Community Corner

Today's Pride of Bed-Stuy: Shawn 'Jay-Z' Carter

Jay-Z pulled himself up by his bootstraps to eventually become the reigning rapper of New York City

February 17, 2012: One of the greatest, most successful hip-hop artists of all time, Jay-Z was born Shawn Corey Carter on December 4, 1969, in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn.

"He was the last of my four children," Carter’s mother later recalled, "the only one who didn't give me any pain when I gave birth to him, and that's how I knew he was a special child."

Carter's father, Adnes Reeves, left the family when Carter was only 11 years old. The young rapper was raised by his mother, Gloria Carter, in Brooklyn's drug-infested Marcy Projects.

Find out what's happening in Bed-Stuywith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Carter had a rough adolescence, detailed in many of his autobiographical songs. He attended Eli Whitney High School in Brooklyn, where he was a classmate of rap legend Notorious B.I.G.

Carter turned to rap at a very young age as an escape from the drugs, violence and poverty that surrounded him in the Marcy Projects. In 1989, at age 19, he joined the rapper Jaz-O to record a song called "The Originators," which won the pair an appearance on an episode of Yo! MTV Raps.

Find out what's happening in Bed-Stuywith free, real-time updates from Patch.

It was at this point that Carter embraced the nickname Jay-Z, which was a play on Carter's childhood nickname of "Jazzy," and a reference to the J/Z subway station near his Bed-Stuy home.

From Jaz-O, he learned how to navigate tthe rap industry. He also participated in the group Original Flavor for a short time. Jay-Z subsequently decided to make an untraditional decision and start his own label rather than sign with an established label like Jaz had done.

Together with friends Damon Dash and Kareem "Biggs" Burke, he created Roc-a-Fella Records in 1996, a risky strategy for cutting out the middleman and making money for himself. Once he found a reputable distributor, Priority Records (and then later Def Jam), Jay-Z finally had everything in place.

In June of that same year, Carter released his debut album, Reasonable Doubt. Although the record only reached No. 23 on the Billboard charts, it is now considered a classic hip-hop album, featuring songs such as "Can't Knock the Hustle," featuring Mary J. Blige, and "Brooklyn's Finest," a collaboration with Notorious B.I.G.

Reasonable Doubt established Carter as an emerging star in hip-hop.  In 1998, he released the DVD “Streets Is Watching,” for which he recorded the soundtrack by the same name.The album fared well commercially, reaching #3 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart and having two singles ("It's Alright" and "Love For Free") appear on The Billboard Hot 100.

Streets Is Watching had notable appearances from Memphis Bleek, Sauce Money, Noreaga, Jay-Z, Ja Rule and DMX. Productions were handled by a large array of artists including Dame Dash, Big Jaz and M.O.P.

Two years later, Carter achieved even broader success with the 1998 album Vol. 2 ... Hard Knock Life. The title track, which famously sampled its chorus from the Broadway musical Annie, became Carter's most popular single to date and won him his first Grammy nomination.

"Hard Knock Life" marked the beginning of a fruitful period in which Carter would become the biggest name in hip-hop. Over the span of those years, the rapper released a slew of No. 1 albums and hit singles. His most popular songs from this period include "Can I Get A ...", "Big Pimpin'", "I Just Wanna Love U", "Izzo (H.O.V.A.)" and "03 Bonnie & Clyde", a duet with Beyoncé Knowles.

Since his album "Hard Knock Life/Volume 2," every Jay-Z solo album has gone at least double platinum. Carter's most acclaimed album of this period was The Blueprint (2001), which would later be named on many music critics' lists of the best albums of the decade.

In 2003, Carter shocked the hip-hop world by releasing The Black Album and announcing that it would be his last solo record before retirement. Asked to explain his sudden exit from rap, Carter said that he once derived inspiration from trying to outshine other great MCs, but had simply gotten bored due to a lack of competition.

"The game ain't hot," he said. "I love when someone makes a hot album and then you've got to make a hot album. I love that. But it ain't hot."

During his hiatus from rapping, Carter turned his attention to the business side of music, becoming president of Def Jam Recordings. As president of Def Jam, Carter signed such popular acts as Rihanna, Ne-Yo and Young Jeezy and helped effect Kanye West's transition from producer to bestselling recording artist.

But his reign at the venerable hip-hop label wasn't all smooth sailing; Carter resigned as Def Jam's president in 2007, complaining about the company's resistance to change from ineffectual business models.

"You have record executives who've been sitting in their office for 20 years because of one act," he lamented.

Carter's other, ongoing business ventures include the popular urban clothing line Rocawear and Roc-A-Fella films. He also opened the 40/40 Club, an upscale sports bar with locations in New York and Atlantic City, and he is a part owner of the New Jersey Nets basketball franchise.

As Carter once rapped about his business empire, "I'm not a businessman -- I'm a business, man." He has often been called "The God MC,” which is why he has been called J-Hova (Jehovah).

In 2006, Carter ended his retirement from making music, releasing the new album Kingdom Come. He has since released two more albums: American Gangster and Blueprint, which sold a total of 3 million copies.

This trio of later albums marked a significant departure from Carter's earlier sound, incorporating stronger rock and soul influences in their production and offering lyrics tackling such mature subjects as the response to Hurricane Katrina, Barack Obama's 2008 election, and the perils of fame and fortune.

Carter calls "Reasonable Doubt" the favorite of his own recordings because "It's the first." He calls "Blueprint 2" his weakest album because of "too many songs." Today, Carter says he's trying to adapt his music to befit his own middle age.

"There's not a lot of people who have come of age in rap because it's only 30 years old," he says. "As more people come of age, hopefully the topics get broader and then the audience will stay around longer."

Carter married his longtime girlfriend, the popular singer Beyoncé Knowles, on April 4, 2008. They live together in an 8,000 square-foot penthouse apartment in the SoHo neighborhood of New York City. Carter and Beyoncé say they eventually want to start a family. "

I absolutely want kids," Carter says. "That's the only thing I really don't have."

In a 2010 cover story, Rolling Stone magazine proclaimed Carter "The King of America." Embodying the rags-to-riches rap dream, Jay-Z pulled himself up by his bootstraps as a youth to eventually become the reigning rapper of New York City.

While that may sound like hyperbole, Carter's ever-growing list of accomplishments places him in largely uncharted territory. Carter has won 10 Grammy Awards and has released 11 No. 1 albums, more than any other solo recording artist in history. Ranked #10 on VH1's 50 Greatest Hip Hop Artists, and he wa ranked #7 in the 2008 Forbes The Celebrity 100 list.

He campaigned for Barack Obama and has visited the president in the White House. He is married to arguably the biggest name in pop music, and he recently signed a $150 million contract with the concert promotion company Live Nation.

Despite all that, Carter remains hungry for new achievements. "There's something else to shoot for," he says. "There's always an extra level you don't know about."

From rags to riches, Jay-Z, has turned his life’s misfortunes into megafortunes. In an era when the purveyors of hip hop culture often are the last financial beneficiaries, Jay-Z has managed to stay on top. From the beginning, with the decision to found his own label, to his co-purchase of the New Jersey Nets, he has had the foresight to continually advance his position.

His role in Hip Hop is critical now more than ever, as so many of today’s young aspiring rappers look to his example. The Streets Are Watching. And they should pay close attention: Because, besides being a phenomenal writer and rapper, Jay-Z truly is a business. Man.

Shawn “Jay-Z” Carter, we acknowledge your successes, and we honor your outstanding artistry and leadership in business.

*Source, biography.com

**This is a reprint of a story that ran on Bed-Stuy Patch February 28, 2011


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here