TrackSlayerz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
TrackSlayerz

Official TrackSlayerz Logo
Background information
Origin Orlando, Florida, United States
Genres Hip hop, R&B, Pop
Occupations Record Producers, songwriters
Instruments FL Studio, YAMAHA Motif, M-Audio Axiom 49,
Years active 2006-present
Labels Grand Hustle Records, TrackSlayerz Entertainment
Associated acts T.I.
Website http://www.trackslayerz.com
Members Dexter "Inf" Randall,
Demetri "Price" Duncan

The TrackSlayerz are a production duo consisting of members Dexter “Inf” Randall and Demetri “Price” Duncan.

Background

Inf (born (1989-02-20) February 20, 1989) grew up in a military family, traveling extensively within the U.S. and internationally during his childhood. This lifestyle “exposed (him) to a wide range of music from an early age." Price (born (1988-11-07) November 7, 1988) caught the music making bug after hearing “Next Episode” by Dr. Dre. Intrigued by the components of good music, Price began creating his own music in 2003.

Price crossed paths with Inf on Soundclick.com in 2005. They swapped beats but fell out of contact over time. However, in the summer of 2006, they reconnected and exchanged beats. During their detachment, Inf had been working at perfecting his use of FL Studio (then FruityLoops), which he was introduced to in 2001 and still credits as the “main weapon in the TrackSlayerz’s production arsenal." Having grown in their production skills, they liked the development of each other’s sounds and decided to work together and the TrackSlayerz production team was established.

Career

The production duo draw from heart, soul and raw emotion, to create their innovative sound; a combination that has generated numerous opportunities for the beat making team to turn out hits for several chart topping hip-hop artists. Their catalog includes Yung Joc ’s "Posted at the Store" featuring Gucci Mane and Yung Ralph, which was the lead single from 2009's The Grind Flu; Jim Jones ’ “Pulling Me Back” featuring Chink Santana, from Jones’ 2009 release, Pray IV Reign [1] which debuted at number nine on Billboard’s top 200, as well as the Lloyd Banks track, "We Remain" from his January 2010 mixtape release, V.5. Most notably, the TrackSlayerz are the sound behind T.I. ’s 2010 comeback single, “I’m Back”;[2] the first single from T.I. after serving a one year prison sentence after being convicted for federal weapons charges. “I’m Back”;[3] was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Rap Solo Performance at the 53rd Grammy Awards. In fact, T.I. was so impressed with how the TrackSlayerz’s instrumentals complimented his lyricism, he signed the collective to a production deal with Grand Hustle Records.

Production Discography

Artist Song Album Year
Juice “Illest New Rapper Alive” The Certificate 2008
Juice “Most Anticipated” The Certificate 2008
Juice “Put Ya Hands Up” The Certificate 2008
Juice “Welcome to My Hood” feat. Gage The Certificate 2008
Nu Jerzey Devil "I Love Cash" feat. Rick Ross Black Wall Street Radio Vol. 3 2008
Jim Jones “Pulling Me Back” feat. Chink Santana Pray IV Reign 2009
Lloyd Banks “We Remain” V5 2009
Yung Joc “Posted At The Store” feat. Gucci Mane & Yung Ralph Grind Flu 2009
Juice “American Me” feat. Kendrick Lamar American Me 2010
Jim Jones “Rosary” Ghost of Rich Porter 2010
T.I. “Gettin' Paid” Fuck A Mixtape 2010
T.I. "I'm Back" No Mercy 2010
Ya Boy “Come and Go” Kalifornia Konvict 2011
Layne Harper “The Letter” Moral Evaluations 2011
Gorilla Zoe “Illuminate Me” (Promo Single) 2011

Future Work

The TrackSlayerz not only have aspirations to expand their discography, but to broaden their catalogue to include pop and rock music, video game soundtracks as well as television and film.

References

Record Companies – TrackSlayerz Entertainment [4] TrapMuzik [5]

  1. Jim Jones Official Website Credits,
  2. T.I.'s I'm Back
  3. T.I.'s I'm Back
  4. Official Website
  5. TrapMuzik Official Website

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.