Wednesday 10 September 2008

Mp3 music: Lil Jon






Lil Jon
   

Artist: Lil Jon: mp3 download


   Genre(s): 

Rap: Hip-Hop

   







Lil Jon's discography:


Best Of Lil Jon (Mixed By DJ Bobby Black)
   

 Best Of Lil Jon (Mixed By DJ Bobby Black)

   Year: 2004   

Tracks: 22






Exuberant, loud-mouthed, and on a regular basis adorned with a bejeweled pandar goblet at helping hand, Lil Jon was the magnetic figurehead of the Dirth South crunk effort that arose from the Atlanta area around the turn of the century. Born Jonathan Smith on January 27, 1971, in Atlanta, GA, the producer/rapper began his hip-hop diligence ascension as portion of Jermaine Dupri's So So Def bull's eye, for which he worked from 1993 to 2000. In the mid-'90s Lil Jon began making a diagnose for himself as a producer with a hang for club remixes. Before long he formed his possess chemical group, Lil Jon & the East Side Boyz, comprised of Big Sam and Lil Bo, in addition to himself.


Basically a means of showcasing his production natural endowment, and profiting from it as well, Lil Jon & the East Side Boyz signed to Mirror Image Records, an Atlanta-based mark distributed by Ichiban Records. In 1997 the label released World Health Organization U Wit?, a CD unmarried, and Get Crunk, Who U Wit: Da Album; a second CD unmarried, Shawty Freak a Lil Sumtin', followed in 1998. The regional success of "World Health Organization U Wit?" brought with it heap of away production opportunities for Lil Jon, and so it wasn't until 2000 that he returned with another East Side Boyz album, We Still Crunk, this one released independently by BME Recordings. A shorten with TVT Records followed, as did the group's label debut, Cast Yo Hood Up (2001), which boasted some previously released real (e.g., "World Health Organization U Wit?," "I Like Dem Girlz"), as well as "Bia' Bia'," the low gear Lil Jon & the East Side Boyz unmarried to get home airplay, thanks in voice to the song's guest features (i.e., Ludacris, Too Short).


Light-emitting diode by the unmarried "I Don't Give a @#&%," Kings of Crunk (2002) then capitalized on Lil Jon's breakthrough, spawning the Top Five strike "Get Low." Featuring the Ying Yang Twins, "Catch Low" was a clubhouse phenomenon passim 2003; Share II, a CD/DVD EP released toward the goal of the year, featured dancehall and merengue remixes of the song, along with extra material. Lil Jon's production style became omnipresent on urban wireless thereafter, as "SALT Shaker" (a production for the Ying Yang Twins), "Goodies" (Ciara), "Yea!" (Usher), "Freek-a-Leek" (Petey Pablo), "Shorty Wanna Ride" (Young Buck), "Darned!" (YoungBloodZ), "Let's Go" (Antic Daddy), "Culo" (Pitbull), "Head Bussa" (Lil Scrappy), "Neva Eva" (Trillville), and "Shake That Monkey" (Likewise Short) all garnered significant airplay in 2003-2004. By this compass point, the renown of Lil Jon was such that comedian Dave Chappelle was memorably satirizing him (specially his signature tune "yeaaah!" and "whaaat!?" expressions) on a couple episodes of The Chappelle Show.


Toward the goal of 2004, "What U Gon' Do," a Lil Jon & the East Side Boyz unmarried featuring Lil Scrappy, announced the release of Crunk Juice, a star-studded album featuring edgar Albert Guest features on intimately every song. "Friends & Lovers," featuring Usher and Ludacris, became the most successful individual, arrival the Top Three of the Billboard century. In the wake of Crunk Juice, Lil Jon receded from the spotlight middling, enjoying his celebrity while continuing to produce hits for others: "I'm a King" (T.I., 2005), "Reach" (Amerie, 2005), "Girlfight" (Brooke Valentine, 2005), "Okey" (Nivea, 2005), "Presidential" (YoungBloodZ, 2006), "U and Dat" (E-40, 2006), "Gangsta Gangsta" (Lil Scrappy, 2006), and "Dime/Tell Me" (Pitbull, 2006), among others.