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Author Topic: R.I.P. Coolio  (Read 533 times)

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Offline supa2520

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R.I.P. Coolio
« on: September 30, 2022, 08:48:58 AM »


Coolio, the rapper whose playful and sometimes gritty takes on West Coast rap and anthemic hits like Gangsta's Paradise made him a hip-hop star in the 1990s, died on Wednesday in Los Angeles. He was 59.

His longtime manager, Jarez Posey, said he was told that Coolio died at a friend's house. No cause was given.

Artis Leon Ivey Jr. was born on Aug. 1, 1963. He grew up in Compton, Calif., in Los Angeles County, a place known for producing some of hip-hop's most successful artists, including Dr. Dre and Kendrick Lamar.

He told The Independent in 1997 that as a child he would play board games with his single mother, to whom he later dedicated his success. After a turbulent youth a bookish, asthmatic child, he became a teenage gang member, juvenile offender and drug addict %u2014 Coolio worked as a volunteer firefighter.

In his 20s, he moved to San Jose to live with his father and fight fires with the California Department of Forestry. He became more spiritual there and later credited Christianity for helping him overcome his addiction to crack.

As he embarked on a music career, Coolio joined a growing wave of West Coast hip-hop that was increasingly becoming mainstream; it had surged in national popularity as MTV, radio stations and major labels came to embrace this once-regional underground sound. After performing with the group WC and the Maad Circle alongside WC, Sir Jinx and DJ Crazy Toones, he went solo.

Coolio signed to Tommy Boy Records, the independent rap label known for releases by De La Soul, Naughty by Nature and Queen Latifah, which had partnered with Warner Bros. Records a decade earlier to expand its commercial reach.

Building off the gangster rap and G-funk sounds and images of N.W.A, Ice-T, Dr. Dre and Snoop Doggy Dogg, Coolio gained a following by combining his credibility with a willingness to appeal to a broad audience by means of softened language, dance tracks, recognizable samples and other nods to past hits.

A Spin review of the Gangstas Paradise album in 1996 called it great pop music and the most stylistically broad mainstream rap album you'll probably hear all year.

Coolio presents himself as an entertainer, the magazine added, Cone who projects an unhinged personality while creating solidly commercial sounds.

Gangstas Paradise had board cultural impact, even spawning a Weird Al Yankovic parody, Amish Paradise, which replaced the streets with farm country, offering lyrics about churning butter and selling quilts.


The scale of the original songs success awed its creator. Coolio told Rolling Stone that he was on tour in Europe when he realized that it was No. 1 all over the entire planet  not just in the States. I was No. 1 everywhere that you can imagine.

On Wednesday, the rapper Ice Cube recalled Coolios hard-earned rise, writing on Twitter that he had witnessed first hand this man%u2019s grind to the top of the industry.

Coolio, known for his spindly and sprouting cornrows, went on to sell 4.8 million albums in the United States, according to Luminate, the tracking service formerly known as Nielsen Music.

The year after his big hit topped the charts, he wrote and performed the theme song for Kenan & Kel, a Nickelodeon staple in the late 1990s starring the future Saturday Night Live comedian Kenan Thompson and Kel Mitchell. Coolio later became a recurring presence on reality TV, appearing in shows like Coolios Rules, a 2008 series that focused on his personal life and his quest to find love in Los Angeles.

He had four children with Josefa Salinas, whom he married in 1996 and later divorced. A complete list of survivors was not immediately available.

In 2009, Coolio pleaded guilty to drug possession and went to a rehabilitation program. In 2016, he pleaded guilty to a felony firearms charge after a loaded gun was found in his carry-on bag at an airport.

Coolio, who struggled with asthma all his life, served as the spokesman for the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America, according to his official online biography. At a 2016 performance in Brooklyn, he had an asthma attack and was saved by a fan who had an inhaler, Page Six reported.

Coolio had in recent years become aware of his place in hip-hop history. He said in 2018 that after long lamenting his struggles in the music industry, he came to understand that people would kill to take my place.

Im sure after Im long gone from this planet, and from this dimension, he said, people will come back and study my body of work.


man i remember growing up to his music and hes cool hair style back them plus he made appearances in films and tv shows this man is a true west cost hip hop legend and he will forever be immortalize to the world so Lets pay our rests to him because this true gangster is finally in paradise now

rest in peace Coolio/Leon Ivey Jr















for more news click here
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/28/arts/music/coolio-rapper-dead.html
« Last Edit: September 30, 2022, 09:07:21 AM by supa2520 »



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