Albums
Bio






Juvenile Hell

Year Released: 1993
Certification: Uncertified
Label: 4th & Broadway
Guest Stars: N/A


The Infamous

Year Released: 1995
Certification: Gold
Label: Loud/RCA
Guest Stars: Nas; Raekwon; Q-Tip; Ghostface Killer


Hell On Earth

Year Released: 1996
Certification: Gold
Label: Loud
Guest Stars: Nas, Raekwon, Method Man, Big Noyd, General G, Ty Knitty, Gambino


Murda Muzik

Year Released: 1999
Certification: Platinum
Label: Columbia
Guest Stars: Kool G. Rap; Lil' Kim; Big Noyd; Eightball; Lil' Cease; Raekwon


Infamy

Year Released: 2001
Certification: Gold
Label: Loud
Guest Stars: Ron Isley; Lil' Mo; 112; Big Noyd





Biography

While most hardcore gangsta rappers and rap groups are quickly written off by seasoned rap fans and critics as lowbrow exploitation, Mobb Deep quickly overcame this initial stereotype in the late '90s, becoming one of the few gangsta rap groups to garner unanimous acclaim from all sides of the rap community. Initially, they were perceived merely as a novelty act, given the fact that their grimy debut album, Juvenile Hell (1993), was recorded while the duo were still teenagers and that it was one of the most blatantly grim portraits of ghetto life since Straight Outta Compton. Within a few years, though, the group had become widely recognized, primarily due to both their poetic depiction of New York street life and also their trademark production, the bleak aural equivalent of their sullen rhymes. By the end of the decade, Mobb Deep's Murda Muzik debuted at number three on Soundscan before quickly going platinum, exemplifying exactly how far they had come within less than a decade without compromising their harsh approach. Mobb Deep members Prodigy and Havoc originally met while both attending the prestigious Graphic Arts High School in Manhattan as teenagers, thanks to their mutual residence in Queens along with their mutual passion for hip-hop. Still in their late teens, the duo released their debut album in 1993, Juvenile Hell, on the 4th & Broadway label. Though the album wasn't that successful from either a financial or critical standpoint, it did serve as a fitting platform for the duo to launch their careers; not only did the duo produce their own beats, but they also crafted their own style: a street-smart poetic approach centering on the ghetto lifestyle surrounding them. Their brutally honest reality rapping and complimentary melancholy beats landed them a deal with the up and coming Loud label in 1995, resulting in their first major-label release, The Infamous.

Propelled to awareness partially by fellow Queens rapper Nas, who took a similar approach lyrically on his championed Illmatic album from 1994, as well as with the aid of a successful single, "Shook Ones," Mobb Deep suddenly found themselves developing a quickly growing cult following. A year later in 1996, Prodigy and Havoc released Hell on Earth; debuting at number six on Soundscan, the album found them fully realizing their approach, dropping both evocative beats and cinematic rhymes that communicated the dark side of New York's urban landscape. And thanks to a grim video for "Hell on Earth (Front Lines)" and theatrical Scarface-like photos inside the CD booklet picturing the duo with guns and a mound of cocaine, Mobb Deep had created an elaborate image for themselves that took hardcore gangsta rap to a new level that the East Coast had yet fostered. It was then no surprise that their succeeding release, Murda Muzik, was heavily bootlegged while it was still in its demo stage, leaking rough versions of the nearly 30 songs the duo had recorded onto the streets and over the Internet.

Months after the bootlegs first leaked and after several pushed-back street dates, Murda Muzik finally dropped, debuting at number three on Soundscan and quickly going platinum on the strength of "Quiet Storm," a song that epitomized the signature Mobb Deep style. Not surprisingly, the album was welcomed by critics, who again applauded the group's lucid cinematics, driven primarily by Havoc's inimitable production. In late 2000, Prodigy finally released his long-rumored solo album, HNIC, which saw the more lyrically gifted member of the group collaborating with outside producers such as the Alchemist and Rockwilder on tracks that didn't depart far from the trademark sullen Mobb Deep style.

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