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American rapper from Illinois

Primary Keef

Chief Keef performing in 2019

Chief Keef performing in 2019

Background information
Birth name Keith Farrelle Cozart[1]
Also known as Sosa, BigGucci Sosa
Built-in (1995-08-15) August 15, 1995 (historic period 26)
Chicago, Illinois, U.S.
Genres
  • Hip hop
  • drill
  • trap
  • mumble rap[ii] [3]
  • punk rap[4]
Occupation(south)
  • Rapper
  • vocalist
  • songwriter
  • record producer
Years active 2008–present
Labels
  • E1
  • RBC
  • FilmOn Music
  • Fontana
  • Glo Gang
  • 1017 Brick Squad
  • Interscope
Associated acts
  • Fredo Santana
  • Gucci Mane
  • Kanye West
  • Lil Reese
  • Mike Volition Fabricated It
  • Soulja Boy
  • Immature Chop
  • Zaytoven
Children four
Website chiefkeef.com
ChiefKeef logo.png

Keith Farrelle Cozart (born August xv, 1995),[5] better known past his stage name Chief Keef, is an American rapper. His music commencement became pop during his teen years in the early 2010s amidst high schoolhouse students from Chicago's Southward Side.[6] In 2012, his pop local single "I Don't Like" was remixed by American rapper Kanye Westward and reached the Billboard Rap Top 20, further raising Cozart's profile.[6] A bidding war between major labels resulted in Keef signing with Interscope. His debut album Finally Rich was released in December 2012, and featured the singles "I Don't Like" and "Love Sosa", which would popularize the Chicago rap subgenre drill.[7]

Primary Keef has faced ongoing legal issues during his career, including weapons possession charges, house arrest sentences, and a performance ban imposed by Chicago authorities.[viii] Though he was dropped from Interscope in belatedly 2014 and later signed to 1017 Records, he continued self-releasing projects through his own Glo Gang characterization. These included: Nobody (2014), Back from the Dead two (2014), Bang 3 (2015), and Thot Billow (2017).

By the belatedly 2010s, critics have pointed to Chief Keef as a major influence on contemporary hip hop through his innovation with the drill subgenre and the impact of his music on other artists.[ix] [vii] [10]

Life and career

Early life (1995–2010)

Main Keef was born Keith Farrelle Cozart[i] in Chicago, Illinois, to Lolita Carter who was 15 and unwed. He is named afterward his deceased uncle, Keith Carter, who was known as "Large Keef".[xi] He lived at the Parkway Garden Homes located in the Washington Park neighborhood on the city's South Side, a stronghold for the Blackness Disciples street gang of which Chief Keef is a member.[12] [xiii]

Chief Keef has been estranged from his biological male parent, Alfonso Cozart,[xiv] since he was a small. His legal guardian was his grandmother with whom he lived in Chicago.[xv] He began rapping equally a v-twelvemonth-one-time using his mother'southward karaoke car and tapes to record his music.[16] During his childhood, Chief Keef attended Dulles Elementary School and the Imprint School, a therapeutic day school.[xvi] He dropped out of Dyett High Schoolhouse at historic period xv.[17] [18]

Early on years, Finally Rich, and subsequent mixtapes (2011–2013)

Photograph of Kanye West in a red suit and white shirt holding a microphone

Kanye Westward (pictured), a beau Chicagoan, remixed Keef'due south single "I Don't Like", raising his profile.

In 2011, Chief Keef first attracted local attention from Chicago's South Side community with his mixtapes, The Glory Road and Bang.[19] In December, he was arrested for firing a gun from his machine in Chicago's Washington Park neighborhood; he was placed under house arrest at his grandmother's residence for 30 days, followed by some other xxx days of dwelling confinement.[20] [21] While under business firm abort, he posted several videos to his YouTube account,[22] forerunners to Chicago'southward hip hop subgenre, drill.[22] [23]

