Midwest-made crossover artist charts solo success that eluded him when he was young
September 19, 2024 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
Sebastian James assumed until recently that his music career had already peaked, the hometown hit-maker shared.
In 2011, the 18-year-old Riverside native and Park Hill South graduate started touring the country as the drummer for the Nigel Dupree Band, opening for bands like Korn and Stone Temple Pilots. But this year, at 30, he launched his solo career and his first two singles “American Made” and “When We Were Young” are taking off, each landing on the Top 40 charts.
“It’s crazy,” James said. “This was something that I’ve dreamt about for the past two decades. Having already done some of those larger tours and those not being life changing like a lot of people would maybe have expected, I figured, ‘Oh, that was probably it. That was my shot.’”
James’ debut album, “Old School Cool,” is set to be released Oct. 4 under the independent label he co-founded, Tungsten Records.
“When We Were Young” — about young love, summer days, and experiencing the world through the rose-colored lens of yesteryear — reached No. 23 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary Chart and No. 20 on the iHeartRadio Adult Contemporary Chart, while “American Made” — his debut single about how Americans are all made in the U.S.A., yet are unique in our own way — reached No. 39 on the Mediabase Chart and remained there for more than 14 weeks.
“I’m just scrolling through and I’m looking at the charts and I recognize every single name in the Top 100 except mine,” he noted. “So it’s one of those things where you’re just like, ‘Wow. Is this real?’”
“But at the end of the day, it is,” he added. “I’m just super humbled, super blessed, and honestly, a little anxious to just do it again.”
With musical inspirations like classic rock icons Van Halen, Kiss, and the Eagles, classic rock/southern rock band the Black Crowes, and singer songwriter Billy Squier, James describes his style as rock/country crossover with a Midwest twang.
As for his songs, he noted, his small town roots bleed through lyrics about his family life and the hardships he’s faced.
“A song like ‘American Made,’ if you look at that video, it not only was filmed really in my backyard and on a lot of the streets that I grew up on,” he said. “But it also touched on a lot of those bits and pieces of my life like the cars and the hands-on time with the kids.”
Click here to follow Sebastian James on Instagram.
From idling music to ‘going full throttle’
Growing up with his musician as a father, James wanted to carve his own path, he shared, mainly focusing on sports as a kid.
“(My dad) was pretty prominent in the area,” he continued. “He always had long hair and tattoos. And I was like, ‘Oh, I don’t want anything to do with that. That’s not my story and so forth.’ Or at least, I didn’t think.”
Then at age 12, James noted, he started to change his mindset. After seeing 1980s rock bands in concert like AC/DC and Poison, he was hooked.
“I remember seeing Kiss specifically and being like, ‘Wow, I would do anything to get up there and do that,’” he said.
So on top of playing sports, James picked up the drums.
“I really just spent a lot of time in the basement, learning to play by ear,” he explained. “At the time, I couldn’t read music. I didn’t really receive any classical training or instruction, but I just picked it up. I was like, ‘Well, my dad’s a great singer, great guitar player, so drums is the thing that I could probably be better at than him pretty quickly.’ So that was the path I went.”
Pretty soon, James said, he started playing in clubs around the Midwest with his dad, continuing that until he graduated high school. Then he got a call from Nigel Dupree, son of Jesse James Dupree from the band Jackyl and the TruTV show “Full Throttle Saloon.” He auditioned for the Nigel Dupree Band and got hired on the spot. He later was featured in seasons 4 and 5 of the TruTV show.
“This whole plan that I thought I’d had — college prep and all this stuff I was going to do — took a left turn,” he continued. “We went out and we started touring pretty much like two months after I had to audition. So I learned all these songs, and then we went out on the road for close to the better part of two years.”
“That was where I really cut my teeth,” he added. “That’s where I got to play on a lot of those big stages and national spotlights and be an opener for a lot of those groups that we looked up to.”
At the same time, James was taking online classes at Park University, where he eventually earned his MBA in 2018.
“I’m in the back of a van during the day, doing my classes, and at night, doing these huge, huge shows,” he added. “So it was definitely a grind.”
Mentoring the next Sebastian James
James stopped touring with the band in 2014, welcomed the first of his three children, and started a group called the Rock Gods, a Las Vegas-style tribute act. Then about a year and half ago, he sat down with a couple of friends and decided it was time to put out some original music. But instead of treating it like a passion project, they approached it with a business mindset.
“We started to say, ‘Hey, how is this going to work? Where does the revenue come from? What do the expenses look like? What are the things that we can do?’” James explained. “So we probably approached it differently than about 99 percent of musicians, probably just because I was older at the time.”
“If I was 18 like when I first started it probably would have been a totally different trajectory,” he continued. “But we were like, ‘Hey, we’ve all got kids and other businesses and priorities. So if we’re going to do this, it has to work.’ And so we just came out guns blazing.”
One of these business decisions was co-founding his own label as an umbrella for his own music, James said.
“I think it was the right move for the state of the industry right now and where everything is at,” he noted. “It’s nice to know that with all the hours and time that I’ve put into writing these songs, that they will at least remain in my name.”
He also has a passion for helping younger artists, James added: those like him 10 years ago who didn’t know what to do next.
“I look forward to the next phase of the label, to where we can start to recruit additional talent beyond myself and future records,” he explained.

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
$17M Operation Breakthrough expansion to bridge Troost, boost STEM and maker skills
An Operation Breakthrough expansion from the east side of Troost Avenue to the west is about more than jumping across the street, said Mary Esselman. The move will literally bridge a racial and economic dividing line that has persisted for decades. “Bridging Troost is not only a legacy to our founders, but is huge symbolically,…
ClusterTruck sizzles on KC food delivery scene with ‘ghost kitchen’ concept
The innovation cooking within ClusterTruck’s technology makes the rapidly expanding Indianapolis company a fresh take on the restaurant-quality food delivery scene, Christian Moscoso said. “We are a software company with our own ghost kitchens, if you will,” said Moscoso, general manager for ClusterTruck’s new River Market kitchen, which opened in mid-December without a public entrance…
Innovation Exchange returns in 2018 with new partners, topics
One of my favorite parts of journalism is the “Hm!” moment. They are the occasions when reading, watching or listening to a story whose details yield an inborn reaction of fascination or intrigue. They can’t be stopped. When your curiosity piqued, “Hmm!” is an impulse. “The SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket produced 5 million pounds of…
Sickweather storms market with overfunded $1M crowdfunding campaign amid flu season
An illness forecaster is never more valuable than when the threat of a widespread virus is high. This year’s severe flu season, however, is only one of the leading contributors to Sickweather’s uptick in interest — and its recent oversubscribed $1 million crowdfunding campaign, said founder Graham Dodge. “We learn a lot every cold and…




