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Bad Boy Entertainment, doing business as Bad Boy Records, is an American record label founded in 1993 by Sean "Puffy" Combs. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] During the mid-1990s, the label signed hip hop and contemporary R&B artists, beginning with the Notorious B.I.G.
Forever is the second studio album of American hip hop recording artist Sean "Puff Daddy" Combs, released on August 24, 1999, by Bad Boy Records and Arista Records. [1] The album debuted at number two on the Billboard 200, [2] received platinum certification by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), [3] and sold 205,343 units in its first week.
The box set features 80 tracks across five CDs and includes remastered hits from Puff Daddy (under his various aliases), The Notorious B.I.G., Craig Mack, Faith Evans, Total, Carl Thomas, Mase, 112, The Lox, Cassie, Janelle Monáe, Danity Kane, Machine Gun Kelly, French Montana as well as other Bad Boy artists.
UPDATED: Sean “Puff Daddy/Diddy” Combs’ decision to give artists and songwriters the publishing rights that he owns on songs from his 1990s powerhouse label Bad Boy, confirmed last week, was ...
The most honest thing Sean Combs may have ever done was name his record label “Bad Boy.”. Although 54-year-old Combs – aka Puff Daddy, aka Puffy, aka P. Diddy, Diddy and Love – has been ...
Over the last 30 years, Diddy's label Bad Boy Records has released music from artists like Machine Gun Kelly, Janelle Monaé, and Yung Joc. Over the last 30 years, Diddy's label Bad Boy Records ...
In 1996, under the name Puff Daddy, Combs released his first commercial vocal work as a rapper. [29] His debut single, "Can't Nobody Hold Me Down", spent 28 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, peaking at number one. [30] His debut album, No Way Out, was released on July 22, 1997, [31] through Bad Boy Records.
After Life After Death, Puff Daddy's Bad Boy Records continued to bring pop and gangsta rap closer together: the references to violence and drug dealing remained, as did the "gangsta" rhetoric, but the previously dark production changed to a cleaner, sample-heavy, more upbeat sound that was fashioned for the pop charts, as seen in the single ...