Keef's song "I Don't Like" became a hitting in Chicago. A local party promoter called it "the perfect Chicago song because 'niggas just hate everything out here'".[21] It caught Kanye West'south attending, and he remixed the song with rappers Pusha T, Jadakiss and Big Sean.[24] As a result, Keef "suddenly shot upward out of obscurity".[25]

In the summer of 2012, Master Keef was the subject area of a bidding war among record labels wishing to sign him, including Young Jeezy's CTE World.[26] While 2012 proved to exist a relatively quiet year in terms of his musical output, Chief Keef began the yr past signing with Interscope Records. In a split deal he was promised his ain label imprint, Celebrity Boyz Entertainment (GBE).[26] The deal was worth $vi,000,000 over a three album layout, with an additional $440,000 advance to institute GBE.[xv]

The deal gave Interscope the right to pull out of the contract if Master Keef's debut album Finally Rich, released on December 18, 2012,[27] had failed to sell 250,000 copies past Dec 2013.[28] Featured guests on the anthology include rappers: 50 Cent, Wiz Khalifa, Young Jeezy, Rick Ross and his boyfriend Glory Boyz member Lil Reese.[29] In May 2013 he signed with 1017 Brick Squad Records.[xxx]

Chief Keef is featured on "Hold My Liquor", the fifth track on Kanye West'south album, Yeezus, released on June 18, 2013.[31] Keef'due south contributions to the track were praised by musician Lou Reed who said, "'Hold My Liquor' is only heartbreaking, and specially coming from where it's coming from – heed to that incredibly poignant claw from a tough guy like Main Keef, wow."[32]

On his 18th birthday, August 15, 2013, Chief Keef historic by releasing the mixtape Bang, Pt. 2.[33] It was highly anticipated as the commencement project following his debut album, merely received a mixed to negative critical response.[34] On October 12, 2013, another mixtape, Omnipotent Sosa, was released.[35] Like Bang, Pt. two, Almighty So besides received mixed to negative critical reviews.[34] [36] Afterwards serving his October 2013 jail term (meet § Legal issues), he began working on his second studio album and a biopic.[37]

Nobody and Bang 3 (2014–2016)

Chief Keef began experimenting with producing his music in 2014. Meaghan Garvey of The Fader noted this was fitting as the rapper has "ever been more concerned with vibe than meaning, and product is his most efficient tool to create a mood without getting bogged down by pesky syntax."[34] In January, Chief Keef announced he was working on a new mixtape entitled Blindside 3.[38] In Feb, he unveiled the cover art to his upcoming mixtape Dorsum From The Dead 2 the sequel to his critically acclaimed mixtape, Back From The Dead.[39] During Feb, Principal Keef said his quondam lean habit and bad mixing contributed to the lack of quality music on his 2 mixtape projects Bang Pt. 2 and Omnipotent So and that he was disappointed in both projects.[40]

Afterward in February 2014, he announced an EP before his second studio album Blindside three, entitled Bang iv, as a preview.[41] The following day, Fredo Santana appear he and Chief Keef were going to release an album collaboration.[42] In March, Keef released the outset official single from Bang 3 entitled "Fuck Rehab" featuring his beau Glo Gang creative person and cousin Mario "Blood Money" Hess. This marked Hess's final recording before his decease on April 9, 2014.[43] On March fourteen Main Keef released the official music video for "Fuck Rehab".[44] Although Interscope executive Larry Jackson announced that Bang 3 would be released on June 10, it was delayed once again.[45]

In Oct 2014, Chief Keef was dropped past Interscope Records. He confirmed via Twitter that every project he had planned, including the release of the long-awaited Bang three, would still be released.[46] Young Chop criticized Interscope's decision to drop Chief Keef.[47] Despite existence set for a Dec 2014 release, Bang 3 did non materialize.[48] Chief Keef's mixtapes, Mansion Musick prepare for a Nov 28 release, and Thot Breakers set up to release on Feb 14, 2015, were not released as appear.[49] All the same, he was successful in releasing Big Gucci Sosa, a 12-track collaborative mixtape, with Gucci Mane,[50] [51] also as Back From the Dead 2, which was made available for digital download from iTunes.[52]

