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Boyz n da Hood was an American Southern gangsta rap group from Atlanta, Georgia. They were formerly signed to Sean Combs' Bad Boy Records and consisted of Young Jeezy, Jody Breeze, Gorilla Zoe, Big Gee, and Big Duke. They have collaborated several times with fellow Atlanta, Georgia artist and Block Ent labelmate Yung Joc.
The discography of Jeezy, an American rapper, consists of thirteen studio albums, 18 mixtapes, 70 singles (including 38 as a featured artist) and 28 music videos. Aside from his solo career, he has also released albums as a member of Boyz N Da Hood and U.S.D.A., respectively.
Boyz n da Hood is the debut studio album by American Southern hip hop group Boyz n da Hood. It was released on June 21, 2005, through Bad Boy South / Atlantic Records . Recording sessions took place at Sho'Nuff Studios, PatchWerk Recording Studios , The Zone, 730 Beat Street, Futuristic Recording Studios and D.A.R.P. Studios in Atlanta and at ...
In 2003, Jeezy independently released Come Shop wit Me, a two-CD set featuring new tracks along with some songs previously released on T.U.I. In 2004, Jeezy signed with Bad Boy Records and joined the group Boyz n da Hood, whose self-titled album was released in June 2005 and peaked at No. 5 on the Billboard 200 album chart.
"Dem Boyz" is the first single from Boyz n da Hood's self-titled debut album. The song reached number 56 on the Billboard Hot 100 , number 15 on the R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, and number 13 on the Rap Songs chart.
Jeezy’s departure from Def Jam marks a turning point for the rap vet, whose first studio album was released via Def Jam South. Every album since then has been released through the imprint in ...
Rapper Jeezy founded the group after his departure from Boyz n da Hood. [1] The original group consisted of Jeezy, Slick Pulla and Blood Raw. [2] In 2007, they released their sole album, Cold Summer, under Def Jam Recordings. After the release of their 2011 mixtape, All or Nothing, [3] U.S.D.A. disbanded in 2012 without any follow up material.
The actor, who played doomed football star Ricky Baker, shared how the classic film about growing up in South Central Los Angeles has "crossed generations."