Around 2013, identical twin brothers Amiri and Rahiem Taylor met Patrick "Sticks" Jones at an open mic at a Sam Ash Music store in Brooklyn, New York City. All recent high-school graduates, the trio formed Blac Rabbit—they say the nameBlack Rabbit was already taken. The Taylors are known for covering the Beatles on the New York City Subway, and they left supermarket jobs and put off college to pursue music full-time. Bassist and occasional guitarist Josh Lugo joined later. The band is based in Rockaway Beach, Queens, New York City. It is represented by Jules Urbanski of the APA as of 2018. Blac Rabbit digitally released the song "All Good" as a single in June 2016. The song was later included on their six-track debut extended play, self-titled Blac Rabbit, which How Far Music released digitally on December 22, 2017. A CD later became available on Bandcamp. The EP was recorded in the Taylors' and their manager's houses and mixed by Rahiem. As critic Olivia D'Orazio writes, "Hazy guitar riffs and rumbling bass are steadfast throughout the EP, and the echoey vocals whisk you from one song to another." A recording of the Taylors playing the Beatles' "Eight Days a Week" received 3 million views on Twitter and 14 million on Facebook in February 2018. The viral online recognition increased the number of the band's Twitter followers from around 500 to 16,700 in two days. The band had to update its website due to traffic spurred by the 48-second video. With more exposure, the band could perform outside the subway with bookings in music venues, eventually playing festivals in Berlin and Guatemala as well as New York City's Bowery Ballroom and the Knitting Factory. They also covered the Beatles' "Michelle" for a Gucci advertisement featuring Harry Styles. From June 15 to July 3, 2018, the band went on a 16-date tour of the East Coast. On early tour dates far from New York City, Rahiem later recalled, some audiences who had only seen the Taylors' Ellen appearance thought they were a cover band and asked for Beatles tunes, which they did sometimes use to end sets. Amiri said their toughest crowd was in Montreal, where the audience had put on a "game face". On September 13, Blac Rabbit was the musical act at an event to promote the John Lennon Educational Tour Bus in New York City recreating the 1969 Bed-In For Peace. The band performed "Give Peace a Chance" alongside speakers including Yoko Ono, Ringo Starr, actor Jeff Bridges, and New York mayorBill de Blasio; "it was so surreal in person," Amiri said. The Seize the Day Tour, Blac Rabbit's second concert tour of 2018, ran October 23 to November 10. It was followed by a tour of Europe and the United Kingdom, ending on December 3 at the Beatles Story and The Cavern Club in Liverpool. Summarizing their ascent from busking in the subway and "playing for audience of barely anyone" to booking larger venues and festivals, Amiri said: "I was scared... All of that happened in one rush and it was just overnight." The Taylors have announced a new Blac Rabbit record, titled Interstella. Its first single, "Seize the Day", was released on November 21, 2018, followed by "Windy Cities" on May 10, 2019. Justin Jagbir, a keyboardist, joined the band before the release of Intersella, and played during the Interstella Tour of North America, from April 2 to May 18. On the day of the 92nd Academy Awards in 2020, Blac Rabbit played Beatles covers at Charles Finch and Chanel's pre-Oscar party at the Polo Lounge in Beverly Hills.
Musical style
The Taylors describe their original music as psychedelic rock, influenced by the Beatles, Radiohead, 1980s music, and contemporaries MGMT, Tame Impala, and Toro y Moi. Rahiem has said: "We just want to make wholesome, melodic, digestible but also very intelligent, deep, thought-provoking music," and he has noted the difficulty in balancing their love of the Beatles with forming Blac Rabbit's own identity. The band performs both Beatles covers and original songs with a "vintage" sound. Afropunk contributor Erin White wrote, "Their music has all of the positivity and optimism of an LSD trip with none of the existential dread." According to José Heinz of La Voz del Interior, the band is "as indebted to the sounds of the '60s as to this era's New York scene". The band's EP fuses surf and psychedelic music, with some tracks tinged by funk. The Taylors' vocals, doused with reverb, have drawn comparison to those of Tame Impala.