Main Keef self-produced 16 of the 20 songs on the mixtape.[53] David Drake of Pitchfork Media said, "For his starting time steps into the rapper-producer territory, he shows promise—though it's tough to imagine most of these beats working exterior the context of a Master Keef album, equally they are primed to frame his vocals."[54] Rolling Stone ranked the mixtape 25th on its listing of the xl all-time rap albums of 2014 commenting, "The bleak earth from which he came notwithstanding shapes his sound; it's a bleak and lonely record, with few guests and a darkly psychedelic shape formed by drugs and likely PTSD. Yet he finds a gleeful humanity inside the globe'southward rotten core, with bluntly stiff, economical rapping that gets strong mileage per give-and-take."[55]

In Nov, he announced Nobody, a "Glo Producer album" that featured guest vocals by Kanye West and Tadoe.[56] It was prepare to be released on December 2,[56] merely appeared on December 16.[57] The album's title track was noted for being ane of Keef'southward more emotionally driven tracks.[58] Chris Coplan of Event of Audio wrote "the track itself feels like the apex of a night spent binge-drinking."[59] The album was awarded a vii.0/10 score by Pitchfork Media 's Meaghan Garvey.[53]

On February 18, 2015, Chief Keef released Deplorable four the Weight, a 20-track mixtape.[60] Elliott Pearson of The Alibi commented: "Sorry 4 the Weight is another consistent chapter in the rapper'southward singular Midwestern gothic repertoire, and if 'What Up' is any indication, he's fabricated serious progress as a beat-maker too."[61] The mixtape was largely a solo effort, featuring only Andy Milonakis and Glo Gang labelmate, Benji Glo.[49] [62] In 2015, his track "Faneto" was slowly building momentum since its Oct 2014 release.[63] [64] On April 24, 2015, Chief Keef announced his next album, titled The Cozart, saying it would exist released soon.[65] He signed with FilmOn Music, a segmentation of media tycoon Alki David, in May 2015.[ citation needed ]

On July 11, 2015, Marvin Carr, ameliorate known by his stage name Capo, a longtime member of Principal Keef's Glo Gang label, was shot and killed in a drive-by shooting in Chicago.[66] After killing Capo, the driver of the vehicle reportedly struck a stroller holding 13-month-old Dillan Harris killing him instantly. Primary Keef announced on Twitter he would be holding a complimentary benefit concert every bit a tribute to Capo and encouraged concertgoers to donate to the Harris family. He also announced the formation of the Stop the Violence Now Foundation, in an endeavor to decrease crime in Chicago.[67] Because of outstanding warrants in Illinois, Keef was scheduled to attend the concert via hologram from a audio stage in Beverly Hills.[68]

The concert, organized by HologramUSA and FilmOn Music, was planned to be held in Chicago's Redmoon Theater.[69] It faced a series of delays after Chicago mayor Rahm Emanuel's office claimed Main Keef was "an unacceptable office model" and that his music promoted violence.[lxx] Chief Keef'southward representatives and so worked out an organization with promoters of Craze Fest in Hammond, Indiana, to concord the concert there. Chief Keef's hologram made a plea for peace in Chicago saying, "Stop the violence, stop nonsense, cease the killing. Allow the kids grow up", before performing "I Don't Similar".[71]

Fearing the concert was a threat to public safety, Hammond mayor Thomas McDermott, Jr. had the city's law section shut down the generators powering Primary Keef'due south hologram. McDermott was quoted as saying, "I know zip about Main Keef. All I'd heard was he has a lot of songs about gangs and shooting people — a history that'due south anti-cop, pro-gang and pro-drug use. He's been basically outlawed in Chicago, and we're not going to allow [him] circumvent Mayor Emanuel by going next door."[71] Chicago Tribune columnist Eric Zorn criticized Emmanuel and Hammond for their decisions, claiming they infringed upon Chief Keef'due south Beginning Amendment rights.[69]

Dedication, Glotoven and Omnipotent So 2 (2016–nowadays)

In March 2016, Chief Keef tweeted that he was retiring from rapping. The annunciation came as his recorded output was slowing downwardly.[72] All the same, subsequently in the yr he was featured on MGK's vocal, "Young Man".[73] He also released a 17-track mixtape Two Zero One Vii in January 2017.[74] Principal Keef joined a long line of rappers, including Jay Z, Lupe Fiasco, Nicki Minaj and others, who claimed to have retired only to return to making music.[75]

Chief Keef released iv mixtapes in the lead up to releasing his tertiary album, Dedication, on Dec 1, 2017.[76] [77] The Guardian chosen Dedication his "most satisfying album to date".[78]

In 2018, Chief Keef was able to drop more than mixtapes, such as Mansion Musick and Back from the Expressionless 3 and more mixtapes in The Leek series. He likewise did more features for musicians such every bit Playboi Carti, Soulja Male child, and G Herbo. [79] [lxxx]

In early 2019, Chief Keef and Zaytoven worked together in the studio. Chief Keef after confirmed they were making a collaborative mixtape called Glotoven. It was released on March fifteen, 2019, and was supported by the single "Spy Kid".[81] On April twenty, 2019, Chief Keef revealed he had another mixtape planned, dubbed Almighty And then two. He so released a song with Youngboy Never Bankrupt Again chosen "Fire fighter". The mixtape is also scheduled to have features from Lil Uzi Vert, Soulja Boy and Lil Reese, amidst others. Chief Keef too released some other single titled "Boost".[82]

In March 2020, Chief Keef earned his first major production credit on Lil Uzi Vert's second studio album, Eternal Atake, with the song "Chrome Heart Tags".[83] Principal Keef was afterwards featured on Uzi's anthology Lil Uzi Vert vs. the World two with a vocal performance on the song "Bean (Kobe)", which became his highest-charting song on the Hot 100 at number nineteen.[84]

Other ventures

Glo Gang

Glo Gang
Parent visitor Amusement One
Founded 2014
Founder Chief Keef
Condition Active
Distributor(s) E1 Music
Genre Hip hop, midwest hip hop, drill
Country of origin Usa
Location Chicago, Illinois
Los Angeles, California
Official website glogangworldwide.com

Equally part of his contract with Interscope Records, Principal Keef'southward characterization imprint, Glory Boyz Amusement (GBE), was established.[85] He and his managing director, Rovan Manuel, each owned 40% of GBE's shares. Chief Keef'southward cousin and fellow rapper, Fredo Santana, his uncle Alonzo Carter, and Anthony H. Dade, owned the remaining 20% of GBE.[15] Various assembly would be signed with the label, such as rappers Lil Reese, Fredo Santana and producer Young Chop.[86] [87] [88]

The label had been active since 2011 but had simply released mixtapes and was not a fully functioning tape company. Later on releasing Chief Keef's Finally Rich in December 2012, the label was set up to release an album past Lil Reese in the following months, along with diverse mixtapes. Notwithstanding, on January iii, 2014, Principal Keef said that Glory Boyz Entertainment was "no more", and he was starting a new record label named Glo Gang.[89] [ninety] Prior to his decease, Blood Money revealed in an interview the members of Glo Gang were Primary Keef, Tray Savage, Ballout, Capo, Tadoe, JusGlo, and himself.[91]

Current artists

  • Main Keef
  • Tadoe
  • Ballout
  • Lil Wink
  • Benji Flo
  • Terintino
  • JusGlo

Former artists

  • Lil Reese
  • Tray Brutal (deceased)
  • Fredo Santana (deceased)
  • Gino Marley
  • Capo (deceased)
  • Blood Money (deceased)
  • SD
  • Snap Dogg

Personal life

At the historic period of 16, Chief Keef had his beginning kid, a daughter, born Kayden Kash Cozart—nicknamed Kay Kay.[5] He was served with a request for child support by the child's mother.[92] In November 2013, Dna documents revealed that he had fathered a 10-month-one-time daughter, and was subsequently ordered to begin paying child back up.[93] In September 2014, Chief Keef announced the birth of his third child, and his showtime son, whom he named Krüe Karter Cozart.[94]

In May 2015, he was sued by some other adult female who claimed he is the male parent of her child.[95] Since he had failed to respond to the legal documents with which he was served, he was ordered to announced in court. After declining to practice and then, a bench warrant was issued for his abort.[95] Despite these issues, LA Weekly reported that at least on Instagram Chief Keef "appears to accept fatherhood seriously."[96]

In August 2015, he caused a controversy after naming his newborn son Sno "FilmOn Dot Com", inspired by his record label, FilmOn Music, to promote his album Bang three.[97] [98] Following a dispute over the child'south paternity, FilmOn Music retracted the proper noun until the matter is settled.[99]

2 of his cousins, Fredo Santana and Tadoe, were signed to his Celebrity Boyz Entertainment label.[100] His stride-brother was shot dead on Jan 2, 2013.[101] Some other of his cousins, Mario Hess, also known equally Large Glo, who performed under the stage name Blood Money, was shot and killed in Chicago's Englewood neighborhood on April 9, 2014.[102] Hess had been signed to Interscope Records only two weeks prior to his killing.[103] [104] In an interview with Billboard, Primary Keef explained how Big Glo's death influenced his life saying, "When that happened that was the biggest lesson. It told me 'You gotta grow up.'"[105]

After being evicted from his Highland Park habitation, he relocated to Los Angeles.[106] [107] In an interview with Noisey'south Rebecca Haithcoat, Principal Keef told her his favorite function nigh Los Angeles is, "the tranquility".[107] After moving to Los Angeles, he began indulging in his new-establish hobby of art collecting, once he discovered the paintings of art teacher Bill da Butcher while in rehab. One time acquainted, da Butcher began working on paintings personally meant for Principal Keef.[107] He believed that his move to Los Angeles benefited him; in an interview with Billboard, he said: "I got abroad from all the unnecessary problem. It'southward meliorate out here [in L.A.] than in Chicago, because I got in so much trouble. I like living out here. I retrieve information technology improved me. It inverse me, and [inspired] me to go somewhere bigger."[105]

Legal issues

On Jan 27, 2011, Principal Keef was apprehended on charges of heroin manufacture and distribution.[108] As a juvenile offender, he was determined to exist a "delinquent", rather than guilty of his charges, and served fourth dimension nether house abort.[108] In December 2011, he left his grandmother's home holding a coat over his hands in front of his waistband. A policeman stopped to question the rapper. He dropped the coat, flashed a handgun and ran away.[109]

Officers chased the then-16-yr-old Principal Keef, who turned around several times and pointed the gun at them. The policemen "discharged their weapons" but missed. They caught him and recovered the loaded pistol. Chief Keef was charged with iii counts of aggravated assault with a firearm on a police officeholder and aggravated unlawful use of a weapon. He was likewise given a misdemeanor charge for resisting abort. He was held in the Cook County Juvenile Detention Eye until a estimate sentenced him to dwelling confinement at his grandmother'southward firm.[109]

On September v, 2012, Chicago Constabulary stated Chief Keef was existence investigated for a possible connection to the shooting expiry of fellow rapper and Englewood resident, Joseph Coleman, who performed under the phase name "Lil JoJo".[110] This began after Principal Keef had mocked his decease on Twitter,[111] which he later claimed was the result of his account being hacked.[112] Coleman's mother has openly maintained Chief Keef paid to have her son killed.[113]

Melt Canton prosecutors asked a guess to remand him to juvenile detention for alleged parole violations on Oct 17, 2012. This was in response to a video interview he held at a shooting range which included footage of him discharging a firearm. A hearing was set up for November 20, 2012, which was later on delayed and moved up to January fifteen, 2013.[114] The court ordered Pitchfork Media, which had posted the now removed video, to provide the interview'southward footage.[115]

