Ruff Ryders Entertainment | |
---|---|
Parent company | The Universal Music Group |
Founded | 1988[1] |
Founder | Joaquin "Waah" Dean Darrin "Dee" Dean Chivon Dean[1] |
Distributor(s) | |
Genre | |
Country of origin | United States |
Location | 33 S Broadway, Yonkers, New York,10701, U.S. |
Ruff Ryders Entertainment is an American hip hop record label and management company founded by siblings and record executives Joaquin "Waah", Darin "Dee" and Chivon Dean.[2] It operated as a subsidiary of Universal, and distributed by Interscope Records, with Def Jam Recordings serving as the distributor for DMX albums. The label went on to launch the careers of several successful artists such as DMX, Drag-On and the Deans' nephew, Swizz Beatz, among others. The Ruff Ryders namesake also referred to a loose-knit hip hop collective composed of the core signees of the label. The collective's de facto leader was the label’s flagship artist DMX. Ruff Ryders and its main studio Powerhouse Studios are headquartered at 33 South Broadway in Yonkers, New York.
History
1997-1999: Rise and success
Ruff Ryders began as the managers of DMX and The LOX.
In 1997,[3] through Def Jam A&R Irv Gotti, Def Jam signed Ruff Ryders artist DMX. Following DMX's signing to Def Jam, Ruff Ryders was launched as a record label, though they would not get a label deal until a year later. DMX's first studio album, It's Dark and Hell is Hot was released on May 12, 1998 and was the first release from Ruff Ryders as a record label. Portions of the album were recorded at Ruff Ryders' main studio, Powerhouse studios. The album featured guest appearances from fellow Ruff Ryders artists Loose and Big Stan, as well as a then 17-year old Drag-On, who signed in 1997.[4] It also featured production from in-house Ruff Ryders producers P.K. and Dame Grease as well as the Deans' then teenage nephew Swizz Beatz, who was relatively unknown at the time. It's Dark And Hell And Hell Is Hot debuted at number 1 on the Billboard top 200 and sold over 250,000 copies in its first week.[5] The album went on to sell four million copies in America, being certified quadruple platinum by the RIAA, and sold five million copies worldwide.[6] DMX's success lead to Ruff Ryders signing a joint venture deal with The Universal Music Group's Interscope Records in 1998 before the release of DMX's second album. The strong success of It's Dark and Hell Is Hot catapulted Ruff Ryders and DMX into mainstream superstardom and prompted Def Jam's leader Lyor Cohen to challenge DMX to record another album quickly to have another album released within the same calendar year.[7] DMX's second studio album, Flesh of My Flesh, Blood of My Blood, was released on December 22, 1998 through Ruff Ryders. Much of the album featured production from Swizz Beatz, who began to produce more for Ruff Ryders artists. Flesh Of My Flesh, Blood Of My Blood debuted at number one and sold over 670,000 units in its first week of release. It went on to sell over three million copies.[8] By this time, Ruff Ryders enlisted Jay Jackson and Amelia Moore as A&R coordinators. Dee and Waah remained executive producers and A&Rs, with Dee also being the stylist for the label.
On April 27, 1999, Ruff Ryders released its debut compilation album, Ryde or Die Vol. 1. It featured the first appearance of rapper Eve as a Ruff Ryder, as well as introduced new Ruff Ryders artists Infa-Red & Cross, and Raleigh, North Carolina Contemporary R&B group Parlè. The LOX and its solo members greatly contributed to the album, through the group was still signed to Bad Boy Records at the time. Swizz Beatz produced a significant portion of the album, with Waah, P.K. and Ice Pick contributing production to other songs and skits. Ryde or Die, Vol.1 debuted and peaked at number one on the Billboard 200, and was ultimately certified Platinum by the RIAA. It featured the moderately successful lead single Down Bottom, credited mainly to Drag-On. Though the album version of Down Bottom featured rapper Juvenile, the music video version (only included on the Spit These Bars CD single) features a verse from new Ruff Ryders affiliate Yung Wun. Yung Wun, an Atlanta, Georgia native, began affiliating with Ruff Ryders in 1999 after his label, Dark Society, presented his music to Swizz Beatz, who in turn presented the music to Ruff Ryders executives. Though not present on Ryde or Die Vol.1, Yung Wun would make appearances on subsequent albums.
2000-2004: Continued success
On March 28, 2000, Ruff Ryders released Drag-On's debut studio album, Opposite of H2O. The album featured production from Ruff Ryders in house producers P.K./P. Killer Trackz, DJ Shok, Jay "Icepick Jay" Jackson, and Swizz Beatz as well as guest appearances from Ruff Ryders acts Parle, Eve, The LOX, Styles, Swizz Beatz, Jadakiss, and DMX. Critical reception was mixed to average, but was nonetheless a commercial success. Supported by the moderately successful lead single Spit These Bars, the album debuted and peaked in the top 5 on the Billboard 200 and was certified Gold in America.
