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Lil
Wayne Biography
Lil Wayne, who's real
name Dwayne Michael Carter, Jr., also known as Weezy was
born September 27, 1982 in New Orleans, Louisiana. Weezy is an American
rapper who became one of the top-selling artists in hip-hop in the early 21st
century. The Hip Hop star grew up in New
Orleans’s poverty stricken 17th Ward. In that environment he was discovered by
Cash Money Records head Bryan "Baby" Williams, and he soon became a
member—with Juvenile, B.G., and Turk—of the label’s all-star group Hot Boys and
won notice for the albums Get It How U Live! (1997) and Guerrilla Warfare
(1999). Rapper Lil Wayne’s first solo album, Tha Block Is Hot, arrived later in
1999 and sold more than a million copies, but two subsequent releases, Lights
Out (2000) and 500 Degreez (2002), were less popular with the public. Lil Wayne
discovered a new avenue to success in 2003 with Da Drought, his first solo
mixtape. (Within the context of early 21st-century hip-hop, the term mixtape
typically referred to a recording produced and distributed outside official
music-industry channels, often as a free Internet download.) His 2004 hit album
Tha Carter reached number five on the Billboard 200 chart and spawned a hit
single, “Go D.J.” During this time Weezy came into his own as a recording artist,
with lyrics that were both profound and clever and that spoke to a wide range
of people. His contribution in 2004 to the single “Soldier” (by Destiny’s
Child) was among the first of many guest performances with other artists that
attracted wider attention to his distinctive gravelly drawl and his skillful
flow. While continuing to build his reputation through mixtapes and
collaborations, Lil Wayne released the critically praised album Tha Carter II
(2005), which sold more than one million copies. In 2008 more than a million
copies of Tha Carter III, which contained the ubiquitous singles “A Milli” and
“Lollipop,” were sold in the first week
of its release in the United States. By the end of December, it had sold more
than 2.8 million copies, which made it the country’s best-selling album of the
year. The following year in February 2009 he took home Grammy Awards for best
rap album, best rap song, best rap solo performance, and best rap performance
by a duo or group; the latter award was for the song “Swagga like Us,” on which
he performed alongside Jay-Z, T.I., and Kanye West. Later that year
unfortunately Lil Wayne pleaded guilty to attempted criminal possession of a
weapon; the charge stemmed from a 2007 incident in which a loaded gun was found
on his tour bus. In February 2010, a month prior to being sentenced to prison,
he released the rock-influenced album Rebirth, which was met with largely
unfavourable reviews. The succeeding I Am Not a Human Being (2010), released
while he was in jail (he ultimately served eight months of a one-year
sentence), was stylistically more consistent with his previous work and was
better-received. Lil Wayne debuted the single “6 Foot 7 Foot” in late 2010,
several months before embarking on a North American tour with Nicki Minaj and
Rick Ross. The full-length follow-up to I Am Not a Human Being was slow to
materialize, however, and its release date was pushed back multiple times. Lil
Wayne acknowledged those delays with his Sorry 4 the Wait mixtape, and he
remained a presence on the hip-hop scene as a frequent guest vocalist. In
August 2011, after a boisterous performance at the MTV Video Music Awards, he
released Tha Carter IV, which featured guest performances by John Legend, Busta
Rhymes, and OutKast’s Andre 3000. I Am Not a Human Being II followed in 2013.
By then, some critics had begun to suspect that Lil Wayne’s creative peak was
behind him, although he remained a vital commercial force.
An expected album
release in 2014 failed to materialize amid disagreements between Lil Wayne and
Cash Money Records. The dispute was exacerbated by the appearance in 2015 of
the mixtape Sorry 4 the Wait 2. Lil Wayne then joined the music-streaming
service TIDAL, through which he released the mixtape Free Weezy Album. It was
not until 2018, after the artist and Cash Money Records parted ways, that the
long-anticipated Tha Carter V finally appeared, to generally favorable reviews
and with his usual commercial appeal. Funeral (2020) was Lil Wayne’s fifth
album to debut at the top of the Billboard 200 chart. In 2020 he also pleaded
guilty to illegally taking a handgun and ammunition on a private plane. He was
expected to receive up to 10 years in prison, but, shortly before his
sentencing in January 2021, he was pardoned by Pres. Donald Trump.
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