On December 31, 2012, Primary Keef was issued a judicial summons for a new and unrelated alleged parole violation. Prosecutors claimed he failed to notify his juvenile parole officer of a change of accost. A hearing was ready for Jan 2, 2013.[116] Although prosecutors requested that he be jailed, Cook County judge Carl Anthony Walker allowed him to remain gratuitous, maxim he had non been presented with "whatever credible evidence" to warrant incarceration.[117]

Master Keef was taken into custody on January 15, 2013, after a juvenile court judge ruled that the gun range interview video constituted a probation violation. Two days later, he was sentenced to two months in a juvenile detention facility and was made a ward of the state.[118] He was released on March 14, 2013.[119] On January 17, 2013, Chief Keef was sued by Washington, D.C.-based promotion company Team Major for $75,000 for a missed show. According to the firm, he was supposed to perform at The O2 Arena in London on December 29, 2012. He never showed up and neither he nor his label has explained why he missed the date.[120]

He ignored the lawsuit, and the court ordered him to pay $230,019 damages to Squad Major past default.[121] He was arrested in an upscale hotel in DeKalb County, Georgia, for allegedly smoking marijuana in public and for hell-raising conduct on May 20, 2013.[122] He was released later on in the twenty-four hour period.[123] Viii days later, Chief Keef was arrested for driving 110 mph in a 55 mph zone in his hometown of Chicago, and for driving with an unlawful number of passengers. He was afterward released on bond.[124]

He returned to court on June 17 and pleaded guilty to speeding. He was ordered to pay a $531 fine, serve eighteen months of probation, complete threescore hours of community service and undergo random drug tests.[125] On Oct fifteen, 2013, Keef returned to jail for a twenty-day judgement for a probation violation subsequently testing positive for marijuana.[37] On October 24, 2013, he was released early for good behavior.[126] However, on November 6, 2013, Chief Keef was jailed on another probation violation.[127]

Following a stint in rehab, Chief Keef was arrested on March 5, 2014, in Highland Park, Illinois, for driving under the influence of marijuana, driving on a suspended license and was cited for having no proof of insurance.[128] On February four, 2014, Kim Productions filed conform against him to recover losses they allege were incurred afterwards he failed to appear at a RapCure benefit concert in Cleveland, Ohio, in June 2013. The suit alleges that Kim Productions provided him with a $15,000 deposit for the performance. The lawsuit also alleges that equally a result of his failure to announced, the concert had to be cancelled.[129]

In June 2014, Main Keef was evicted from his Highland Park home.[106] Although Bal Bansal, the owner of the house, maintained he was a skillful tenant and that his departure from the habitation was voluntary, police confirmed information technology was an eviction.[106]

In January 2017, Chief Keef was arrested for allegedly beating up and robbing a producer by the name of Ramsay Tha Great. He claimed that Master Keef stole his Rolex lookout and pointed firearms at him. These charges were dropped for lack of show.[130] Chief Keef was arrested in S Dakota for smoking cannabis and possession of drug paraphernalia in June 2017. He was able to make bail and took the charges to trial. In April 2019 he pleaded no contest and was given a suspended sentence.[131]

Prototype

Primary Keef is often seen as a representation of the "Chiraq" gangsta rap civilization that is present in Chicago.[96] He often refers to himself as "Sosa" as practise his peers and the media.[17] [96] [132] The nickname "Sosa" is a reference to Alejandro Sosa, the drug kingpin in the motion picture Scarface.[133] LA Weekly reported that Chief Keef's Glo Gang entourage respects the rapper. One fellow member of the Glo Gang, Ballout, stated, "We learned all that from Sosa, we be in the studio with him so much", calling him, "a rhyming machine. A music genius. Blackness Justin Bieber, if yous inquire me."[96]

The New York Times stated that Chief Keef "symbolizes" Chicago's drill music scene and is the "best known of the young generation of Chicago rappers."[23] In November 2012, Lucy Stehlik of The Guardian described Chief Keef as drill's "alpha male".[22] David Drake of Pitchfork Media wrote, "Chief Keef is in rarefied air for street rap—a artistic voice with an original, cohesive aesthetic", calculation, "to the grassroots, among a new generation of stars, he sits at street rap'due south aesthetic center, not its margins."[54]

Photograph of 50 Cent with whom Chief Keef has been comopared

Primary Keef has fatigued comparisons to 50 Cent (pictured).