On July 4, 2000, Ruff Ryders released their second compilation album, Ryde or Die Vol.2. Production on the album was handled by regular in-house producers Swizz Beatz, Icepick and P. Killer Trackz, as well as new Ruff Ryders producers Mahogany, Teflon, and TJ Beatz. Darrin and Joaquin Dean, Chivon Dean and Ruff Ryders marketing executive Leota Blacknor served as executive producers. While the album featured regular Ruff Ryders artists like Parlè, The Lox, DMX, and Eve, the album also featured appearances from new Ruff Ryders affiliates Yung Wun and Larsiny. Larsiny was a Philadelphia, Pennsylvania rap group who was discovered by Swizz Beatz's father Terrence Dean, and in turn the group signed to the Ruff Ryders-subsidiary label TD Entertainment in 1999. One of the members of Larsiny, Cassidy, would go on to achieve success as a solo rapper signed to Swizz Beatz's Full Surface Records label in the 2000s. Ryde Or Die Vol.2 was commercially successful, debuting and peaking in the top 3 on the Billboard 200 and was certified Platinum in America. A Parlé album, originally scheduled for an April 4, 2000 release, was ultimately shelved.
Around 2000, Ruff Ryders began experiencing with film and launched Ruff Ryders Television & Film. Ruff Ryders had hopes of releasing a film titled My Brother's Keeper with an accompanying soundtrack. However, both the film and the accompanying soundtrack were never released.
The label promoted the idea of all its acts being part of the "Ruff Ryders family", as evidenced when DMX won Best Rap Album at the 2000 Billboard Music Awards and was joined on stage by other Ruff Ryders when he went to accept his award.[9] That same year, Ruff Ryders toured with Cash Money Records from February to April.
In 2003, Ruff Ryders' deal with Interscope Records ended, though Jadakiss, Eve and Styles remained on Interscope. Shortly thereafter, Ruff Ryders signed a joint venture deal with Virgin Records.[10] That same year, Ruff Ryders signed Jin, a Miami, Florida born Chinese rapper who rose to prominence through winning many Freestyle Fridays rap battles on BET's 106 & Park.
The first release from Ruff Ryders under the Virgin deal was Drag-On's second studio album, Hell and Back, released in February 2004. The album featured appearances from Ruff Ryders artists Eve, DMX, Styles, Jadakiss and Swizz Beatz, who also provided production on the album. As a result of low promotion, Hell and Back was a commercial failure, only peaking at number 47 on the Billboard top 200 and failing to achieve gold status in America. Jin's debut album, The Rest Is History, was delayed multiple times before its October 2004 release. Upon release, the album was also a commercial failure, only selling 20,000 units in its first week and peaking at number 54 on the Billboard top 200. Contributing factors to the album failing were lack of promotion from Virgin Records and the online music piracy crisis of the 2000s.[11] The failure of both albums led to Ruff Ryders parting ways with Virgin Records.
2005 saw only one release from Ruff Ryders, Vol. 4: The Redemption, released through independent record company Artemis Records. The album peaked at number 40 on the Billboard top 200 and sold around 25,000 copies in its first week. It was the only Ruff Ryders album released through Artemis.
2005-2009: Decline
2005 saw two releases from Ruff Ryders, Vol. 4: The Redemption, released through independent record company Artemis Records. The album peaked at number 40 on the Billboard top 200 and sold around 25,000 copies in its first week. It was the only Ruff Ryders album released through Artemis. The other album released through Ruff Ryders in 2005 was Sheek Louch's After Taxes. The album fared better than Vol.4, but failed to achieve Gold status in America.
That same year,DMX began working on his sixth studio album, then titled Here We Go Again. Though the album was initially scheduled to be release through Def Jam, tension between DMX and then-Def Jam president Jay-Z led to DMX leaving Def Jam. The album, now titled Year of the Dog... Again, was released in August 2006 through Ruff Ryders, Sony Urban Music and Columbia Records. The album debuted at number 2 on the Billboard top 200 but failed to achieve the same success that DMX previously achieved, only selling 345,000 copies. That same year, Jin left the label as well as Drag-On who left to join Swizz Beatz's Full Surface Records.
Ruff Ryders released Styles P's Super Gangster (Extraordinary Gentleman) in 2007 and Jadakiss's The Last Kiss in 2009 through Interscope Records and Def Jam Recordings, respectively. The Last Kiss is the latest album released through Ruff Ryders, and Ruff Ryders has remained dormant since then due to not having funding and distribution from a record label.
