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T.I. was discovered by Kawan "KP" Prather and signed to his label imprint Ghet-O-Vision Entertainment. [3] Upon signing a recording contract with Arista Records subsidiary LaFace Records in 2001, he shortened his name from TIP to T.I., out of respect for his Arista label-mate Q-Tip. [4] In 2001, T.I. released his debut album, I'm Serious.
T.I. released his fifth album, T.I. vs. T.I.P., on July 3, 2007. The lead single from the album was "Big Shit Poppin' (Do It)", which was produced by Mannie Fresh and was released to radio stations on April 17, 2007. The second single, "You Know What It Is" featuring Wyclef Jean, was released June 12, 2007.
This announcement was the release of the first single from the album. [12] On April 1, 2010, T.I. posted the first post-prison interview on his website and he described the album's direction being "more aggressive. It's going hard like classic T.I.". [13] T.I. announced that the album would be titled King Uncaged on April 15, 2010. [14]
It should only contain pages that are T.I. albums or lists of T.I. albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about T.I. albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
The L.I.B.R.A. is the eleventh studio album by American rapper T.I. It was released on October 16, 2020, via Grand Hustle Records and Empire Distribution.The title, which references T.I.'s zodiac sign, libra, also doubles as an acronym for "Legend Is Back Running Atlanta". [2]
King (stylized as King.), is the fourth studio album by American rapper T.I., released on March 28, 2006, through Grand Hustle Records and Atlantic Records.Recording sessions for the album took one and a half years to complete in late 2005 according to T.I. in an interview with MTV News.
Relive Taylor Swift's eras with all of her albums in order of release, from her debut to her newest album and all the Taylor's versions re-recordings. ... Full list of winners for 2024 season.
Despite criticizing T.I.'s "half-hearted stabs at Hot 100 success", Patrick Bowman of Idolator commended Trouble Man: Heavy Is the Head for showing "flashes of brilliance amidst brief instances of lingering stagnation", as well as noting the album to mark an important stage in T.I.'s career. [66]