A The New York Times article compared Chief Keef to fifty Cent, noting that, like him, Chief Keef makes thuggery, "a major function of his early on-career persona."[23] Lupe Fiasco, who has been involved in a controversy with him, has been referred to as an "antagonist" to Chief Keef'south more gangsta-rap persona. The New York Times writes, "Lupe Fiasco is a stern and didactic teacher, only information technology'southward arguable that Chief Keef's music is far better at ringing warning bells."[23] Some other rapper, Common, has praised his contributions to rap saying, "I recollect Principal Keef brought something that nobody else was doing and he brought it raw. He brought it real. With that, I accept to respect that as an creative person that he has come up and brought that."[134]

Other rappers, such as Rhymefest and Lupe Fiasco, all the same, take been disquisitional of Chief Keef.[135] [136] In June 2012, Rhymefest authored a web log post critical of his paradigm and message, describing him as a "flop" and a "spokesman for the Prison Industrial Complex". The postal service was likewise critical of rappers Waka Flocka Flame and Rick Ross, citing like issues.[135] Rhymefest reiterated these views in a subsequent interview with Salon.[137] Lupe Fiasco'southward criticisms of Keef touched off a feud between the two.

Influence

Many publications take referred to Principal Keef as a highly influential effigy in gimmicky hip-hop, for both his musical manner and gangster paradigm. His melodic style of rapping and his characteristically slurred delivery of lyrics has been called the catalyst for the success of Chicago drill and Mumble rap, and an influence on a large number of modern artists especially such every bit: 21 Savage, YoungBoy Never Broke Again, Lil Uzi Vert, Lil Pump, XXXTentacion, Ski Mask The Slump God, Trippie Redd, Juice Wrld, Polo G and Tay-1000 among the others. Additionally, Chief Keef's heavy utilise of adlibs, specifically the word "aye" every bit a big part of a song was a major influence on the Soundcloud rap subgenre and the artists that emerged from it.[9] [7] [x]

Controversies

Hip hop feuds

In an Baronial 2012 interview with Baltimore radio station 92Q Jams (WERQ-FM), Lupe Fiasco stated that Chief Keef "scares" him and described him as a "hoodlum" and a representative of Chicago'south "skyrocketing" murder rate.[136] A tweet from Master Keef'south business relationship threatening Fiasco was posted on September five.[138] Chief Keef claimed that his account had been hacked and the tweet was not his.[139] On September xiii, 2012, Fiasco released a video interview in which he made amends to Chief Keef.[140]

In November 2014, rap group Migos and Glo Gang fellow member, Capo, were involved in a physical altercation in a Chicago restaurant.[141] Later, Chief Keef uploaded an image onto Instagram featuring an alleged stolen chain belonging to rapper Quavo of Migos.[142] Though this incident escalated the already existing tension between the 2 groups' members, the feud seemingly ended.[143]

Principal Keef was involved in a feud with rapper 6ix9ine in May 2018. This stemmed from Tadoe'south domestic abuse and human relationship issues relating to fellow rapper Cuban Doll. She was in a relationship with Tadoe simply too friendly with 6ix9ine.[144] 6ix9ine then dissed Chief Keef and rapper Lil Reese on social media posting a video of his semi-romantic vacation to Hawaii with Cuban Doll to Instagram,[145] and driving upwards to Chief Keef's old neighborhood and taunting him.[146] 6ix9ine as well contacted Aereon Clark, known professionally as Slim Danger, the mother of one of Primary Keef'due south sons and recorded himself ownership her designer clothes, verbally taunting Principal Keef and later receiving fellatio from her.[147] [148]

