The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
Big Hurt  |  CD Reviews  |  Classical  |  Jazz  |  Live Reviews  |  Music Features
unsexy2011_1000x50b

Akrobatik: down but not out

The beat goes on
By CHRIS FARAONE  |  June 8, 2011

main_TJI_akrobatik480
RUMORS OF HIS COMA have been greatly exaggerated. Akrobatik is still kicking.
 
It's hard to evaluate life-threatening illnesses if you skipped med school to kick rhymes. Still, countless members of the rap community diagnosed Boston MC Akrobatik (real name: Jared Bridgeman) on Twitter, spreading unsubstantiated reports that he had suffered a heart attack, and subsequently slipped into a coma, on May 12.

Some gossipers meant well. Others were just feeding the frenzy. But the only slice of the story that most of them got right is that there's an all-star benefit for Akro this Saturday at the Middle East.

"I guess you could say that a lot of people took some liberties," says Akro, who is not in a coma, and fielded our call at the beach near his East Boston apartment. "I understand how that sort of thing happens, but there were really very few people who were right there with me and who knew exactly what was going on."

In his first interview since the episode, which caused major worry in the rap blogosphere, Akro shared some details about his condition. On May 12, while relaxing at home by himself, Akro had an aortic dissection, a condition often linked to high blood pressure. A valve in his heart became ruptured, leading to his having surgery at Massachusetts General Hospital.

"It was an emergency situation," he says. "And sure, it could be simplified as a heart attack. But the way I look at it now, what's important is that I'm lucky to live so close to MGH, that I had the wherewithal to dial 911, and that I'm a really active dude who's been able to recover quickly."

An artist always on the move, Akro's scare did not come from a lack of exercise. He tours extensively with an energetic stage show worthy of his moniker. An ad hoc correspondent for NESN (and formerly for JAM'N 94.5 FM), he's frequently out and about at New England sporting events. Until last year, he even played fullback for the Randolph Oilers in the Eastern Football League.

As for personal habits, while he's not vegan like some of his enlightened rap peers, the famously athletic Akro, who is in his mid-30s, says he's no glutton. "It's not like I'm at the counter ordering burgers every day," he says. "There were no problems with my arteries or anything like that. The truth is that being African in America, I'm predisposed to having high blood pressure. I take the blame for it — I've definitely had warnings that I ignored because I'm young, and it caught up to me."

As near-tragic encounters often do, Akro's recent hospitalization added perspective to his life and career. He hasn't dropped a full-length project since 2008, when his Fat Beats release, Absolute Value, earned widespread acclaim as one of the best rap albums that year. Now he's in overdrive, polishing an upcoming LP titled Built to Last. "It was already called that," he says, "but it definitely has more meaning now."

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Slideshow: Video game heroes run amok in Boston, Summer releases from Brzowski, Pinsky, and more, Review: Circumstance, More more >
  Topics: Music Features , Middle East, Middle East, Boston,  More more >
| More

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
ARTICLES BY CHRIS FARAONE
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   KENJI NAKAYAMA TAKES AN AGE-OLD CRAFT TO NEW PLACES  |  January 10, 2012
    This winter, the Butera School of Art in Back Bay commences its last-ever sign-making classes, teaching students how to hand-letter everything from yachts to mom-and-pop shops.
  •   OCCUPY FIRST NIGHT  |  January 04, 2012
    If the Boston Police Department had undercover officers embedded in the Occupy Boston First Night operation, they would have found a whole mess of juicy goods to bring back to the Suffolk County district attorney's office.
  •   CALLING OUT 'THREE STRIKES'  |  January 05, 2012
    Three nights before Christmas, hundreds of concerned citizens crammed into the St. James African Orthodox Church in Roxbury to address what one civil-rights activist calls "the most stunningly racist piece of legislation" to hit Massachusetts in decades.
  •   OCCUPY THE FUTURE  |  December 28, 2011
    After barreling straight ahead for more than three months, Occupy is at its first fundamental turning point.
  •   LETTER TO AN OLD CONTRARIAN  |  December 21, 2011
    Most of the classes I had with Christopher Hitchens began the same way.

 See all articles by: CHRIS FARAONE

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed