Matt Martians

Matt Martians
Matt Martians in September 2012.
Matt Martians in September 2012.
Background information
Birth nameMatthew Robert Martin
Born (1988-09-12) September 12, 1988 (age 36)
Atlanta, Georgia, United States[1]
Genres
Occupations
Years active2007–present
Labels
Member ofThe Internet
Formerly of
Websiteoddfuture.com

Matthew Robert Martin[2] (born September 12, 1988), known professionally as Matt Martians, is an American record producer, illustrator, singer and songwriter. Aside from his solo career, Martians is a founding member of the hip hop music collective Odd Future and the alternative R&B band The Internet, and is one half of the production duo The Jet Age of Tomorrow, a sub-group of Odd Future.[3]

Discography

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Solo

[edit]

Studio albums

  • The Drum Chord Theory (2017)
  • The Last Party (2019)
  • Going Normal (2021)
  • Butterfly Don't Visit Caterpillar (2021)
  • Matt's Missing (2024)

Extended plays

  • Bonus Going Normal (2021)

with Odd Future

[edit]

Studio albums

Compilations

Mixtapes

with The Jet Age of Tomorrow

[edit]

Mixtapes

Extended plays

  • Can I Hold Your Hand? (2010)
  • JellyFish Mentality: Bonus EP (2013)

with brandUn DeShay and The Jet Age of Tomorrow

[edit]

Extended plays

  • The Super D3Shay (2009)

with The Internet

[edit]

Studio albums

Extended plays

  • Purple Naked Ladies: 4 Bonus Songs (2012)
  • Ego Death (Bonus Tracks) (2015)

with Raleigh Ritchie and The Internet

[edit]

Extended plays

  • Black and Blue Point Two (2014)

Videography

[edit]
List of videos as a solo artist
Title Director(s) Album Year
"Dent Jusay / Where Are Yo Friends?" (feat. Syd and Steve Lacy) Matt Martians[4] The Drum Chord Theory 2017

Production discography

[edit]

References

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  1. ^ "How ATLien Matt Martians hooked up with Odd Future via the Internet". Clatl.com. Retrieved 16 December 2015.
  2. ^ "2GETHER (ENTERLUDE)". ASCAP. American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. Retrieved July 9, 2023.
  3. ^ "Q&A: How Odd Future's Syd the Kyd and Matt Martians Invented the Internet". Spin.com. Retrieved 16 December 2015.
  4. ^ Helman, Peter (27 January 2017). "Matt Martians – "Dent Jusay" (Feat. Syd & Steve Lacy) Video". Stereogum.com. Retrieved 17 March 2017.