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Chingy
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This media has an uncertain copyright status and is pending deletion. You can comment on the removal. Chingy was born Howard Bailey Jr. in Walnut Park on the northside of St. Louis, Missouri on March 9, 1980. He attended school in the St. Louis metro area. Early on, Chingy developed a passion for rapping and began to play around with it. He began rapping under the psuedonym Chingy, which is what he and his friends would call someone that they felt were rich, which is what he aspired to do. He would sign to Fo-Reel Entertainment, which is home to Nelly and the St. Lunatics. Chingy would get his first shot at fame by touring with Nelly. This would lead to a chance meeting with legendary southern rapper, Ludacris, who immediately signed Chingy to his Disturbing tha Peace record label.
Slick St. Louis party rapper Chingy is MTV's main MC for instant hits. The photogenic rapper reminds fans of a young Nelly, dragging his flow over blipped-out beats and sucking on his R's like they're covered in barbecue sauce. He broke onto the scene with his debut hit single "Right Thurr" in 2003. The song, which sees Chingy romancing ladies on the dance floor, features grinding synths and The Neptune's trademark hand-claps. It burnt up the request lines in clubs and on radio playlists and broke Chingy into the music industry. With pals like Ludacris and the St. Lunatics.
Chingy Picture The St. Louis rapper Chingy has stated he's ready to battle other competitors before him. Making his first recording at age 10, Chingy has shaken hip-hop fanatics with his single "Right Thurr" released in 2003.
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These days, Chingy is settling down, and has a number of distinctive trademarks, such as his distinctive southern accent, which adds a nice touch to his rhymes. Plus, he even ended his ongoing feud with popular hip hop artist Nelly.
Chingy Similar in style to fellow St. Louis pop-rapper Nelly, Chingy enjoyed a lot of success initially in his career, beginning with the summer 2003 smash hit "Right Thurr," yet he struggled to rival that success in subsequent years. Born Howard Bailey, Jr., on March 9, 1980, in St. Louis, MO, Chingy was signed by Atlanta rapper Ludacris, whose Disturbing the Peace label released "Right Thurr" as the lead single to Jackpot (2003). "Right Thurr" became a quick hit, getting a lot of airplay and breaking into the Top Five of Billboard's Hot 100. Jackpot spawned two additional Top Five hits, "Holidae In" and "One Call Away," but an ensuing dispute between Chingy and Disturbing the Peace resulted in a seperation of the rapper from the label. Powerballin' (2004), Chingy's second album, was released by Capitol and failed to rival the success of its predecessor; its lead single, "Balla Baby," stalled at number 20 and its follow-up single, "Don't Worry," failed to even crack the Hot 100. Hoodstar (2006) was relatively more successful, led by the Top Ten hit "Pullin' Me Back," though the album itself fell well short of platinum sales status (in comparison, Jackpot had gone triple platinum).
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In late 2003, Chingy would engage in a feud with his label boss, Ludacris, over the royalties from his debut album. Chingy would claim that Ludacris was not giving him the proper pay for his services, while Ludacris would say that he had paid Chingy properly. This would lead to Chingy leaving DTP Records in December 2003. He would quickly found Slot-A-Lot Records under Capitol Records and aim numerous disses at Ludacris and DTP. They beefed into 2004 with Chingy calling Ludacris and Nelly out on his album Powerballin'. Because Chingy did not honor his contract with Disturbing Tha Peace, he had to still pay them some percentage of what he made from his album releases.
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