Kodak Black
Idioma disponible: inglésAn MC who broke out of Pompano Beach, Florida when he was just 18, Kodak Black attracted listeners with a sound that harked back to the Dirty South of the '90s. Controversy and legal troubles followed the rapper on every step of his journey to stardom, but his ruthless flows and snarling attitude propelled albums like 2020's Bill Israel and 2022's Back for Everything and Kutthroat Bill: Vol. 1 into the upper reaches of the charts. He also hit the Top 40 of the R&B/Hip-Hop charts with "King Snipe" (with Gucci Mane), in the lead-up to 2023's Pistols & Pearls. Born in 1997 in Pompano Beach, Florida, Kodak Black (born Dieuson Octave) began sharing his music with the public in 2013, when he was just 16. Recording demos in the back of a drug house and repeated visits to juvenile court gave weight to his violent lyrics and stories of inner-city life -- two things that fueled his 2014 mixtape, Project Baby. The mixtape Heart of the Projects followed in 2015, featuring "SKRT," a hit track that got massive exposure when superstar Drake shared it on the web and played it on his OVO Sound Radio show. After signing a deal with Atlantic, his third mixtape, Institution, appeared at the end of the year. In 2016, Kodak Black appeared on French Montana's hit single "Lockjaw" before releasing his fourth mixtape, Lil B.I.G. Pac. The following year he put out his debut studio album, Painting Pictures, which featured guest spots from Jeezy, Future, and Young Thug. The set topped the R&B/Hip-Hop chart and rose to number three on the Billboard 200. Kodak quickly returned with Project Baby 2 later in 2017, the fifth mixtape and sequel to the 2014 Project Baby release. His R&B-influenced mixtape Heart Break Kodak dropped on Valentine's Day in 2018, rising to number 25 on the overall albums chart. Months later, after a series of legal charges and not guilty pleas, he was sentenced to a year in prison; due to credit for time served, however, he was released after just four months. While in prison, he legally changed his name to Bill K. Kapri and earned his GED. Upon release, he issued the single "If I'm Lyin, I'm Flyin." The track was the lead single for his sophomore LP Dying to Live, which was released later that year and topped the Billboard 200. 2019 was spent touring and in court fighting various legal battles, but Kodak was back in jail as of June 2020. In November 2020, he released his third studio album, Bill Israel, while still incarcerated. The album included cameos from Lil Yachty, Jackboy, Gucci Mane, and others and entered the Billboard charts at number 29 a week after its release. A pared-down eight-track mixtape, Haitian Boy Kodak, came out in May of 2021 and hit number 25 on the Billboard 200. Later that year, he released the EP Happy Birthday Kodak and several singles including "Killing the Rats." In October of 2021, Kodak appeared as a featured artist on eight of the eleven tracks that made up the Halloween-themed mixtape Sniper Gang Presents Syko Bob & Snapkatt: Nightmare Babies. One of those tracks, "Super Gremlin," quickly became a platinum hit, rising to the number four position of the Billboard charts. Kodak's fourth studio album, Back for Everything, arrived in February of 2022 and peaked at the number two spot on the Billboard 200. In addition to the charting hit "Usain Boo," the album also included "Super Gremlin" as a bonus track. Aside from a lone contribution from Lil Durk on the song "Take You Back," the album featured no other guest contributions. After appearing on Kendrick Lamar's Top Ten hit "Silent Hill," Kodak returned later that year with the solo singles "Walk" and "Spin," which landed on his fifth official full-length, Kutthroat Bill: Vol. 1. The Top Ten set also featured guests Lil Crix ("Play"), VVSNCE ("Starter Kit"), NFL Tuewop ("Ammunition"), and Prince Swanny ("Bad Man"). In 2023, he cracked the Hot 100 with "King Snipe" (featuring Gucci Mane) and reached the Top 40 of Billboard's Top R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart with "I Remember" (featuring Internet Money and Roddy Ricch) and "No Love for a Thug," all prior to the release of his fifth album, Pistols & Pearls.
