Artist: Dj Premier
Genre(s):
Rap: Hip-Hop
Discography:
DJ Premier Presents-Step Ya Game Up
Year: 2004
Tracks: 19
Cornerstone Mixtape Volume 9
Year: 1999
Tracks: 38
Crooklyn Cuts Tape B
Year: 1996
Tracks: 14
NY Reality Check
Year:
Tracks: 11
Beats To Beat Mics (Best Of DJ Premier Instrumentals)
Year:
Tracks: 29
No more than iII producers (Dr. Dre, RZA, and Prince Paul) toilet test DJ Premier's position as the about important trackmaster of the '90s, and no expressive style is more than distinctive. Aggressive and in the raw, a Premier course was an straight placeable soundclash of battling loops and heavy scratch -- all of them perfectly timed -- that elicited the legal of Brooklyn wagerer than anyone. Besides helming tracks for his independent business vexation, Gang Starr, since their 1989 debut, Premier's productions appeared on many of the East Coast's most important records: Nas' Illmatic, the Notorious B.I.G.'s Ready to Die, Jay-Z's Reasonable Doubt, Jeru the Damaja's The Sun Rises in the East, and Mos Def's Bootleg on Both Sides.
Premier, born Chris Martin, exhausted time in Brooklyn and Houston spell maturation up, and studied reckoner science at Prairie View A&M outside Houston. Known as Waxmaster C, he'd already conditioned to play a diverseness of instruments and besides managed a record fund. After moving back to Brooklyn, about 1987-1988 he came into contact with Guru, a Boston native. Guru had already formed a mathematical group named Gang Starr iI days to begin with (and recorded with the 45 King), merely his former partner, Mike Dee, had returned to Boston. DJ Premier and Guru signed to Wild Pitch and released a debut exclusive ("Manifest") and album (No More Mr. Nice Guy). Gang Starr's interest in melding hip-hop with jazz informed the record, and they were invited to add together to the soundtrack for Spike Lee's 1990 film Mo' Better Blues. Their subsequent work was often more mature and incorporate, with a pair of instant East Coast classics (1991's Step in the Arena and 1992's Day-by-day Operation) arriving in short order.
DJ Premier had been working with other vocalists for years, and his productions for the 1990 landmark Low-down Technician by Lord Finesse and DJ Mike Smooth cemented his status as one of the charles Herbert Best producers round. He presently began recording alone at D&D Studios, a spot soon to suit a shrine for rap fans (thanks in large office to his own solve). The year 1994 was a huge unrivalled for Premier, probably the charles Herbert Best year for any rap producer ever; in plus to dropping another Gang Starr classical, Heavy to Earn, his productions appeared on five-star, all-time classics by Nas (Illmatic), the Notorious B.I.G. (Quick to Die), and Jeru the Damaja (The Sun Rises in the East), as substantially as Big Daddy Kane and Branford Marsalis' Buckshot LeFonque project. Though his workload dropped cancelled considerably during the recent '90s, he still managed to shoes tracks on trey of the first four Jay-Z albums, and returned in force out with the new millenary, including shots with Common, D.I.T.C., D'Angelo, Jadakiss, and Snoop Dogg.
Midnight Configuration