Artist

Trick Daddy

Genre: Rap ,Southern Rap ,Gangsta Rap ,Dirty South ,Contemporary Rap ,Hardcore Rap
Origin: U.S.A
Active: 1995 - Present
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Trick Daddy surfaced among the most aggressively styled rappers to gain mainstream traction, achieving his first national breakthrough from the southern United States in 2001 through the single "I'm a Thug" and solidifying an improbable status as a coast-to-coast star. Prior to that crossover moment he had already logged several localized successes. Chief among them were the club staples "Nann Nigga" and "Shut Up," tracks defined by driving rhythms and boisterous verses. His arrival in the wider market via the aptly named "I'm a Thug" registered as unexpected. Observers never doubted his skill, yet his signature look—an unvarying scowl, shaved head, bristly beard, forearm ink, and gold grill—diverged sharply from prevailing mainstream rapper aesthetics. Whether thug or not, he ascended to national prominence anyway. Multiple RIAA honors followed, among them platinum certification for the 2001 album Thugs Are Us, while seven straight projects reached the Top Ten of the Billboard R&B/hip-hop albums chart through Finally Famous: Born a Thug, Still a Thug in 2009. Output slowed markedly over the ensuing decade, though live performances continued along with scattered mixtapes and EPs, and demand persisted for guest appearances.

Born Maurice Young in Miami, Florida, the artist originally billed as Trick Daddy Dollars first drew notice in 1996 as a lead voice on Luke's "Scarred," the opening cut from the ex-2 Live Crew leader's Uncle Luke album. The track resonated strongly with the relevant audience, its appeal heightened by Trick Daddy Dollars' unusually smooth and rapid delivery. Former concert promoter Ted Lucas was among those impressed and promptly placed the rapper on the roster of his newly launched Slip-n-Slide Records. The debut Trick Daddy Dollars project, Based on a True Story (1997), appeared later that year. Strong regional singles helped it sell respectably as an independent release and pushed it into the Top 60 of Billboard's R&B/hip-hop chart.

The situation shifted decisively the next year with www.thug.com (1998). Trick Daddy shed the "Dollars" suffix and landed a breakout single in "Nann Nigga," a dance-floor record that matched him against then-unknown Trina as a female foil. The song circulated widely through the South and reached parts of the Midwest and Southwest, prompting Atlantic Records to sign him and reissue www.thug.com nationally—the first of seven consecutive Top Ten R&B/hip-hop entries. The initial Atlantic full-length, Book of Thugs: Chapter AK Verse 47 (2000), met expectations and positioned him for broader success. Powered by "Shut Up," another rowdy club track reminiscent of "Nann Nigga" and again featuring Trina, Book of Thugs carried Trick Daddy's name from coast to coast and established him as one of the Dirty South's more promising prospects.

Major payoff arrived the following year with Thugs Are Us (2001), the set that placed Trick Daddy alongside Ludacris and Mystikal among the few Dirty South rappers embraced nationwide and secured rotation on urban stations across the country as well as on MTV. The album's Top 20 pop single "I'm a Thug" anchored the campaign. Despite tattoos, gold grill, and overall thuggish presentation, Trick Daddy obtained mainstream airplay, climbed the Billboard rankings, and earned a platinum plaque to accompany the gold certifications from his prior two releases. Momentum held with his fifth album in six years, Thug Holiday (2002), and its lead single "In da Wind," perhaps his most inventive recording to date, which featured fellow Southern artists Big Boi and Cee Lo Green. Thug Matrimony: Married to the Streets (2004) followed two years later, highlighted by the hit "Let's Go," a Lil Jon production built around a heavy sample of Ozzy Osbourne's metal staple "Crazy Train."

He eventually circled back to the street-oriented sound that first defined him on Back by Thug Demand (2006), a more traditional Trick Daddy album. After parting ways with Slip-n-Slide/Atlantic, he started the Dunk Ryders label and released Finally Famous: Born a Thug Still a Thug (2009), his seventh Top Ten R&B/hip-hop project. Releases grew sporadic over the next decade, limited to occasional guest spots and a handful of mixtapes and EPs that included Dick & Dynamite (2013), U Already Know (2014), and Thug Mentality (2018). The material appeared either on his own Trick Daddy Music imprint or with support from Fast Life Entertainment.