No ID

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No I.D.

No I.D. (left) with Kanye West (middle) in a recording studio in October 2008.
Background information
Birth name Ernest Dion Wilson
Born Chicago, Illinois, United States
Origin Chicago, Illinois, United States
Genres Hip hop, R&B
Occupations Record producer, DJ, A&R, rapper, songwriter [1]
Instruments Sampler, keyboards, bass guitar
Years active 1989–present
Labels Roc Nation, GOOD Music, Def Jam
Associated acts Big Sean, Cocaine 80s, Common, Kanye West, Jay-Z, Nas

Dion Wilson, American hip hop and R&B record producer professionally known as No I.D. He is the current Executive Vice-President of Def Jam Recordings. Best known for his early work with Chicago rapper Common, Wilson is known as "The Godfather of Chicago hip hop".[2] The nickname No I.D. is his birth name, Dion, in reverse.

Career

Also known as Ernest Wilson, No I.D., working as a co-producer (and sometimes ghost producer) for Jermaine Dupri, "Heat" by Twista & Co-Produced with The Legendary Traxster "I Do It" by Big Sean, No I.D. has worked on hit singles such as "My Boo" by Usher and Alicia Keys, "Let Me Hold You" by Bow Wow featuring Omarion, and "Smile" by G-Unit, "Retrospect for Life" by Common feat. Lauryn Hill, as well as the hip hop staple "I Used to Love H.E.R." and "Resurrection" which garnered Common his early fame. No I.D. also introduced Kanye West to hip hop production, inviting him to his sessions with Common when West was only beginning. He also introduced Kanye to a long-time friend named Kyambo "Hip Hop" Joshua, who was A&R for Roc-a-fella Records who eventually signed West to his imprint Hip Hop Since 1978 which launched West's career as an artist. Kanye cites No I.D. as his mentor in "Last Call,"[3] "Big Brother" and "Made in America."

In 1997, No I.D. released an album under his own name, Accept Your Own and Be Yourself (The Black Album).[4]

His second release was with Dug Infinite, a two-album package called The Sampler, vol. 1. He also released Invisible Beats, a beat tape.[5]

In 2007, he was the focus of perhaps the most attention of his career for producing two songs from Jay-Z's album American Gangster. He has recently worked with such artists as Jay-Z (The Blueprint 3), Rhymefest, Plies, Big Sean, Killer Mike, Rick Ross, Drake (Thank Me Later), and Kanye West (808's & Heartbreak, My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy), Young Jeezy, and Rihanna on their upcoming albums. No I.D. produced the first single for Jay-Z's 11th studio album The Blueprint 3 titled "D.O.A. (Death of Auto-Tune)" and his second single "Run This Town" Feat Rihanna & Kanye West. He also worked with Common for the first time since 1997, co-writing and producing The Dreamer/The Believer. In 2012 He was an executive producer on the critically acclaimed album Life Is Good by Nas, producing 5 songs included the twice Grammy Nominated single "Daughters" and the promotional singles "Loco-Motive" and "Accident Murderers".

No I.D. is currently the Executive VP of Def Jam Records. Formerly, he was president of GOOD Music, a record label founded by Kanye West.[6] He is also The CEO and founder of ARTium Recordings, a Joint Venture with IDJ who's roster has Cocaine 80s, Jhene Aiko and Songwriter/Artist Elijah Blake (Formally known as Redd Stylez). Since becoming CEO he has signed Aiko and Logic to Def Jam. He then served as the primary producer of Big Sean's second album Hall of Fame. He told Complex in an August 2013 interview that he was currently working on Aiko and Logic's upcoming debut studio albums.[1]

Discography

References

External links

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