Kwamé
Kwamé | |
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Holland at a panel on hip hop and comics at the 2014 New York Comic Con | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Kwamé Holland |
Also known as | K-1 Million, K1 Mil |
Born | 1973 (age: 43) |
Origin | Corona, Queens, New York, U.S |
Genres | Hip hop, R&B, Pop |
Occupation(s) | Rapper, Producer |
Years active | 1988–1994, 2001–present |
Labels | Atlantic Records Cold Chillin' Records |
Associated acts | Skillz, Missy Elliott, Tweet, Christina Aguilera, LL Cool J, Fantasia, Salt-N-Pepa, Kid 'n Play, Sweet Tee, Antoinette Big Daddy Kane New Edition Keith Sweat Vivian Green Algebra Blessett Chante Moore Ro James Mary J Blige |
Kwamé (born 1973) is an American rapper who enjoyed brief popularity in the late 1980s and early 1990s. He is currently a music producer, sometimes credited as K-1 Million or K1 Mil.
Biography
In 1989, aged 16, Kwamé released his debut album, Kwamé the Boy Genius featuring a New Beginning, which he also produced with the aid of Hurby "Luv Bug" Azor. The 'A New Beginning' of the title refers to his backing band, which was unusual amongst emcees of the time. The album spawned the singles "The Man We All Know and Love" and "The Rhythm." The accompanying music videos featured a polka-dot motif in the costumes and production design. This was to become Kwamé's trademark and a hip hop fashion trend, as fans of his began wearing polka-dotted clothing.[1][2] In 1990, Kwamé released his second album A Day in the Life: a Pokadelick Adventure, a concept album about a day in the life of a high school student. The album spawned the hit singles "Oneovdabigboiz" and "Ownlee Eue."[1]
In 1992, aged 18, he released his third album, Nastee. This album marked a departure for him, discarding the polka-dots and writing more sexually charged lyrics, in contrast to his previously playful, intellectual persona. The title track was a minor hit but the album quickly fell from the charts.[3] His fourth album, 1994's Incognito failed to chart.[1][3]
In 2000, Kwamé reemerged as a music producer, sometimes working under the name K-1 Million. He has produced for many artists, such as LL Cool J, Mary J. Blige, Keyshia Cole, Missy Elliott, and Christina Aguilera. In 2004, he had a major success as the co-producer (with Eminem) of Lloyd Banks' smash hit song "On Fire."[1] In 2005, he had more success with co-writing and co-producing Tweet's single "Turn da Lights Off and Will Smith's single "Switch".[1] As a producer, Kwamé has sold over 30 million records.
In 2012, Kwamé teamed up with Vin Diesel to help score his web series The Ropes. He also formed the boutique label Make Noise, with signees including Beyond Belief, and released an instrumental album, Break Beat Diaries.
Kwamé has also written scores and original music for film and TV., including Drumline, Step Up 1 & 2, Stomp the Yard, Freedom Writers, The Comebacks, Coach Carter, and Fantastic Four and recently produced Vivian Green's fifth album Vivid. He has also joined the hip hop group the Alumni, alongside Chubb Rock, Dana Dane, Special Ed, and Monie Love.
In 2015 , Kwamé formed Make Noise Recordings . Distributed by Caroline / Capitol records, Kwamé signed R&B singer song writer Vivian Green . Make Noise released Vivian's 5th album Vivid produced entirely by Kwamé. Also garnered a top 2 R7B hit "Get Right Back To My Baby" & top 15 R&B Hit "Grown Folks Music (Work)" .
In 2016 TV One aired an episode of Unsung featuring Kwamé and unlike any other artist in the shows history, Kwamé scored all the music for his episode.
In 2017 Make Noise is set to release Vivian Green's 6th Album VGVI .
Personal life
Kwamé is a cousin of Vin Diesel, who danced in some of his early music videos.[4]
Discography (as artist)
Albums
- Kwamé the Boy Genius featuring a New Beginning (1989)
- A Day in the Life: A Pokadelick Adventure (1990)
- Nastee (1992)
- Incognito (1994, Ichiban Records)
- Break Beat Diaries (Instrumental Album) (2012, MAKE NOISE Recordings)
Singles
Year | Title | Chart positions | Album | |
---|---|---|---|---|
US Hot R&B | US Hot Rap | |||
1989 | "The Man We All Know and Love" | 33 | 2 | Kwamé the Boy Genius featuring A New Beginning |
"The Rhythm" | 57 | 1 | ||
"U Gotz 2 Get Down" | — | 7 | ||
"Sweet Thang" | — | 20 | ||
1990 | "Ownleeeue" | 33 | 1 | A Day in the Life: A Pokadelick Adventure |
"Oneovdabigboiz" | 40 | 3 | ||
1991 | "Hai Love" | 94 | 17 | |
1992 | "Nastee" | 68 | 16 | Nastee |
"Can U Feel It" | — | — | ||
1994 | "? It Like" | — | 20 | Incognito |
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 Hall, Rashaun (2004-10-07). "Lloyd Banks, Eminem Help Kwame Set The Polka Dots 'On Fire'". MTV.com. Retrieved 2009-07-10.
- ↑ The Fly Guy (2007-07-20). "Express Yourself: The Genius Of Kwamé". AllHipHop. Retrieved 2009-07-10.
- 1 2 Paine (2004-07-07). "Kwame: Nobody’s Laughing". AllHipHop.com. Retrieved 2008-05-05.
- ↑ "In Tha Background: Kwame - Once dissed by Biggie... But Now?". HipHopDX.com. 2002-09-06. Archived from the original on June 14, 2012.
External links
Media related to Kwame Holland at Wikimedia Commons