Ja Rule the Rapper
Ja Rule the Rapper
Biography of Rapper Ja
Rule
   
As the flagship artist for producer Irv Gotti's
Def Jam-affiliated Murder Inc. label, Ja Rule became the rap
industry's most commercially successful artist during the early
2000s, working closely with the hitmaker and his stable of
talent.
Ja initially won over a sizable following with
Venni Vetti Vecci (1999), his rather hardcore debut album
modeled largely after the style of rugged thug rap then
popularized by DMX and the Ruff Ryder collective. In
particular, "Holla Holla" became a breakout hit, but in
retrospect it was a minor success relative to what Ja
accomplished a year later with his follow-up album, Rule 3:36
(2000). [ Ja Rule the Rapper ]
On this album, Gotti juxtaposed the rapper's
thuggish style with a trio of radio-friendly vixens --
Christina Milian, Lil' Mo, and Vita -- and produced three
enormous hit singles: "Between Me and You," "I Cry," and "Put
It on Me." These duets established the template for Ja's
following album, Pain Is Love (2001), which featured yet more
chorus-singing divas, this time Jennifer Lopez ("I'm Real") and
Ashanti ("Always on Time"), as well as a similarly styled
interpolation of Stevie Wonder's "Do I Do" ("Livin' It Up")
featuring Case on the hook.
By 2002, Ja alone had brought Gotti's Murder
Inc. label into the national spotlight and helped break
successive artists from the label; most notably Ashanti, who
collaborated with him on "Down 4 U," yet another chart-topping
hit. Roughly around this same time, Ja used his fame to launch
a minor acting career for himself, beginning with The Fast and
the Furious (2001), and he began to attract attention from his
peers, uniting with Nas on the 2002 MTV Video Music Awards and
squabbling with DMX in the press. [ Ja Rule the Rapper ]
Later that year he released The Last Temptation
(2003), which again paired him with urban vocalists for a few
singles, this time with Bobby Brown ("Thug Lovin'") and Ashanti
("Mesmerize"). A backlash mounted around this time, as upstart
rapper 50 Cent began hurling numerous disses at Ja.
Ja Rule the Rapper
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