On May 8, 2018, Trippie Redd previewed the vocal "I Kill People" on Instagram, featuring Principal Keef and Tadoe, which was aimed as a diss toward 6ix9ine and Cuban Doll.[149] On June 2, 2018, Chief Keef was fired upon exterior the W Hotel in New York City. He was not hit and there were no injuries from the incident.[150] Due to the ongoing feud, 6ix9ine was confirmed to be under investigation past the New York Law Department for possible involvement in the incident despite being in Los Angeles at the time.[151] [152] [153] [154] In February 2019, 6ix9ine pleaded guilty to ordering the shooting of Principal Keef. He had offered his associate Kintea "Kooda B" McKenzie $20,000 to shoot at Cozart. 6ix9ine was later institute to be an informant for the U.South. Government helping to lock up Kooda B, and his manager Kifano "Shotti" Jordan.[155]

Instagram

On September 15, 2012, Chief Keef uploaded a photograph of him receiving fellatio from a female person fan onto Instagram,[156] which he removed before long afterward.[157] However, his business relationship was afterward banned for violating Instagram's terms of service.[158] He has since created another Instagram account, and has had his activities on the app mentioned by various outlets.[159] [160]

Discography

Studio albums

  • Finally Rich (2012)
  • Bang 3 (2015)
  • Dedication (2017)
  • 4NEM (2021)

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b "Principal Keef Arrested in Miami Beach After Cops Discover Sizzurp". nbcmiami.com. April ix, 2017. Archived from the original on December vi, 2017. Retrieved December five, 2017.
  2. ^ "Perchance This Is Why Modern Grumble Rap Exists..." HipHopDX. February 25, 2017. Retrieved September 19, 2018.
  3. ^ Harold, Oscar. "Review: 'Mumble Rap' is a poor label for new Hip-Hop". The Fundamental Times . Retrieved September nineteen, 2018.
  4. ^ Guan, Frank (December 20, 2017). "The Twelvemonth Rap Overtook Popular". Vulture.com. Archived from the original on September xviii, 2019. Retrieved September 26, 2019.
  5. ^ a b Buyanovsky 2013.
  6. ^ a b Jeffries, David. "Biography & History – Chief Keef". AllMusic. Archived from the original on May 10, 2018. Retrieved May ix, 2018.
  7. ^ a b c "Artist – Main Keef". Pitchfork Media. Archived from the original on May 10, 2018. Retrieved May 9, 2018.
  8. ^ Breihan, Tom (July 23, 2015). "Banned By Chicago Mayor, Chief Keef Says Hologram Bear witness Will Go along In A Secret Location". Stereogum. Archived from the original on May 10, 2018. Retrieved May 9, 2018.
  9. ^ a b Drake, David. "How Chief Keef became the near influential hip-hop artist of his generation". The Outline. Archived from the original on May 10, 2018. Retrieved May 9, 2018.
  10. ^ a b Carter, Dominique. "Finally Rich: The Fashion That Chief Keef Has Influenced A New Generation of Artists". Hypefresh Mag. Archived from the original on May x, 2018. Retrieved May ix, 2018.
  11. ^ Celeb 2012.
  12. ^ Austen 2013.
  13. ^ Rosemary Regina Sobol, Chief Keef pays $531 to settle speeding ticket Archived July 29, 2017, at the Wayback Automobile, Chicago Tribune (July 30, 2016): "his former home in the Parkway Gardens apartment complex on the South Side."
  14. ^ Goldstein & Turbin 2013.
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  • X, Dharmic (October 12, 2013). "Mixtape: Principal Keef "Almighty And then"". Complex . Retrieved July 10, 2014.
  • XXL Staff (September 18, 2012). "Chief Keef Banned from Instagram for Lewd Photograph". XXL . Retrieved March 24, 2015.
  • Young, Alex (August 27, 2015). "Chief Keef named his newborn son after the website for his tape label". Consequence of Audio . Retrieved August 27, 2015.
  • Yeezus Credits (PDF) (Media notes). Kanye W. Def Jam Recordings. 2013. Retrieved March 23, 2015. {{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  • Zorn, Eric (July 28, 2015). "Sorry, the Constitution protects Master Keef likewise". Chicago Tribune . Retrieved July 28, 2015.

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chief_Keef

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