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As part of the golden-age MC-and-DJ tandem Kool G Rap & DJ Polo, the Kool Genius of Rap enjoyed a successful and, above 更多>
小簡(jiǎn)介
As part of the golden-age MC-and-DJ tandem Kool G Rap & DJ Polo, the Kool Genius of Rap enjoyed a successful and, above all, influential run during the late 80s and early 90s before embarking on a fitful solo career. Born Nathaniel Wilson on July 20, 1968, in Queens, NY, Kool G Rap debuted in 1986 on Cold Chillin Records with the Its a Demo/Im Fly 12 single, produced by Marley Marl and billed to DJ Polo & Kool G Rap (the rappers name would later come first, before the DJs). A couple further singles followed — Rikers Island/Rhyme Thyme (1987), Poison (1988) — along with a Kool G Rap feature on Marley Marls Juice Crew classic The Symphony (1988), before Kool G Rap & DJ Polo released their debut album, Road to the Riches (1989), on Cold Chillin. Featuring each of their previously released singles, along with a couple new ones (Road to the Riches, Truly Yours), Road to the Riches was a remarkable debut and proved highly influential. Two subsequent Kool G Rap & DJ Polo albums, Wanted: Dead or Alive (1990) and Live and Let Die (1991), proved similarly influential and, though they tend to be less celebrated than Road to the Riches, are widely considered classics of the genre and are arguably better albums than the duos debut.
Kool G Rap embarked on a solo career at this point, releasing 4, 5, 6 (1995) on Cold Chillin. He released his second solo album, Roots of Evil (1998), on Illstreet Records, for Cold Chillin had ceased operations. The latter album was not well received, at least relative to Kool G Raps albums on Cold Chillin, and the rapper took some time off to regroup. He returned in 2000 with a promising 12 EP for Rawkus, The Streets, and then another, My Life, in 2001. Rawkus planned to release a full-length album by Kool G Rap, The Giancana Story, in fall 2001; however, when the label was abruptly shuttered and sold to MCA Records, the album didnt get released until over a year later, in November 2002, on Koch Records. Following this unfortunate turn of events, Kool G Rap went the independent route, releasing a collaborative album, Click of Respect (2003), on Blaze the World Records. Few heard that album, which was the last release by Kool G Rap for several years. It wasnt the last heard of the rapper, though, as he popped up on guest features now and then, most memorably alongside Big Daddy Kane on both the Roots Boom! (2004) and UGKs Next Up (2007).