Biography of anthony l ray
Sir Mix-a-Lot
American rapper (born )
"Prime Minista" redirects here. Not to be confused with Prime Minister.
Musical artist
Anthony L. Ray (born August 12, ), better known by his stage name Sir Mix-a-Lot or his CBhandlePrime Minista, is an American rapper. He is best known for his hit song "Baby Got Back", which peaked at number one on the Billboard Hot
Early life
Anthony Ray was born on August 12, , in Auburn, Washington, and grew up in Seattle's Central District. In Ray's youth, his mother worked as a licensed practical nurse at the King County Jail. Ray was a fan of hip hop and started rapping in the early s.[3]
While living in the Bryant Manor apartments on 19th Ave and East Yesler Way, Anthony Ray started school at Roosevelt High School, near the University District, when the Seattle Public School District was in the throes of what would be a year experiment to integrate the school system; Guns N' Roses member Duff McKagan and actress Rose McGowan also went there. Students were bused from their neighborhoods to schools at the other end of the city. From to , when the busing program was in operation, minorities carried the burden of busing, going from the South End and the Central Area to predominantly white schools in the North End.[4]
Ray said he knew that some North End residents did not want black children bused into their neighborhoods. But for him, the experience offered respite from the projects. "I've heard things like, 'Forced integration is not good,' 'I want my kid to be able to go to school in our community; that's why we moved here' – all those things I totally understand," he said. "But from my perspective, I didn't have the luxury of living in a neighborhood where a good school was. We didn't make that kind of money. So from my perspective, it was the best thing that could have happened to me."[4] A music teacher at Eckstein Middle School introduced Ray to the possibility of a music career.
Ray was interested in electronics and CB radio from a young age. One of his early jobs was working at a pinball arcade servicing machines, and during that time he started to fix keyboards and other musical equipment. He still works with electronics as a hobby.[5]
Career
s
Soon after high school, he began DJing parties at local community centers.[6] By , Sir Mix-a-Lot had begun playing weekends regularly at the Rainier Vista Boys and Girls Club in South Seattle. Soon he moved locations and started hosting his parties at the Rotary Boys and Girls Club in the Central District. It was there that he met 'Nasty' Nes Rodriguez, a local radio DJ and host of Fresh Tracks, the West Coast's first rap radio show on Seattle station KKFX (K-Fox).[7]
Sir Mix-a-Lot partnered with Nasty Nes and local businessman Ed Locke to found the Nastymix record label in [8] The first song to gain popularity outside of Seattle was "Square Dance Rap" in Mix-a-Lot had originally decided to rap the entire song slowly, then speed it up and increase its pitch in post production, Mix later told Seattle Refined in that "I didn't want to rap, that's why I use this weird Smurf voice".[9] After the song was picked up by DJs in clubs nationwide, he toured Florida, New York, and other states. While in Arizona, he noticed a street named Broadway with a restaurant named Dick's, just like Seattle. This gave him the idea to write his next hit, "Posse on Broadway".[10] The title referred to Broadway in Seattle's Capitol Hill district.[11] Released in , the single made the Top but quickly disappeared, although it remains popular in the Seattle area for its references to many local landmarks.
Swass, Sir Mix-a-Lot's debut album, was released in with two other singles: "Square-Dance Rap"[11] and "Iron Man", a rap metal track sampling from the song of the same name by Black Sabbath; it was backed by the band Metal Church.[12] In , the Recording Industry Association of America certified Swassplatinum.[13]
Seminar, released in , featured "My Hooptie", "Beepers", "Gortex" and "I Got Game".
s
In , Sir Mix-a-Lot signed to the Def American label, which also bought the rights to his first two albums, and released his third album Mack Daddy in The single "Baby Got Back" was a number one hit that went double platinum[13] and won the Grammy Award for Best Rap Solo Performance.[14]MTV aired the music video for the song only after 9 PM because of "many, many, complaints."[15]
In , Sir Mix-a-Lot collaborated with Seattle-based grunge band Mudhoney for the song "Freak Momma" on the Judgment Night soundtrack.[11]
In , he released the album Chief Boot Knocka, which reached #69 on the Billboard and #28 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Charts. The album featured the hit single "Put 'Em On The Glass". "Just Da Pimpin' in Me" was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Rap Solo Performance but lost to "Let Me Ride" by Dr. Dre.
