King Tee
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King Tee | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Roger McBride |
Born | 1969 |
Origin | Compton, California |
Genre(s) | Hip hop |
Occupation(s) | Rapper |
Years active | 1988-present |
Label(s) | Capitol Records, Loud Records : (1988-1994), Music Corporation of America : (1994-1996), Aftermath Entertainment : (1996-2004), Ruthless Records : (2004-...) |
Associated acts | Tha Alkaholiks Xzibit Dr. Dre |
King Tee, also spelled King T, (born Roger McBride in Compton, California), is an American West coast rapper from Compton, California.
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[edit] Career
Born in 1969, Tee began his rap career on Capitol Records in 1988, with Act a Fool. Some of Tee's first tracks were produced by The Unknown DJ, who also produced Ice T's earliest gangster rap tracks[citation needed]; this album, however, was entirely produced by eventual Dogg Pound-affiliate DJ Pooh in some of the producer's earliest work.
During his time with Capitol, Tee began mentoring a young trio of rappers called Tha Alkaholiks, or "Tha Liks," as well as their loosely affiliated collective called the Likwit Crew. The Likwits included Xzibit, who would later rise to fame and bring king Tee close to Compton producer Dr. Dre. Tha Liks put out their debut album under King Tee's guidance on Loud Records in 1993. Tee greatly influenced The Notorious B.I.G. with his deep voice, flow and rhyme style, which Big would at times imitate on his 1994 album Ready to Die. Tee later paid homage to Biggie on the track "6 In'a Moe'nin" on his album Thy Kingdom Come, using a similar setup to and vocal samples of Biggie's track "Somebody's Got to Die."
After 1994's Tha Triflin' Album, on which Tee worked with Marley Marl, he left Capitol for MCA and put out IV Life in 1995. After leaving MCA as well, he built with Dr. Dre and ended up signing to the producer's label, Aftermath Entertainment. However, Tee only released three songs while on the label, "Str8 Gone" and "Fame" which appeared on Dr. Dre Presents the Aftermath and "Some L.A. Niggaz" which appeared on 2001; the two began recording for King Tee's Aftermath album, but the project was subject to repeated push-backs. Eventually, King Tee requested a release from the label.
In 2002, King Tee independently released his Aftermath album, Thy Kingdom Come. He also released The Ruthless Chronicles in 2004, which featured some of the songs seen on Thy Kingdom Come and others produced by DJ Quik. In the interim, Tee has guested on DJ Muggs' Soul Assassins II album. He was mentioned on Nas' song "Where Are They Now?" and appeared on the West Coast remix, along with Kam and Ice-T and other California artists Breeze, Candyman, Threat, Sir Mix-A-Lot and The Conscious Daughters. After this appearance, he put out a mixtape called Boss Up Vol. 1 with music by Snoop Dogg, The Game, J-Ro and several other West Coast artists. In 2006 he made a guest appearance on the song "Poppin' Off" from Xzibit's album Full Circle. He has also reportedly started his own label, though no artists are yet signed to it.[1].rumored that he signed to bossupentertaiment. A remix of the song Money has appeared on Dr. Dre's son Hood Surgeon's The Autopsy Mixtape. The song was renamed "Fast Money" and features King Tee and Dr. Dre. The original song was on Thy Kingdom Come.
[edit] Discography
[edit] Albums
Album Information |
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Act a Fool
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At Your Own Risk
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Tha Triflin' Album
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IV Life
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Ruff Rhymes: Greatest Hits Collection
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Thy Kingdom Come/The Kingdom Come
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The Ruthless Chronicles
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[edit] Singles
- 1986 "Payback's a Mutha"
- 1987 "The Coolest"
- 1988 "Bass"
- 1989 "Act A Fool"
- 1990 "Ruff Rhyme (Back Again)"
- 1990 "At Your Own Risk"
- 1990 "Diss You"
- 1990 "Played Like a Piano" w/ Ice Cube and Breeze
- 1992 "Got It Bad Y'all"
- 1992 "Bust Dat Ass"
- 1993 "Black Togetha Again"
- 1994 "Dippin'"
- 1995 "Way Out There"
- 1995 "Free Style Ghetto" w/ Xzibit, Tha Alkaholiks, MC Breeze
- 2003 "Get Ready 2 Ride" w/ Battle Cat
- 2003 "Stop On By" w/ Tray Deee
- 2004 "Back Up" w/ Phil Da Agony
[edit] External links
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