Ruff Endz is an American R&B duo, consisting of members David "Davinch" Chance and Dante "Chi" Jordan from Baltimore, Maryland. They are best known for their hit songs "No More" and "Someone to Love You". Originally part of a quartet, the two left the group in 1994 to form the duo.
They released Love Crimes in 2000, which featured the single "No More". "No More" peaked at number 5 on the Billboard Hot 100, and was their most significant hit. It also reached #1 on the R&B chart.
In 2002 the duo released "Someone to Love You", which peaked at #49 on the U.S. Billboard chart.
Unplugged by David Chance was due to be released in winter 2007, which was remixed with new songs added with a follow up album called Unconditional Love which were only digital releases. Chance is now doing what he calls "inspirational soul music" (gospel) with two new groups signed to his label, called CMG Music LLC. Even though Ruff Endz is "no more", they agreed to release to the fans the album that was never heard called The Final Chapter, which was released on iTunes on August 9, 2010, and released physically on November 23, 2010. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Ruff Endz, the hip-hop soul duo of David "Davinch" Chance and Dante "Chi" Jordan, formed in Baltimore in the mid-'90s. Named after their trouble finding a record deal, the group came up in West Baltimore, originally part of a quartet. Davinch and Chi soon found chemistry between their voices, and struck out on their own by 1994. They recorded a demo tape with producer Troy Patterson, but didn't find success until another recording project, helmed by Oji Pierce, was heard by executives at Epic. With productions featuring Pierce, Manuel Seal, and Nokio, Ruff Endz' debut album Love Crimes dropped in August 2000. They wouldn't follow it up for almost two years, bringing Someone to Love You to the public in the spring of 2002.~ John Bush, All Music Guide Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.