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Joshua Evans Turner [1] (born May 31, 1992), [2] [3] better known by his stage name Dem Atlas (often stylized as deM atlaS), [4] is an American rapper from Saint Paul, Minnesota. [5] He was formerly a member of the group Sifu Hotman alongside rapper Guante and producer Rube. [6] He was formerly signed to Rhymesayers Entertainment. [7] [8] [9]
B Wise; B Young; B-Legit; B-Lovee; B-Real; B-Tight; B'Flow; B. Cooper; B. Dolan; B. Smyth; B.G. B.G., the Prince of Rap; B.G. Knocc Out; B.o.B [1]; Baauer; Baba Saad ...
On July 29, 2016, they released a new single titled "No Biggie". The album included guest appearances by rappers Kool Keith, MF Doom, The Grouch, Aesop Rock, and deM atlaS, as well as artists Kim Manning and I.B.E. [31] [32] The album was released on August 12, 2016. [33] In 2018, a promotional song named "Make It All Better Again" was released.
This is a list of notable rappers and hip hop musicians murdered since 1987. Two studies in the mid-2010s concluded that murder was the cause of half of hip hop musician deaths. The average age of death is between 25–30 years of age.
[7] [11] Unlike previous Atlas Sound album covers, Parallax's cover did not feature faces obscured by a lens flare. By not covering his face with a flare, Cox felt that the album cover effectively conveyed the loneliness he experienced creating the album.
[3] [4] [5] As a hip hop artist, he has collaborated with Minneapolis locals Haley Bonar, Kristoff Krane and No Bird Sing, and is a member of the group Sifu Hotman with the rapper Dem Atlas and the producer Rube. [6] Big Cats! produced his albums, An Unwelcome Guest and You Better Weaponize. Myhre founded the MN Activist Project. [citation needed]
Atlas would continue to appear on ECW during The Abraham Washington Show as Abraham Washington's sidekick, until ECW went off air in February 2010. Smith Hart and Tony Atlas in 2012 Atlas was released from his WWE contract on April 30, 2010. [ 24 ]
Kaseem Ryan was born on August 11, 1972, in New York City [9] and grew up in the Brownsville neighborhood of Brooklyn. [10] He initially developed an interest in hip hop as a child in the late 1970s; [11] in an interview with Vice, he estimated that he began rapping around the age of eight.