Too Short on LL Cool J, MC Hammer & breaking in with Def Jam. interview

  • 7 лет назад
Too Short on LL Cool J, MC Hammer & breaking in with Def Jam. interview\r
Too $hort interview with Fab Five Freddy in Central Park on Yo! MTV Raps\r
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Todd Anthony Shaw (born April 28, 1966),[1][2] better known by the stage name Too Short (stylized as Too $hort), is an American rapper, producer, and or. He is best known for his hit songs like The Ghetto and Blow the Whistle. Too Short is one of the very few musicians to have been able to collaborate with both 2Pac and The Notorious B.I.G. during the height of their careers.\r
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Too Short is credited as being one of the pioneer rappers of West Coast hip hop.[1][2][3] Many of his rap lyrics are about pimping, drug use and other ually-related or explicit/vulgar topics.\r
Shaw was born and grew up in South Central Los Angeles, California. In the early 1980s, Shaw and his family moved to Oakland, California. He was a drummer in the band at Fremont High School in Oakland.[5] In the mid 1980s, Shaw produced custom songs (called special requests) for people with his high school friend, Freddy B. In 1983, Too Short had his first release, Dont Stop Rappin which, along with the following three releases, featured raw, simple drum beats from a LinnDrum drum machine. In the early 1990s his beats came from mostly a TR-808 and from mid-to-late 2000s, a TR-909 was used. In 1985, Too Short and Freddie B. formed the label Dangerous Music to regionally distribute his music and with others formed rap group The Dangerous Crew.[6] Dangerous Music became Short Records, and then Up All Nite Records. With his 1989 release, Life Is.Too Short, he began using replayed established funk riffs (rather than samples) with his beats.\r
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Subsequent work was primarily collaborative, including work with Tupac Shakur, The Notorious B.I.G., Scarface, and Pimp C. One of his notable collaborations during this period was on the track The World Is Filled. on the classic Notorious B.I.G. album Life After Death; he comes in on the third verse after Diddy and Biggie. Being featured on the album introduced him to a wider audience as well, due to his typical style contrasting greatly with the Mafioso theme of the album. He also appeared on TWDYs hit single Players Holiday from their 1999 debut album Derty Werk[7] as well as the Priority Records compilation Nuthin but a Gangsta Party.[8] After these appearances, he began working on his eighth album, Cant Stay Away. The album included guest appearances by 8Ball & MJG, Jay-Z, Jermaine Dupri, Sean Combs, E-40, Daz Dillinger, Lil Jon, Soopafly, Scarface and B-Legit.[9] Too Short relocated to Atlanta in 1994, but he did not begin working with a more diverse variety of Southern artists until 2000, when he collaborated with Lil Jon. With the 1999 release of Cant Stay Away, Too Short fully came out of retirement and released a number of new albums within the next few years, most of them taking on a crunk or Dirty South type sound, as he had become involved in the Southern rap scene. However, he didnt totally give up on his trademark funk grooves or ually explicit style. New albums released 2000-2003 were You Nasty (2000), Chase the Cat (2001), Whats My Favorite Word? (2002), and Married to the Game (2003). These albums all charted fairly well, as they all were in the top 71 of the Billboard 200, but they didnt do quite as well as Too Shorts earlier 1990s releases as none of them reached the top 10.[10]\r
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In 2004, his earlier 1990 single The Ghetto appeared on popular video game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, playing on West Coast hip hop radio station Radio Los Santos. Given that this was an incredibly popular game at the time, the featuring was acclaimed as a success for Too $hort, both in publicity and in the fame generated by the song.\r
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For his next album, 2006s Blow the Whistle, Too Short now took advantage of the new hyphy rap music that was emerging out of his original home base in Oakland. This saw somewhat of a resurgence for Too Short as it peaked at #14 on the Billboard 200, much better than each of his previous three releases.[10] However, his subsequent releases, such as 2007s Get Off the Stage, have not been as successful. On October 7, 2008 Too Short was honored by VH1 at the fifth annual Hip-Hop Honors along with Cypress Hill, De La Soul, Slick Rick and Naughty By Nature.