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Artist - Soulja Boy
Soulja Boy
Avg 4.86 / 5
Total of 1350 votes
Last update: 12/04/08 12:47:42 Account:Artist Quota
Location: AFRICA: Algeria Signed up: 26 Mar 2007 09:57 AM Members: Soulja Boy Genre: Rap Influences: 50 Cent, UNK, Lil Boosie Website:http://www.myspace.com/souljaboytellem
Biography
"Soulja Boy Tell 'Em's Bio"
“He's a genius, man. It's like catching Michael Jackson before he actually hit wax. It's that kind of talent.” Strong words, words more likely attributable to an overzealous blogger than one of the game's rising impresarios. But Mr. Collipark, known best for his irrepressible production behind the Ying Yang Twins, uses those very superlatives in describing Atlanta-based phenom Soulja Boy. Skeptical? Consider this: at an age normally reserved for acne remedies and orthodonture, Soulja Boy signed to the inimitable roster at Interscope Records. So how did this 16-year-old rapper/producer go from irritating teachers at South Panola High School in Batesville, Mississippi to inking deals in Jimmy Iovine's plush office? Let's fill in some gaps.
Soulja Boy, born DeAndre Cortez Way in Chicago, moved to Atlanta at age 6. A-town, today the boiling cauldron of musical creativity, had begun to seriously bubble by the mid-90s. Artists like OutKast, Usher, Jermaine Dupri, and Goodie Mob were rising from local heavyweights into national sensations, shoving the South inexorably into prominence.
A young Soulja, taking cues from his surroundings, mustered his fledgling foray into music alongside then-partner, Young Kwon: “ He was the one who taught me how to make beats and record; he recorded the first songs I ever did,” Soulja reveals. “He taught me what he knew about snap beats in the studio in his house.” His appetite whetted, Soulja began to hone his production chops. But while his time was abundant, resources were not. “I didn't like growing up, we grew up poor,” Soulja admits. “When I was staying with my Momma, it was me and my little brother. We didn't have much money. I ain't have nothing to do, just go to school. I used to be real smart, a straight A student. But music affected my grades, I ain't gonna lie.”
Ironically, it was Soulja's subsequent departure from Atlanta that prompted the next step in his musical march. While in 8th grade, he moved to nearby Mississippi with his father. “I moved with my daddy because he had a little money, he could provide more for me,” Soulja notes. “That's where I got access to a computer. When I went to Mississippi, I had to adjust to what was going on. But it was really a blessing in disguise, because if I would've never moved to Mississippi I wouldn't be where I'm at today. I wouldn't have had access to no computer, no internet, no camera to film my dancing. I took the hood to where the money was at. If I didn't have no money behind it, nobody would've ever known about it.”
By “it,” he means the grass-roots groundswell he created via the internet. Soulja collaborated with classmate and co-conspirator Arab to form the duo The 30/30 Boys. The pair cooked up jocular songs and beamed them out over the web. “First we uploaded songs to SoundClick, where people can comment on your songs, rate them, and download them,” Soulja explains. “We were getting good responses, so I set up my website, www.souljaboytellem.com to help push my name.” Having opened this new portal --and alongside manager Michael Sykes, a.k.a Miami Mike-- Soulja was able to display his full palate of attributes. “I don't think it's just the music, I think it's me that people like,” he asserts. “My personality come through, and my style. I think somebody who just hears my music and doesn't know me won't like me as much as somebody who's seen me perform. That's Soulja boy, that's that dude. You gonna be like that, ‘Dang, I wanna be like that dude right there.'”
At first glance, such a statement seems more a measure of Soulja Boy's age than his credibility. But upon further inspection, this claim shows Soulja's head to be level, rather than big. In fact, old ally Arab remains a close friend, and his current tour hypeman. And Mr. Collipark, who via his Collipark Music imprint brought Soulja Boy to Interscope's attention, echoes the sentiment. “To an adult who doesn't know what's going on with him, it appears to be a fad. But if you do the research and look at the real fans, his presence is like a cult. Matter of fact, he didn't even have a single per se when I signed him. It was beyond a record; it was his whole lifestyle: how he dressed, his shades with his name on them, the shoes he chose to wear. It was all of that and the music was another part of what he brought to the table. Part of Soulja's magic that blew him up, even before I got to him, was that the kids looked at his music as something that was just theirs. It was something they could have that nobody else could have. But if you not hip to it, you gonna look at him as some one hit wonder.”
Soulja returned to Atlanta in 2004, wearing Mississippi on his back like a David Banner tattoo. “Down in Mississippi, there's rappers for days trying to make it,” he maintains. “If more people in Mississippi just had some way to let the world see what they doing, there'd be a lot more dudes who can do better than what's out there right now. It's controversial because people saying the South killing hip hop, but I feel it's new and different, and people still stuck on the old stuff. It's changing; I'm fitting to be the next generation.” Riding high off his internet celebrity, Soulja was determined to translate this notoriety into US currency. “When I moved back to Atlanta, I was like ‘I gotta get my momma out of this right here,'” he says. “Then my career started to jump off, and the money started coming in.” He paired with Atlanta-based manager Derrick Crooms, who'd been responsible for shaping the Ying-Yang Twins' successes. Soulja landed his first live performance at the grizzled age of 15, at a teen nightclub in Indianapolis, Indiana. “The first time I stepped onstage was wild,” he recalls. “The show was so crunk that I was worried about doing a wack show. But then I just calmed down and did it.” That stage-stealing three-song showcase parlayed into more eye-catching engagements. “As a businessman, his savvy at 16 years old is incredible,” attests Mr. Collipark. “He puts his shows together, his songs together, he produces all his own music. This is only the beginning.”