© David Jeffries /TiVo Leer más
An MC who broke out of Pompano Beach, Florida when he was just 18, Kodak Black attracted listeners with a sound that harked back to the Dirty South of the '90s. Controversy and legal troubles followed the rapper on every step of his journey to stardom, but his ruthless flows and snarling attitude propelled albums like 2020's Bill Israel and 2022's Back for Everything and Kutthroat Bill: Vol. 1 into the upper reaches of the charts. He also hit the Top 40 of the R&B/Hip-Hop charts with "King Snipe" (with Gucci Mane), in the lead-up to 2023's Pistols & Pearls.
Born in 1997 in Pompano Beach, Florida, Kodak Black (born Dieuson Octave) began sharing his music with the public in 2013, when he was just 16. Recording demos in the back of a drug house and repeated visits to juvenile court gave weight to his violent lyrics and stories of inner-city life -- two things that fueled his 2014 mixtape, Project Baby. The mixtape Heart of the Projects followed in 2015, featuring "SKRT," a hit track that got massive exposure when superstar Drake shared it on the web and played it on his OVO Sound Radio show. After signing a deal with Atlantic, his third mixtape, Institution, appeared at the end of the year. In 2016, Kodak Black appeared on French Montana's hit single "Lockjaw" before releasing his fourth mixtape, Lil B.I.G. Pac. The following year he put out his debut studio album, Painting Pictures, which featured guest spots from Jeezy, Future, and Young Thug. The set topped the R&B/Hip-Hop chart and rose to number three on the Billboard 200. Kodak quickly returned with Project Baby 2 later in 2017, the fifth mixtape and sequel to the 2014 Project Baby release.
His R&B-influenced mixtape Heart Break Kodak dropped on Valentine's Day in 2018, rising to number 25 on the overall albums chart. Months later, after a series of legal charges and not guilty pleas, he was sentenced to a year in prison; due to credit for time served, however, he was released after just four months. While in prison, he legally changed his name to Bill K. Kapri and earned his GED. Upon release, he issued the single "If I'm Lyin, I'm Flyin." The track was the lead single for his sophomore LP Dying to Live, which was released later that year and topped the Billboard 200. 2019 was spent touring and in court fighting various legal battles, but Kodak was back in jail as of June 2020. In November 2020, he released his third studio album, Bill Israel, while still incarcerated. The album included cameos from Lil Yachty, Jackboy, Gucci Mane, and others and entered the Billboard charts at number 29 a week after its release. A pared-down eight-track mixtape, Haitian Boy Kodak, came out in May of 2021 and hit number 25 on the Billboard 200. Later that year, he released the EP Happy Birthday Kodak and several singles including "Killing the Rats." In October of 2021, Kodak appeared as a featured artist on eight of the eleven tracks that made up the Halloween-themed mixtape Sniper Gang Presents Syko Bob & Snapkatt: Nightmare Babies. One of those tracks, "Super Gremlin," quickly became a platinum hit, rising to the number four position of the Billboard charts.
Kodak's fourth studio album, Back for Everything, arrived in February of 2022 and peaked at the number two spot on the Billboard 200. In addition to the charting hit "Usain Boo," the album also included "Super Gremlin" as a bonus track. Aside from a lone contribution from Lil Durk on the song "Take You Back," the album featured no other guest contributions. After appearing on Kendrick Lamar's Top Ten hit "Silent Hill," Kodak returned later that year with the solo singles "Walk" and "Spin," which landed on his fifth official full-length, Kutthroat Bill: Vol. 1. The Top Ten set also featured guests Lil Crix ("Play"), VVSNCE ("Starter Kit"), NFL Tuewop ("Ammunition"), and Prince Swanny ("Bad Man"). In 2023, he cracked the Hot 100 with "King Snipe" (featuring Gucci Mane) and reached the Top 40 of Billboard's Top R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart with "I Remember" (featuring Internet Money and Roddy Ricch) and "No Love for a Thug," all prior to the release of his fifth album, Pistols & Pearls.
© David Jeffries /TiVo
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