Roster
Artists
- DMX
- The LOX
- Eve
- Drag-On
- Swizz Beatz
- Fiend
- Infa-Red & Cross
- MC Jin
- Yung Wun
- Big Stan
- Loose
- Parlè
- Larsiny (Akbar, Shiz Lansky, and Cassidy)(Through Ruff Ryders subsidiary label TD Entertainment)
In house producers
- DJ Iroc
- DJ Shok
- P.K./P. Killer Trackz
- Dame Grease
- Icepick Jay (deceased)
- Swizz Beatz
- Teflon
- Mahogany
- TJ Beatz
- Darrin Dean (exec.)
- Joaquin "Waah" Dean (exec.)
- Chivon Dean (exec.)
Marketing staff
- Keisha Gibbs
- Ignatius "Icepick Jay" Jackson (deceased)
- Leota Blacknor
Releases
Studio albums
Artist | Album | Details |
---|---|---|
DMX | It's Dark And Hell Is Hot |
|
Flesh Of My Flesh, Blood Of My Blood |
| |
Eve | Let There Be Eve...Ruff Ryders' First Lady |
|
DMX | ...And Then There Was X |
|
The Lox | We Are the Streets |
|
Drag-On | Opposite of H2O |
|
Eve | Scorpion |
|
Jadakiss | Kiss tha Game Goodbye |
|
DMX | The Great Depression |
|
Styles P | A Gangster and a Gentleman |
|
Eve | Eve-Olution |
|
DMX | Grand Champ |
|
Drag-On | Hell and Back |
|
Jadakiss | Kiss of Death |
|
Jin | The Rest Is History |
|
Sheek Louch | After Taxes |
|
DMX | Year of the Dog... Again |
|
Styles P | Time is Money |
|
Super Gangster (Extraordinary Gentleman) |
| |
Jadakiss | The Last Kiss |
|
Compilations
Artist | Album | Details |
---|---|---|
Ruff Ryders | Ryde or Die Vol. 1 |
|
Ruff Ryders | Ryde or Die Vol. 2 |
|
Ruff Ryders | Ryde or Die Vol. 3: In the "R" We Trust |
|
Ruff Ryders | The Redemption Vol. 4 |
|
DMX | The Definition of X: The Pick of the Litter | |
DMX | Playlist Your Way |
|
DMX | The Best of DMX | |
Ruff Ryders | Ruff Ryders: Past, Present, Future |
|
See also
- Bloodline Records founded by DMX
- Full Surface Records founded by Swizz Beatz
References
- 1 2 BET.com (August 19, 2020). "5 Things To Know About Ruff Ryders". Black Entertainment Television. Retrieved October 18, 2021.
In 1988, [Waah] formed a fledgling management company and brought Dee, along with their sister, Chivon, on board as his founding partners.
- ↑ Phares, Heather. Biography of Ruff Ryders at AllMusic. Retrieved October 26, 2008.
- ↑ "Executives Lyor Cohen and Kevin Liles Remember DMX & Reveal How He Helped Save Def Jam". Billboard. Retrieved May 28, 2022.
- ↑ "Drag-On on Signing to Ruff Ryders After Losing Battle to DMX, Does DMX Impression (Part 2)". YouTube. May 18, 2021. Retrieved June 18, 2022.
- ↑ "Today in Hip-Hop: DMX Drops 'It's Dark and Hell Is Hot'". Retrieved May 28, 2022.
- ↑ "DMX's 'It's Dark And Hell Is Hot' Tracklist, Ranked". Retrieved May 28, 2022.
- ↑ "DMX Earned $1 Million Bonus for 'Flesh of My Flesh, Blood of My Blood' by Recording Album in 30 Days". Retrieved May 28, 2022.
- ↑ "DMX'S FLESH OF MY FLESH, BLOOD OF MY BLOOD ALBUM ANNIVERSARY". Retrieved May 28, 2022.
- ↑ Simon, Reynolds (March 12, 2000). "Family Values in the Rap Business". The New York Times. Retrieved February 22, 2015.
- ↑ "Ruff Ryders, Virgin Link For Joint Venture". Billboard. Retrieved July 11, 2022.
- ↑ "The Rise, The Fall & The Rebirth Of The Ruff Ryders | Ruff Ryders Chronicles Finale". YouTube. September 17, 2020. Retrieved July 11, 2022.
- ↑ Inc, Nielsen Business Media (January 19, 2002). Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc.
{{cite book}}
:|last=
has generic name (help) - ↑ Kellman, Andy. "The Definition of X: The Pick of the Litter – DMX". AllMusic. TiVo Corporation. Retrieved August 12, 2017.
- ↑ "BPI: DMX". British Phonographic Industry.
- ↑ "DMX – Playlist Your Way". Amazon. Retrieved August 12, 2017.
- ↑ Jeffries, David. "The Best of DMX – DMX". AllMusic. TiVo Corporation. Retrieved August 12, 2017.
- ↑ "BPI: DMX". British Phonographic Industry.