Collipark takes it a step further: “The more I'm around the kid, the more I see how special he is. I think he's the future of the way music's going. Coming into the game, he's done all the work for the record company who's trying to find an artist with substance and an existing fan base. The game right now is based on somebody lucking up and finding a hit record, but that somebody has no substance. Soulja Boy comes with that substance already built in. He has a better chance of selling a million records than a lot of established artists do. Whether we as adults get it or not doesn't matter; it's a fact that he's already selling out shows by himself-- headlining across the country. He's really an entertainer. His stage show is phenomenal. I put his stage show up against anybody, right now, and he's only 16 years old.”
This may sound a bit like rose-colored rhetoric, so perhaps some simple arithmetic is in order: nearly 10 million people have visited Soulja Boy's MySpace page since its inception. His legion of fans uploads YouTube clips daily, emulating his epidemic self-titled dance routines. His “Crank Dat Soulja Boy” anthem is scalding radio. He's set to release his debut album on Interscope Records, aptly called SouljaBoytellem.com. Fittingly, he references labelmate 50 Cent as motivation: “50 Cent inspired me a lot: he's sold millions of records, done movies, he's got clothes and a videogame. I want all that too and more.” Daring to use 16-year-old rapper and track record in the same breath, Soulja has set the requisite precedent for success. And he's leaving doubters powerless. When asked how he distinguishes himself from other artists on the come-up, he drops his boyish grin and answers steadfastly: “I'm different, in terms of my style, what I rap about, what I do, how I do it, the way I put it together. I switch up doing comedy, the snap, the dance, the party, the happy, the sad, all of that.” It's a convincing pitch. When further pressed about how he'll deal with haters, he seems unconcerned. “I don't respond to skepticism because they not gonna be skeptical for long,” he states. “My life right now is like a TV show; you watch every day to see a new episode,” he continues. “They waiting to see what I'mma do next.” Sounds like he's got us all figured just right. Not bad for 16.
"Soulja Boy" was Born in Chicago,iLL in 1990.He was raised there by this mother &; grandmother.He said his first rap when he was 5 years old in Shy-town.He and his mother Lisa later moved to Atlanta,Ga. in 1996.Atlanta is where he learned how to do do Beats and dance.The snap music was just coming into play while he was in Atlanta.He mixed his Chicago style flow with his Atlanta beats and then the hits started coming.He was in Atlanta from age 6 to the age of 14.At the age of 14 he moved to Batesville,Ms. with his dad Tracy.Batesville is 40miles south of Memphis,Tn. on I-55.It was there in batesville that he picked -up the Memphis style of rap.His dad brought him a in house studio and the rest is history.He started his website WWW.SouljaBoytellem.com and the rest is internet history.People were feeling his different but cool way of dance and snap music.When people would ask him where he was from he would say ,"Shylantaville or Shylantasippi" he did'nt want to leave out any of his cities so he would claim them all.Shy comes from Chicago because its called Shy-town and Lanta comes from Atlanta and ville comes from Batesville.The Sippi comes from Mississippi so that he could represent Mississippi.He linked up with PalmTreePromotions/PalmTreeManaagement/PalmTreeBooking (Miami Mike) and started to doing shows across the country;mostly Sweet 16 parties, Skating Rings, and Private Parties.He has crossed-over to all nationalities already.He started a Myspace site (Myspace.com/Souljaboytellem) so that his fans could get closer to him at the end of July in 2006. He has already broken history on Myspace for an independent artirst.He has over 700,000 profile views,over 2.5millions total plays in just under 4 short months.He averages 15,000 to 30,000 plays a day &; 1,500 to 3,000 downloads a day on the site. The numbers that he is doing is unbeliveable.Its hard for any independent artist to touch him.He's rated #1 on My space out of 30million independent artist.Many Record labels have tried to get him.The Biggest so far is Sony.His favorite labels are Bad Boy,G-Unit, So-So-Def, Koch Records, and Def Jam.
**SITES TO CHECK OUT**
www.souljaboytellem.com
soulja-boy.bebo.com
www.soundclick.com/souljaboy5
www.youtube.com/souljaboy
http://eventful.com/souljaboytellem
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Stop Then Snap
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hey crush boyz coming through to show u and your page some luv check out one of our tracks called "strutta walk" let us know what u think with some feed back crushboyz
Hey, check me out my page, and listen to my beats and leave comments and feedback! also check me out on www.myspace.com/brandanbath or www.soundclick.com/brandanbath
Visit The number 1 Page in the carolinas. Thats me my dude. Make sure you check out my song Fuck Petey Pablo Featuring The Game... Its already over 1 million
www.myspace.com/latruth
HOTTEST UNHEARD PRODUCERS IN VA RIGHT NOW! IN THE PROCESS OF BEING THE HOTTEST PRODUCERS FROM VA PERIOD. NEXT TO OUR HOMIE DANJAHANDZ. WE DROPPIN A MIXTAPE FEATURING OUR INSTRUMENTALS AND WE NEED ARTIST IF YOU INTERESTED IN GETTIN ON GET AT ME
What it do Soulja Boy this ya girl ~CHI~ jus stoppin thru to show some love make sure u check out my "CHEVY SITTIN HIGH" track n leave a comment much love to ya
~CHI~