Just Weeks Before He Died, Oliver Tree Explained Why His Family Wouldn’t Inherit a Cent of His Fortune
Oliver Tree Nickell died on June 14 in a helicopter crash in Rio de Janeiro. He was 32. He made music that refused to sit in one genre, “Life Goes On,” “Miss You,” “Alien Boy,” and built a whole visual world around it with the bowl cut and the videos he wrote and directed himself.

Earlier this year, on the Zach Sang Show, he laid out exactly what he wanted to happen to everything he’d built. The plan was simple and a little radical. His family, and any kids he might have one day, would not inherit his wealth. He said he’d put his children through college and stop there, no silver spoon.

The rest would go back to the people he came up with. He described setting up a foundation, Dr. Oliver Tree’s Art Grants for Baby Geniuses, funded by the residuals his catalog would keep earning after he was gone. A committee of the artists he’d actually made things with would meet each year and vote on which emerging artists got the grants, in the spirit of the work he made. He said anyone could donate to it, and he hoped it would run for about 100 years.
It is too early to know the legal or operational status of that foundation now. What exists for certain is the interview, and the reasoning he gave for all of it.

“That’s when people appreciate you,” he said, “when you’re not there anymore.”
Want more Thought Catalog? Follow us on Facebook or head to our website.
