Gucci Mane biography

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Guuci real name is Radrick Davis. Davis was born in Birmingham, Alabama and moved with his single mother to Atlanta in the fourth grade. Since elementary school, he had enjoyed writing poetry, and he began rapping at age 14. He signed to Big Cat Records after his debut single "Black Tee" was frequently played on local radio. In 2005, he released his independent debut album entitled Trap House, which featured the successful single "Icy" with Young Jeezy. Disputes over the rights to this single caused a rift between the two artists. Hard to Kill followed in 2006.[2]

Hard To Kill included the hit single "Freaky Gurl". The song peaked at #12 on the Hot Rap Tracks, #19 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, and at #62 on the Hot 100. The official remix featuring Ludacris and Lil Kim was included on his 2007 commercial debut album Back to the Trap House. Gucci Mane appeared on OJ da Juiceman's "Make the Trap Say Aye" and began working on various mixtapes.[3] Gucci Mane signed to Warner Bros. Records in May 2009.[4]

He appeared on remixes of the songs "Boom Boom Pow" by Black Eyed Peas, "Obsessed" by Mariah Carey and "5 Star Chick" by Yo Gotti and made a guest appearance on Mario's "Break Up". Gucci Mane is set to release his next album The State vs. Radric Davis on Warner Bros. Records December 8, 2009.[5] Its first single, "Wasted" featuring Plies, was originally from Mane's 2009 mixtape Writing on the Wall. It peaked at #36 on the Hot 100, #3 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, and #3 on the Rap Songs making it Gucci Mane's most successful single to date. The second single is "Spotlight" feauring Usher. The third single is "Worst Enemy". The fourth single is "Heavy".

On October 2, 2009, Gucci Mane was named #6 on MTV's annual Hottest MC's In The Game list.[6]

Legal issues On May 10, 2005, Davis was attacked by a group of men at a house in Decatur. Davis' companions shot at the group, killing at least one. The corpse of one of the attackers, Henry Lee Clark III, was found later behind a nearby middle school. Davis turned himself in to police investigators on May 19, 2005 and was subsequently charged with murder. Davis claimed that the shots fired by his party were in self-defense[1] The DeKalb County district attorney's office dropped the murder charge in January 2006 due to insufficient evidence. The previous October, in an unrelated matter, Davis had pleaded no contest to a charge of assault for assaulting a nightclub promoter the previous June; at the time the murder charge was dropped, he was serving a six-month prison sentence for this. [7] Davis was released from jail in late January 2006.[2]

In September 2008, Gucci Mane was arrested for parole violation for completing only 25 out of 600 community service hours following his 2005 arrest for assault. He was sentenced to a year in jail but was released after six months.[8]

On November 12, 2009, Gucci Mane was sentenced to 12 months in prison for probation violation and taken away to jail in handcuffs.[9]

Discography Main article: Gucci Mane discography Studio albums References
  1. ^ a b Kaufman, Gil (2005-05-23). "Atlanta Rapper Gucci Mane Faces Murder Charge". MTV News. http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1502738/20050523/gucci_mane.jhtml. Retrieved 2009-05-03. 
  2. ^ a b Cordor, Cyril (2007). "Gucci Mane > Biography". allmusic. http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:jifuxqwsldde~T1. Retrieved 2009-05-03. 
  3. ^ Reid, Shaheem (2009-03-30). "Gucci Mane Is Out Of Jail And Back On The Mixtape Circuit". Mixtape Monday (MTV News). http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1607973/20090327/gucci_mane.jhtml. Retrieved 2009-05-03. 
  4. ^ Jason (2009-05-13). "Gucci Mane Signs New Deal With Warner". Rap Basement. http://www.rapbasement.com/gucci-mane/051309-gucci-mane-signs-new-record-deal-with-warner-brothers-records-drops-two-new-songs-listen-now.html. 
  5. ^ Reid, Shaheem (2009-10-28). "Exclusive: Gucci Mane The State Vs. Radric Davis Cover". MTV News. http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1625004/20091028/gucci_mane.jhtml. Retrieved 2009-10-31. 
  6. ^ Reid, Shaheem (2009-10-01). "Gucci Mane Balances 'Hood, Mainstream To Be #6 Hottest MC In The Game!". MTV News. http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1622767/20091001/index.jhtml. 
  7. ^ Harris, Chris (2006-01-03). "Murder Charges Against Gucci Mane Dropped". MTV News. http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1519599/20060103/gucci_mane.jhtml. Retrieved 2009-05-03. 
  8. ^ "Gucci Mane Sent To Jail For Violating Probation". XXL. 2008-09-15. http://www.xxlmag.com/online/?p=24484. Retrieved 2009-10-31. 
  9. ^ http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1626187/20091112/gucci_mane.jhtml
External links [hide] v  d  e Gucci Mane Studio albums Back to the Trap House · The State vs. Radric Davis Independent albums Trap House · Hard to Kill · Trap-A-Thon · Murder Was the Case EPs & Compilations Hood Classics · Wasted: The Prequel Mixtapes Writing on the Wall  · Gangsta Grillz: The Movie Part 2 - The Sequel · Movie 3-D: The Burrprint! Singles "Icy" · "Go Head" · "Freaky Gurl" · "Freaky Gurl (Remix)" · "Stoopid" · "Wasted" · "Spotlight" · "Worst Enemy" · "Heavy" Featured singles "Gucci Bandana" · "Make Tha Trap Say Aye" · "Ridiculous" · "Break Up" · "I Think I Love Her" · "Self Made" · "Boi!" · "LOL :-)" · "We Be Steady Mobbin" · "I Get It In" · "Pretty Girls" · "Tip of My Tongue" · "Look Like This" · "Krazy" · "Sponsor" · "Speak French" Related articles Discography Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gucci_Mane" Categories: Living people | 1980 births | African American rappers | Americans convicted of assault | Atlantic Records artists | People from Birmingham, Alabama | Rappers from Atlanta, Georgia

Who do u think is better?

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In a time where rap beef has mutated into mildly entertaining WWF style grandstanding (see 50 Cent vs Rick Ross) featuring incessant video exchanges with less and less of an emphasis on actual diss records , its rare that you see a beef like this Battle of the Trap. While beefs like 50/Ross or 50/Cam (How much did the Mobb sell Curtis?!?!?) play out like they were helmed by the Farrelly Brothers, Gucci and Jeezy's beef plays more like a cold, taut Michael Mann crime thriller. On one street corner we have Atlanta's foremost Trap Star, the Snow Man (with no shots to T.I., who has transcended trap rap) and on the other street corner we have Atlanta's crack pipe hot upstart, poultry chef slash rapper (and by Thor, does he look the part), Gucci Mane La Fleur (check out his humorous uncylopedia entry or die suddenly).

Their problems started off small, a squabble over money for a verse, but ended up with some critical repercussions. Let's put all the ki's on the table, Young Jeezy allegedly sent a team of goons to rob/kill Gucci Mane in a semi-elaborate set-up involving a stripper. Gucci Mane, ever the quick-wit, shot them the fuck up on entry and caught a body off one of them. Amazing right? As far as I can remember Gucci is the only rapper with a known body on him (if you know of others please post in the comment section). Since Gucci is just now rising to the national stage (as opposed to popping up from time to time with hits separated by several years) this story hasn't gotten the shine it deserves. With Jeezy firing shots on wax again this week, the time is ripe to go over their history and look to their future. For our history lesson I will defer to Mara Shaloup who covered the beef in a painstakingly researched three-part expose' on the infamous drug racket, Black Mafia Family (a group Jeezy was closely affiliated with). Read on for excerpts from Shaloup's masterful Hip-Hop's Shadowy Empire (full article here) with scattered hyperlinks and bracketed italicized commentary from your trusty old blogger conneck.

~~
In the fall of 2004, two Atlanta rappers happened to brush shoulders at Walter's, a shoe store downtown. Gucci Mane was passing out CDs and offered one to an impressive-looking guy loaded with diamonds. Young Jeezy took the CD and complimented Gucci on his skills; he'd already heard some of the up-and-comer's tracks.

Though the rappers came from different territories -- Gucci from Atlanta's east side and Jeezy, by way of Macon, from the Old Fourth Ward -- they shared similar backgrounds. And both had been effective in channeling their street experiences into more professional ones.

Jeezy, however, was the bigger name. The 27-year-old had risen from Macon mixtape hawker to Atlanta hip-hop royalty. He was a street-level entrepreneur who had sold tens of thousands of mixtapes through his indie label, Corporate Thugz Entertainment. Around that time, he was busy flooding the streets with his record, Trap or Die. And thanks to a logo that likened him to a menacing snowman, Jeezy had cemented his ties to the street. (On the streets, "snow" is cocaine and the "snowman" a dealer.)

An affiliation with the Black Mafia Family didn't hurt, either. Jeezy wasn't shy about showing up on camera flanked by BMF members and saying things such as, "This is my muthafuckin' homeboy. It's love. It's family, dog," or dropping verses such as, "You don't want me to get the streets involved, better yet make a call and get Meech (Meech was the BMF's top boss) involved (yeah BMF)."

Though Meech had launched a record label earlier that year, Jeezy's affiliation with him stopped short of the label's roster. He would ink a deal with Def Jam Records instead. Thanks to the infusion of funds from Def Jam, Corporate Thugz Entertainment would be better equipped to cultivate Jeezy's own stable of artists, which included the rapper Slick Pulla, the group Blood Raw (although Blood Raw is one fat ass nigga, he is not a group, just one guy), and if all went according to plan, a trio from Macon called Loccish Lifestyle.

Gucci wasn't looking to join CTE's ranks when he ran into Jeezy at the shoe store. He'd already signed with Atlanta-based Big Cat Records. But that didn't mean the two rappers couldn't collaborate. The next day, Gucci showed up at Jeezy's studio with a track he'd been toying with, a song called "Icy." Jeezy laid down a few verses (the song is horrible and sports the worst Jeezy verse I've ever heard - and yet it caused all this trouble), and Gucci said he paid him for his work. It was a coup for the more underexposed artist to have a guy like Jeezy contributing to the track.

The camaraderie, however, was short-lived.

To say that someone is "icy" is to imply he's heavy with diamonds. The term applied to Jeezy that day at Walter's, and it applied just as much to Gucci when it came time in April 2005 to shoot the video for "Icy." On the set, he wore a blue-and-yellow, diamond-studded "Jacob" (as in a $50,000 watch designed by New York hip-hop jeweler Jacob Arabo) (ever wonder why rapper's don't talk about Jacob anymore? It's because he is in jail for money laundering for BMF. I really urge you to read the whole BMF saga as it is quite riveting) and a 37-carat pendant that spelled the words "So Icy" in $40,000 worth of diamonds.

"Icy" also happened to describe the hostilities that formed between the two rappers after the song became a surprise hit. In the spring of 2005, Gucci and Jeezy had a bitter -- and rather public -- falling out.

Gucci claimed that once "Icy" was hot, Jeezy wanted to use it on his soon-to-drop album, Let's Get It: Thug Motivation 101 (a fantastic album by the by). Jeezy's attorney claimed that was bullshit; Gucci was just looking to drum up press. As if to make his feelings on the matter abundantly clear, Jeezy released a "diss song" slamming Gucci -- and placing a bounty on his $40,000 necklace: "I want that muthafuckin' bullshit-ass icy chain," Jeezy sneered on "Stay Strapped." The title of the track doubled as a threat. If Gucci wasn't already carrying a gun, he ought to start.

Gucci was quick to fire back. In his response, "Round 1," which featured fellow Big Cat artist Black Magik, Gucci rapped, "Jeezy can't make a hit with a Louisville Slugger," "You're a thug imposter, you deserve an Oscar," and "Put a dress on, nigga, you Meech's bitch."

By then, however, Jeezy appeared to have turned his attention elsewhere -- to Loccish Lifestyle's Henry "Pookie Loc" Clark, Carlos "Low Down" Rhodes and Shannon "Luke" Lundy. Jeezy was interested in signing the group to CTE. The deal appeared to be moving along.

But in May 2005, when Luke and Pookie Loc headed to Atlanta from Macon to meet with CTE, one of them would be diverted. Something would go wrong. And an unwitting Gucci Mane would find himself back in the picture.

Before Loccish Lifestyle had officially formed, its three members decided to test their talent. They came to Atlanta in 2000 for a freestyle rap competition at the Atrium. Low Down, Luke and Pookie Loc didn't even have a song ready, Low Down recalls, "just a beat from somewhere, and the name."The group's name refers to a way of life on the streets of Macon -- a lifestyle that Low Down likens to that of the Crips. "We had good chemistry," he says. "That's probably what did it. We was all on the same tip."

The Macon trio that came to Atlanta without a song managed to take home the prize. They spent the next five years putting out two albums on their own and building their name on the street. Several of Loccish Lifestyle's tracks got heavy play on local radio and in the hip-hop clubs. The sound was moody and introspective -- and the lyrics unapologetic. "Trying to muse on how we're living," is how Low Down sums up the music. Loccish Lifestyle's single "Ridin' High" puts it more bluntly: "I'm gettin' high as I wanna be," "ain't no stopping me," and "don't blame me, nigga, blame the gang."

The group had been hustling for five years when Jeezy, whom they knew from his Macon days as "Lil Jay,"(no homo on that name) wanted to make them an offer. Loccish Lifestyle wasn't big in Atlanta's hip-hop scene. But a deal with CTE might change that.

Yet Low Down was holding out. He wasn't exactly opposed to CTE's offer; he just wasn't yet convinced it was the right move. Luke and Pookie Loc were more enthusiastic. When the two of them checked into the Marriott Courtyard downtown in May 2005 to go over some details with CTE, they were eager to sign. But before the deal was official, Pookie Loc would be diverted.

He had been in trouble before. But as far as Low Down was concerned, Pookie Loc's past didn't make an impression against the daily realities that go with the lifestyle. "If you know him for being wild, I guess you could say he was being wild," Low Down says. "If you know him for being cool, he probably was cool."

As for what happened shortly after Loccish Lifestyle landed in Atlanta, Low Down expresses similar stoicism: "The situation is what it is. I mean, shit happens."

The situation would plot Pookie Loc against Jeezy's nemesis, Gucci Mane. And it would put Loccish Lifestyle's deal on indefinite hold.

On May 10, 2005, Gucci went with a friend to the Blazin' Saddles (harumph) strip club down on Moreland Avenue. After a while, they decided to head with one of the strippers, a woman named Foxy, over to her house. They weren't there long when company arrived.

Five guys rolled in. One had a set of brass knuckles. Another had duct tape. Several had guns. Their intentions did not appear to be good.

The guy with the knuckles punched Gucci in the head. One of the other guys pistol-whipped his friend. Someone said something about killing them.

Gucci saw his chance. "Stay strapped," he'd been warned.

He aimed and fired.

~~
(This is the beginning of Part 2, excuse the brief repetition)
On a dead-end street called Springside Run, five men dressed in black were making their way up one of the driveways. One carried brass knuckles. Another had duct tape. Some had guns. A neighbor doing yard work glanced up and thought it odd, a sight so menacing in broad daylight.

Inside the house, a rapper named Gucci Mane was hanging out with a stripper he'd met earlier that day. Gucci had wanted her to hear some of his tracks, so they decided to go back to her place. He was hoping she'd like one of the songs enough to dance to it on stage, a move that would generate some buzz (he was tryna fuck tho).

He'd already created a good bit on his own.

It started with a track called "Icy." Gucci had written it, and a better-known rapper named Young Jeezy had laid down a few verses. But when the song became a hit, Gucci and Jeezy got in a spat over who was indebted to whom. Jeezy responded with a "dis song," "Stay Strapped," that put a $10,000 price on Gucci's diamond-encrusted necklace:

"I want that muthafuckin' bullshit-ass icy chain ...

"I got a bounty on that shit, nigga, 10 stacks ...

"So if he come to your town,

"And you just happen to snatch that muthafucker off his neck ...

"I'm gonna shoot you the 10-stack, man ...

"So I can cremate that muthafucker."

By all accounts, Jeezy wasn't one of the men who walked through the stripper's door on the afternoon of May 10, 2005. But he was connected to at least one of them.

The five men flooded the room. The one with the brass knuckles hit Gucci in the head. Another guy pistol-whipped his friend. At least one of the men drew a gun.

Gucci drew faster.

"All of a sudden I feel a pop, and fall to the ground ..."

-- Macon rapper Pookie Loc, circa 2000, recording with the group Loccish Lifestyle

The five men quickly got out of there. One of them, Henry "Pookie Loc" Clark, was separated from the others. He ran along Springside Run toward Columbia Drive. A middle school was up ahead. So was a cop car. He veered into the woods, stumbling, stumbling, falling.

"I try to move but constantly something is holding me down ..."

Five years earlier, Pookie Loc's group, Loccish Lifestyle, came to town from Macon for a freestyle rap competition at the Atrium. Without having written a single song, they took the prize. Dozens of recordings and two self-released albums later, Pookie Loc and band member Shannon "Luke" Lundy were in Atlanta again -- this time with the hopes of inking a deal with the label Corporate Thugz Entertainment. Pookie Loc was within a breath of success.

"I wake up cold and sweating, light flashing in my eye ..."

Three days after the incident at the stripper's house, DeKalb County Police got a call. Four men had shown up at Columbia Middle School to search for something in the woods. The incident report lists one of the men as Shannon "Luke" Lundy. It lists another as Demetrius "Kinky B" Ellerbee, who is co-owner, along with Young Jeezy, of Corporate Thugz Entertainment.

Luke told police he'd been at a video shoot in West End when he heard about a shooting on Springside Run. He said his friend Pookie Loc, who'd gone missing, knew a woman who lived there.

So they went looking for him.

"Realizing that I'm shot and real slowly I'm dying."

They found Pookie Loc there in the woods, dressed in black. Flies were swarming all around him.

Let's get one thing straight: Young Jeezy has said on several occasions that he had nothing to do with the raid on Springside Run (ed's note click, this). Police have never named him as a suspect. And the only arrest that came of the incident was that of Gucci Mane, who was charged with killing Pookie Loc. (Those charges wouldn't stick.) But there is some disagreement about what happened that day in May 2005. And it basically boils down to whether an organization with ties to Jeezy -- an alleged drug ring called the Black Mafia Family -- might have been involved.

At the time, BMF was well-known in Atlanta hip-hop circles as a crew that partied like celebs and dropped money like monarchy. The crew's reputation on the street was legendary. As with most legends, there was likely some truth to the lore, and quite possibly a false claim or two.

Neither Loccish Lifestyle's manager, Tarence Bivins, nor its third member, Carlos "Low Down" Rhodes, was in Atlanta at the time of Pookie Loc's death. But both Bivins and Low Down say they're positive BMF was not behind it.

"BMF had nothing to do with -- not anything, period -- the Gucci Mane situation and [Pookie] Loc," Bivins says. "That's not true, totally not true. You can quote me on that."

Low Down is equally unequivocal. "Basically, they're just using BMF as a prop," he says. "They're going to use BMF just so they can bring more heat."

Of BMF itself, he claims: "They are really hot anyway. I mean, they on fire. So I guess you can't add no more fire to it."

Yet Gucci's former attorney, Dennis Scheib, and his current one, Ash Joshi, are firm in their assertions that BMF is in some way responsible.

"Here's the situation," Scheib says. "Five guys came in. They were BMF."

According to Joshi, the DeKalb County district attorney's office was looking into whether BMF was behind the attack. The spokeswoman for the district attorney's office, Adora Andy, says she can't comment on allegations of BMF's involvement. "We did not investigate it," she tells CL. "The FBI did."

The FBI's Atlanta office declines to comment. "I wouldn't be able to discuss that," Special Agent Steve Emmett says.


the feds allege the crew laundered some of the drug money. They would pay inflated prices for winning Detroit Lotto Tickets and then buy cars and cribs with the legit winnings.

~~

It's me again. Let's move to the present. Gucci winds up in prison after skipping on his probation for assaulting an upstanding citizen with a pool cue (source). While in the bink, Gucci's already hefty mixtape presence skyrockets with a big time assist from his partner (pause), the unbelievably more niggerish, OJ Da Juiceman. This surge was based largely around the record Make The Trap Aye, Juice's breakout single on which Gucci appeared. On being released after nearly six months, Gucci got out with the largest buzz of his career and was welcomed home like rap royalty.