me where I am today.”

After graduating from Lincoln Prep High School, he played guard for the University of Kansas City-Missouri basketball team. But while athletics taught him about about hard work and how to “put 10,000 hours into your craft,” it wasn’t his passion.

Young (as “AY Musik”) and his brother auditioned for the FOX TV show “X-Factor” in 2012, earning screen time with such music heavyweights as L.A. Reid, Simon Cowell and Britney Spears. They even received four “yes” votes from the judges, further affirming Young’s belief that his future would be grounded in music, he said.

“After the show, I wanted to say ‘Hey!’ to the world,” Young said. “I wanted people hear my music. I wanted to make an impact with music as the vehicle.”

The music video for his song “Say Hey” was filmed at locations across Kansas City.

Keep reading after the video.

But the gigs didn’t follow. Young couldn’t get in front of booking agents because he wasn’t yet established enough, he said. Pop-up performances on curbside venues seemed the best available option, Young said.

“Walking around, you might see somebody playing the guitar on the street corner, but I’m not a guitar player. I was mainly a rapper then,” he said, noting the challenges. “Plus, when you’re talking about performing somewhere like the Riot Room, you’re talking about a big sound system, It has to sound right. But how do you do that without electricity?”

Figuring out how to power a concert anywhere sparked the earliest incarnation of the Battery Tour — aptly named because the shows themselves were juiced independently of an established venue.

Plugging away

First performing on the Country Club Plaza, which earlier in his life helped inspire his poetry, Young’s shows quickly evolved. As he gained popularity, he realized he couldn’t fill the entire lineup with just his rap. Collaborators joined the spotlight.

“It became a mix of dance party, open mic night, and a concert,” he said. “I was doing a show every day to eat and live, charge my batteries and go to the next city or state. And it just turned into a movement — not being selfish with anything, collaborating with visual artists, collaborating with live painters, collaborating with musicians, whoever wanted the platform.”

The Battery Tour helped Young gain the exposure he needed. He opened for such artists as Shaggy, T-Pain, Wiz Khalifa and Aaron Carter — and he’s set to do the same for Wyclef Jean Aug. 24 at Crossroads KC at Grinders, Young said.

Performing about 230 shows in 2017, he even was in the midst of developing a pilot in California for Netflix, he said. The show would have followed Young and the Battery Tour from concert to concert, but the deal fell apart because of internal strife within his team, he said.

“I fell flat on my face with having the wrong people around me when I was close to attaining that success,” Young said.

What some would call a failure became an opportunity to pivot the Battery Tour’s mission, he said. Returning to Kansas City, Young embraced the idea of making a community-driven impact with his concerts.

“At the end of the day, I do just love music and want to be able to do it freely, whether there’s money involved or not,” he said.

Young has partnered brands with H3 Enterprises, whose co-founder Roy Scott encountered a similar brush with quick national success that also slipped away too soon.

“We hit it off immediately,” Young said. “His story really resonated with me.”

Scott has become a mentor, he said, along with H3 co-founder Reggie Gray, Landon Young at Give VC, Sally Williams at UMKC, and entrepreneurial consultant Jill Meyer.

“I’m really getting plugged into entrepreneurial resources — even just understanding what an entrepreneur is — and trying to figure out how to keep Batter Tour going,” he said.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2018 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Ryan Cowdrey and Blake Herren, Raven 3D Printing

    Raven’s return-to-earth science is complete, founder says; a new space accelerator will help get the KCK-built tech off the ground

    By Tommy Felts | April 19, 2023

    A KCK startup that could revolutionize space transportation is among 14 companies selected this week for an accelerator program from Amazon Web Services that focus on “transforming the future of space for all of humanity.” Kansas City-based Raven Space Systems — led by co-founders Ryan Cowdrey and Blake Herren — is building entirely 3D printed reentry…

    Tesseract earns $1.25M contract to help Space Force, military ‘predict the future’

    By Tommy Felts | April 19, 2023

    Industry-defining tools built by Kansas City’s Tesseract Ventures will help the U.S. Space Force accurately track machines, people and objects on base, and create a clearer understanding of launch conditions through next generation data visualization, said John Boucard. Tesseract announced Tuesday that the company has been awarded a direct-to-Phase II Small Business Innovation (SBIR) contract…

    AI Hub builds creative space in River Market, giving artists access to business tech, tools

    By Tommy Felts | April 19, 2023

    The Midwest needs more resources to help creatives start their own businesses and keep them thriving, said Taylor Burris and James Spikes, who designed a one-stop art incubator to give artists’ innovation a fresh canvas. The husband-and-wife team opened AI Hub — powered by IRIS Creative Projects Agency and with funding from The Porter House…

    Why this serial entrepreneur bought ‘a giant beach in Kansas’ (and how he plans to make it KC’s next outdoor hot spot) 

    By Tommy Felts | April 18, 2023

    Lance Windholz is already digging his new position on Shawnee’s sand volleyball courts: owner.  “This deal was about six years in the making,” said Windholz, a serial entrepreneur and small business owner. “I had been playing volleyball out at Shawnee Mission Beach Volleyball three, four times a week — and just thought, ‘Why not own…