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The following list is a discography of production and co-production by Sean Combs, sometimes credited as Puffy, P. Diddy or simply Diddy. It includes a list of songs produced, co-produced and remixed by year, artist, album and title.
The discography of American rapper Sean Combs (known professionally under the pseudonyms Puffy, Puff Daddy, P. Diddy or Diddy) consists of five studio albums, two collaborative albums, one remix album and seventy-two singles – including thirty-three as a lead artist and thirty-nine as a featured artist.
Trouser Press wrote that 20/20 "stands proudly" as one of the best power pop albums to date. [3] Reviewing in Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies (1981), Robert Christgau said: "Just about all of these dense, cleverly constructed tunes would sound great on the radio. If they have some other reason for being, though, neither ...
Sean John Combs was born on November 4, 1969, in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City.Raised in Mount Vernon, New York, [4] his mother Janice Combs (née Smalls) was a model and teacher's assistant, [5] and his father, Melvin Earl Combs, served in the U.S. Air Force and was an associate of convicted New York drug dealer Frank Lucas.
Diddy parties is a collective name for the parties hosted from the 1990s to the 2020s by the rapper, producer and entrepreneur Sean Combs, sometimes known as "Puff Daddy" and "Diddy". [ a ] The initial series, known as White Parties , were a series of parties hosted by Combs between 1998 and 2009.
Rapper 50 Cent announced that he was developing a Sean Combs docuseries on December 7, 2023, stating that proceeds from the project would be going to victims of the sexual assault and rape allegations that Diddy has been involved in. [1]
20/20/Look Out! — Oglio Records: First two LP's, 20/20 and Look Out! remastered and released on one CD. Now out of print and commercially unavailable. A later edition includes two non-LP B-sides from the Look Out! era. 1995 4 Day Tornado — Oglio Records: 1998 Interstate — Oglio Records: 1999 Sex Trap — Japanese release Includes bonus ...
The song marks Diddy's first record to not be released by his label, Bad Boy Records, for which he was the flagship artist and founder.After a lukewarm commercial and critical response from his previous decade of material, the song finds Diddy in a less-braggadocious state of vulnerability as he laments on unrequited love. [5]