When his album Return of the Bumpasaurus was only given a low label promotion, leading to lackluster sales, Sir Mix-a-Lot left Def American. During the time off, he worked closely with the band The Presidents of the United States of America under the group name "Subset" with a combination of rock and rap music, but nothing was ever officially released.[16]
s
Sir Mix-a-Lot signed with the independent label Artist Direct for his album Daddy's Home with "Big Johnson" as its lead single.[11][17] The next year, he released a DVD entitled "Shhhh Don't Tell 'Em That" to promote the album.[18]
s
In , Sir Mix-a-Lot announced his next album, Dun 4got About Mix. The lead single "Carz" was released to YouTube on 23 Nov By June , the video had had over a million views, although no release date for the album has been set as of [13] In the same year, his F.U.B.a.R. Remix for the song Conditions Of My Parole appeared on Puscifer's remix album All Re-Mixed Up.[19]
In , Sir Mix-a-Lot produced the album Dream for the urban rock band Ayron Jones and The Way. He opened their album release party at Neumos on November 2. That Christmas season, he promoted the Washington State Lottery over the Christmas season, with advertisements featuring his music appearing on Spotify.[20]
On June 6, , Sir Mix-a-Lot collaborated and performed with the Seattle Symphony on a new composition by Gabriel Prokofiev as part of the symphony's Sonic Evolution series of new orchestral pieces inspired by Seattle's music icons.[21][22][23]
In , rapper Nicki Minaj released the single "Anaconda",[24] which prominently featured samples from "Baby Got Back". Sir Mix-a-Lot praised both the artist and the song, calling it the "new and improved version" of "Baby Got Back".[25]
In March , Sir Mix-a-Lot collaborated with TNT and LK on the track and video, "Streets Don't Love Me".[26]
From to , Sir Mix-a-Lot hosted a morning radio show based in Seattle on Hot FM.
He owns multiple residences, including one in Auburn, Washington, where he has continued to maintain a strong presence performing at small festivals across the country.
Other work
In , Sir Mix-a-Lot was the regular host of the short-lived UPN anthology drama series The Watcher, in which, in , he was quoted in Vibe magazine as saying "in retrospect, I wish I hadn't done (the show)"[27]
In , Sir Mix-a-Lot appeared on Adult Swim's Tom Goes to the Mayor and the 17th Treehouse of Horror on Fox's The Simpsons. In , he appeared on Adult Swim's Robot Chicken singing a song entitled "Table Be Round". It was sung in the style of "Baby Got Back", but was about to King Arthur's creation of the Round Table. He also voiced politician Hans Blix and singer Stevie Wonder in the season 3 finale. He appeared in "The Judge" episode of Season 4 of BoJack Horseman playing himself.
Sir Mix-a-Lot provides narration and commentary in Wheedle's Groove, a documentary about the Seattle s and 70s funk and soul scene.[28]
In June , the DIY Network aired a special called Sir Mix-A-Lot's House Remix, which involved Sir Mix-a-Lot buying and flipping a house in Seattle.[29]
In , he became the spokesperson for Cards Against Humanity's "Ass Pack".[30]
Discography
Main article: Sir Mix-a-Lot discography
Awards and nominations
Grammy Awards
[31]
| Year | Nominated work | Award | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| "Baby Got Back" | Best Rap Solo Performance | Won | |
| "Just Da Pimpin' In Me" | Best Rap Solo Performance | Nominated | |
| Televoid | Best Long Form Music Video | Nominated |
MTV Video Music Awards
American Music Awards
[32]
| Year | Nominated work | Award | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sir Mix-a-Lot | Favorite Rap/Hip-Hop Artist | Won |
Soul Train Music Awards
| Year | Nominated work | Award | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| "Baby Got Back" | Best R&B/Soul Single – Male | Nominated |
References
- ^Rabin, Nathan (July 16, ). "Sir Mix-A-Lot". A.V. Club. Retrieved June 16,
- ^"Sir Mix-A-Lot Says His Critics Have Got His Message Backward". Los Angeles Times. 19 July Retrieved 9 January
- ^"Sir Mix-a-Lot Biography". . Archived from the original on October 13, Retrieved July 13,
- ^ ab"Busing Blues". . Retrieved January 2,
- ^Bomani Jones (19 August ). "Sir Mix-A-Lot". ESPN (Podcast). ESPN Radio. Event occurs at Retrieved 19 August
- ^"Going Way Back A Brief History of Hiphop". . