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Afroman | |
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Afroman in Daytona Beach, Florida, October 11, 2009 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Joseph Edgar Foreman |
Born | (1974-07-28) July 28, 1974 (age 50) South Central, California, United States |
Genres | Hip-hop, West Coast hip hop |
Occupation(s) | Rapper, musician, singer-songwriter |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, guitar, bass guitar, drums |
Years active | 1992–present |
Labels | Universal Motown, T-Bones, Hungry Hustler Records, Fontana North |
Website | www |
Joseph Edgar Foreman (born July 28, 1974), better known by his stage name Afroman, is an American hip-hop recording artist and musician. He is best known for the hit single "Because I Got High". He was nominated for a Grammy award in 2002.
Music career
He began his career in 8th Grade, when he began recording homemade songs and selling them to his classmates. "The first tape I made was about my eighth-grade teacher," he once recalled. "She got me kicked out of school for sagging my pants, which was a big deal back then. So I wrote this song about her and it sold about 400 copies: it was selling to teachers, students, just about everybody. And I realized that, even though I wasn't at school, my song was at school, so in a way I was still there. All these people would come by my house just to give me comments about how cool they thought the song was." Foreman also performed in his church at a young age, playing both the drums and guitar.
In 1998, Afroman released his first album, My Fro-losophy; and later relocated to Hattiesburg, Mississippi, where he met drummer Jody Stallone, keyboardist/bassist Darrell Havard, and producer Tim Ramenofsky (aka "Headfridge").
Ramenofsky produced and released Afroman's second album Because I Got High in 2000 on T-Bones Records; it was distributed primarily through concerts and the file-sharing service Napster before its title track was played on The Howard Stern Show. Afroman was inspired to write the song's lyrical content by his unwillingness to clean his room, and he ran with the idea of everyday tasks being derailed by drug use. In late 2001, the song became a worldwide hit and was featured in the films Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, The Perfect Score, and Disturbia later in the 2000s. "Because I Got High" was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Rap Solo Performance in 2002.
After the single's success, Afroman joined the lineup of Cypress Hill's fall festival "Smoke Out" with the Deftones, Method Man, and others. After this, Universal Records signed Afroman to a six-album deal, and Universal released The Good Times in 2001. The Good Times was a compilation of Afroman's first two albums and some new tracks.
Afroman started releasing his music independently and mostly through the Internet in 2004, and that year, he recorded Jobe Bells, which satirized traditional Christmas songs.
Afroman was part of the 2010 Gathering of the Juggalos lineup.
In October 2014, Afroman released a remix of his song "Because I Got High," to highlight the usefulness of marijuana as part of the fight to legalize its sale across the United States.
Arrest
On February 17, 2015, Foreman was midway through his performance at a live music venue in Biloxi, Mississippi when a female individual walked on stage. It is unknown whether she was invited up or not but Foreman was aware of her presence. Shortly after, she casually approached Foreman, drink in hand, from behind and began dancing in his vicinity. When the individual allegedly made contact with Foreman he whirled around and evidently knocked her down with a blow to the head. He was subsequently escorted off stage by security where he was arrested and peacefully taken into custody and charged with assault. He was released on bond shortly thereafter.
There were reportedly 12 to 15 security guards on duty to manage a crowd in excess of 500 people. When interviewed, Foreman's representative claimed that the act was a reactionary, involuntary reflex caused by the individual irritatingly infringing upon his stage space. He also stated that Foreman mistook the individual for someone who had been consistently heckling him just off stage. Foreman has since publicly apologized and is actively seeking anger-management rehab.
Discography
Main article: Afroman discography- 1998: My Fro-losophy
- 2000: Because I Got High
- 2000: Sell Your Dope
- 2001: The Good Times
- 2004: Afroholic... The Even Better Times
- 2004: Jobe Bells
- 2004: 4R0:20
- 2004: The Hungry Hustlerz: Starvation Is Motivation
- 2006: Drunk 'n' High
- 2006: A Colt 45 Christmas
- 2008: Waiting to Inhale
- 2008: Greatest Hitz Live
- 2009: Frobama: Head of State
- 2014: One Hit Wonder EP
- 2015: The N-Word EP
References
- ^ Nimmervoll, Ed (2008). "Afroman Biography". allmusic. Retrieved March 27, 2009.
- Afroman | Gratis muziek, tourneedata, foto's, video's. Myspace.com. Retrieved on 2011-10-30.
- Evans, Rob (January 4, 2002). "Grammy nominees led by U2, India.Arie, Alicia Keys". LiveDaily. Retrieved March 27, 2009.
- Schumacher-Rasmussen, Eric (September 28, 2001). "Cypress Hill's Oakland Smoke Out Bumped By A's". MTV News. Retrieved March 27, 2009.
- "For The Record: Quick News On Jessica Simpson, Ashlee Simpson, Snoop, Good Charlotte, Afroman, Chingy & More". MTV News. October 28, 2004. Retrieved March 27, 2009.
- GOTJ 2011:::Buy Tickets Now!. Juggalogathering.com. Retrieved on 2011-10-30.
- Afroman punches woman during performance at a Biloxi nightclub WLOX News. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
- Afroman apologizes for incident TIME News. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
External links
Afroman | |
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Discography | |
Studio albums | |
Singles |
- 1974 births
- Living people
- African-American drummers
- African-American male rappers
- African-American guitarists
- American bass guitarists
- American hip hop singers
- People from Hattiesburg, Mississippi
- Rappers from Mississippi
- Rappers from Los Angeles, California
- Underground rappers
- California Democrats
- Cannabis music
- Mississippi Democrats
- People from Palmdale, California
- African-American Christians
- American male drummers
- American male guitarists
- 20th-century American singers
- 21st-century American singers