| |
Shawn
Corey Carter, 4 December 1969,
Brooklyn, New York City, New York,
USA. Raised in Brooklyn, Carter was
a school friend of the
Notorious B.I.G.
He first started releasing records
in the late 80s, part-financing his
by hustling. In 1990, he appeared on
records by his close friend Jaz
("The Originators") and Original
Flavor ("Can I Get Open'), and later
scored an underground hit single
with 1995"s "In My Lifetime".
Drawing on Jaz's dealings with
mercenary labels, Jay-Z set-up his
own Roc-A-Fella imprint in 1996 with
entrepreneur Damon Dash and Kareem
"Biggs" Burke. His debut set,
Reasonable
Doubt, went on to achieve
gold sales and produced the US
number 50 pop single "Ain't No Nigga"/"Dead
Presidents", featuring future rap
star
Foxy Brown.
The album, which reached US number
23 in July, attracted fans with a
mixture of hard-hitting street
lyrics and rhymes, epitomized by the
collaboration with Notorious B.I.G.
on "Brooklyn's Finest'. The
follow-up
In My Lifetime, Vol.
1 was released in the
aftermath of Notorious B.I.G.'s
murder, and debuted at US number 3
in November 1997. Featuring guest
appearances from
Puff
Daddy,
Lil" Kim,
Too Short,
BLACKstreet
and
DJ Premier,
this sombre and intensely personal
album included the stand-out tracks
"You Must Love Me" and "Where I'm
From"...>>>
Book Jay Z for Your Event
Although in demand as a guest
artist, Jay-Z found the time to
write, produce, and direct the
semi-autobiographical short
Streets Is
Watching. The gold-selling
soundtrack introduced several of
Roc-A-Fella's rising stars,
including Memphis Bleek, Rell and
Diamonds In The Rough, and featured
the hit single "It's Alright". Jay-Z
then became a major star with the
hit singles, "Can I Get A ... " and
"Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem)",
the latter built around a line from
the musical
Annie. One of
the more bizarre samples to be used
on a hip-hop track, the single
nevertheless became an international
hit (UK number 2, December 1998/US
number 15, March 1999). The album of
the same name featured hotshot
producer
Timbaland,
in addition to the usual team of Ski
and DJ Premier. Guest rappers
included
DMX,
Foxy Brown and Too Short, on a
package that diluted Jay-Z's
hard-hitting lyrical edge in an
attempt to corner the crossover
market.
Vol. 2 " Hard Knock
Life easily succeeded in its
aim, staying at US number 1 for five
weeks before finally being deposed
by
Alanis Morissette's
new album.
Despite a hectic schedule as a guest
producer/writer and rapper, Jay-Z
still found the time to enter the
studio and record tracks for his new
album. Released in December 1999,
Vol. 3 ... Life And
Times Of S. Carter confirmed
his status as one of hip-hop's most
popular artists when it topped the
album charts the following month.
The following year's
The Dynasty:
Roc La Familia 2000, another
US chart-topper, was originally
planned as a supergroup
collaboration with fellow Roc-A-Fella
rappers
Beanie Sigel,
Memphis Bleek and Amil. Jay-Z's
remarkable roll continued with
2001's
The
Blueprint, another stellar
work putting him out front as the
current leader of the genre. The
same December he was sentenced to
three years probation for stabbing
record producer Lance "Un" Rivera at
a New York nightclub two years
previously. He announced in October
2003 that he would retire from
recording and performing, and devote
his time to the business side of the
music industry.
>>>
Book Jay Z for Your Event
|