Danny Rodriguez

D-Boy Rodriguez
Birth name Daniel Dimitri Rodriguez
Born (1967-11-10)November 10, 1967
The Bronx, New York City, U.S.
Died October 6, 1990(1990-10-06) (aged 22)
Dallas, Texas, U.S.
Genres Christian hip hop, hip hop
Years active 1989-1990
Labels Frontline Records

Daniel Dimitri Rodriguez (November 10, 1967 October 6, 1990),[1] alias D-Boy Rodriguez, was a Christian rap artist. He released two albums that received moderate commercial success, before being murdered in 1990. His third album was released posthumously.

Rodriguez saw rap music as a vehicle to reach inner-city youth in Dallas, Texas, through the Street Church Academy, a ministry founded in the Buckner Terrace area of Dallas in 1983 by his parents, former drug addicts Demi and Irma "Cookie" Rodriguez. The ministry was focused on anti-gang activities as well as fighting drug addictions among those who attended. Danny had been the Academy's first graduate.

Career

Debut album

Rodriguez was signed to Frontline Records, who released his debut album Plantin' a Seed in 1989. Christian blue-eyed soul singer Tim Miner was instrumental in creating the album in a technical role as well as assisting with songwriting, playing various instruments and singing background vocals on the disc. Miner's future wife Cindy Cruse also sang backing vocals.[2] "Pick Yourself Up", co-written with Miner and Tommy Sims of White Heart hit No. 8 on Christian radio from the album. It would be the only song D-Boy ever charted.[3]

Second album

Rodriguez' second album, 1990's Lyrical Strength of One Street Poet (street poet was Rodriguez' preferred term for himself rather than 'rapper') was one of the first in Christian rap to make extensive use of sampling, using soundbites from Pee-Wee Herman ("Nobody hipped me to that, dude..") and Bill Cosby ("Read your Bible..Bible states") along with musical elements from Sly and the Family Stone, Steve Miller Band, The Isley Brothers amongst others. The album also has an early appearance on backing vocals by Nicole Bruce,[4] who after marrying Christian rocker David Mullen would go on to greater recognition as Nicole Mullen. It peaked at No. 35 on Billboard's CCM album chart in early 1991.[1] Christian radio, however, was not ready for its more raw rap sound and it got little airplay.

Death

Rodriguez died in 1990 after being shot upon leaving his East Dallas apartment. No official motive has yet been revealed for the shooting. According to his mother: "They say it was everything from mistaken identity to a robbery attempt, but nobody really knows."[5] As a tribute to her late son, Cookie renamed Street Church Academy as the "D-Boy Community Center" after his death. Lyrical Strength.. was completed just one week before D-Boy's death and was released in November 1990.

Posthumous career

In 1993 his final album, Peace to the Poet, was released. It contained a collection of outtakes and other scraps put out by his label posthumously.[6] Labelmate Angie Alan recorded "Until We Meet Again" in his memory on her CD The Bottom Line. Rappers including tobyMac and Vanilla Ice.[1] His sister, Genie Rodriguez-Lopez, began recording rap music herself to carry on his legacy as MC Gee Gee. [7]

Fellow musicians Corey Red and Precise dedicated the song "Martyr's Anthem" to him. It is found on the 2004 album, Resistance Iz Futile. On April 28, 2006, his mother was in attendance as a concert in West Oak Cliff was held to mark the release of a Christian rap CD entitled The Fallen Soldier Compilation : A Tribute To D-Boy.[5] The album features contributions from fellow Christian rap pioneer Fred Lynch (of P.I.D.), Dynamic Twins, IDOL King, Lingo, Heata and others.[8]

Discography

Compilation Contributions

References

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