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Тексты песен J-Zone

J-Zone - The Bum-Bitch Ballad
15 часа назад 268,00 (не задано)
J-Zone - The Commandment$
15 часа назад 252,00 (не задано)
J-Zone - County Check Pimpin
15 часа назад 274,00 (не задано)
J-Zone - A Friendly Game of Basketball
15 часа назад 274,00 (не задано)
J-Zone - Inauguration Day
15 часа назад 277,00 (не задано)
J-Zone - The Zone Mission
15 часа назад 245,00 (не задано)
J-Zone - Ms. Platonic Part 2
15 часа назад 279,00 (не задано)
J-Zone - The Zone Mission (Part VIII)
15 часа назад 265,00 (не задано)
J-Zone - Q & A
15 часа назад 253,00 (не задано)
J-Zone - The Smurf Syndrome
15 часа назад 264,00 (не задано)
J-Zone - Too Many Babies
15 часа назад 274,00 (не задано)
J-Zone - Zone for President
15 часа назад 246,00 (не задано)

Информация о артисте

Westchester-bred, Queens-based rap artist J-Zone (née J. Mumford) began his musical quest when he picked up and mastered a variety of instruments before he even made it out of elementary school. Growing up in suburbia, he specifically dreamed of a career playing bass guitar in a raw urban funk band and would scour record stores for hours to dig up old funk LPs just to mimic the basslines. Surrounded by hip-hop culture and a now-significant vinyl collection, inspired by Yo! MTV Raps, and influenced by the likes of the Bomb Squad, Marley Marl, DJ Premier, and local beatsmith-made-good Pete Rock, J-Zone nevertheless put his funk fantasies on hold by the time he reached high school — where he also earned his pseudonym due to the same zany, zoned-out personality that would eventually manifest itself on his recordings — to concentrate on his emerging skills as a rap producer and DJ, while also occasionally dabbling as an MC on the side. It wasn't until a friend hooked him up with Vance Wright, Slick Rick's longtime DJ and producer, though, that his career officially began to take off. On the basis of J-Zone's home demos, Wright brought him into the neighborhood studio he owned as an intern, and the teenaged Zone eventually worked his way up to head engineer. By the time he had mastered the studio, the fledgling producer was also ready to attend SUNY Purchase in New York City, where he majored in Music. His senior project, in fact, also turned out to be J-Zone's unintentional debut album, the long EP Music for Tu Madre, pressed and released in 1999 on his own slapdash record label, Old Maid Entertainment on vinyl- and cassette-only. Always considering himself more of a producer than a rapper despite evidence to the contrary, the album also introduced the "Old Maid Billionaires," a group of MCs headed by Al-Shid and Huggy Bear, both of whom he would return to on all subsequent recording projects and countless future live performances. The EP earned significant buzz in underground circles, not least because of the integral early support of Bobbito Garcia, who played J-Zone's early singles on his popular radio program. The following year saw the release of a second EP, A Bottle of Whup Ass, and almost across-the-board acclaim. At the beginning of 2002, he signed a distribution deal with Fat Beats Records to release the third Old Maid Billionaires joint (though his first "official" full-length), Pimps Don't Pay Taxes, then subsequently took an indefinite sabbatical from rapping to concentrate on the technical side of the art, producing 12" releases for both Al-Shid and Huggy Bear, in addition to creating tracks for Biz Markie, Celph Titled, and Louis Logic of the Demigodz, Cage, and High & Mighty, among others. At the end of the year, J-Zone returned to his own music, putting out the "S.L.A.P."/"Ho Kung Fu" single and preparing his fourth proper album for the summer of 2003, as well as a supergroup project headed by him and Dick $tallion, Go-Rilla Pimp$. A Job Ain't Nuthin' But Work was released in 2004. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
J-Zone is a rapper, producer, and CEO of Old Maid Entertainment. He lives in Queens, New York. J-Zone has enjoyed a large following of underground hip hop aficionados and a sizable European fan base, which continues to grow.

At a young age, he developed and honed his musical abilities by listening to records and playing bass guitar. He later learned the basics of production under the tutelage of DJ Vance Wright (Slick Rick's DJ) in 1994. In 1999, he released Music for Tu Madre, garnering critical acclaim in the hip hop underground, but it was not enough to propel him into the mainstream spotlight. He has since worked with and produced beats for artists such as Biz Markie, Cage, Diversion Tactics, Danger Mouse & Jemini, High and Mighty, Jehst, Redman, R.A. the Rugged Man, Tame One, MF Grimm, and Tha Liks.

J-Zone's music could be described as somewhat unconventional. He typically uses lots of offbeat samples, and attention to detail. While generally praised for his comedic storytelling, clever punch lines, acerbic wit, and stellar production work, some critics have claimed that his music is crude, juvenile, and misogynistic.

He has recently shifted his focus away from rapping to concentrate full time on production, DJing, his Gator$-n-Fur$ mixshow podcast with his alter-ego Chief Chinchilla, TV Commercials and behind the scenes work. J-Zone also serves as an adjunct Professor at the State University of New York and is a freelance sports journalist. He covers New York High School basketball and does NBA blogging as a regular contributor for SLAM Magazine and www.slamonline.com, France-based Reverse Magazine and many others. In 2007 he wrote a column for www.HipHopDX.com called 5 Things That Killed Hip Hop and stated that crews, too much music, no balance, the law and the Internet were all killing hip hop. The said column was eventually published in Common Culture: 6th Edition (Prentice Hall, 2009), a pop culture textbook.

www.myspace.com/jzoneoldmaid Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.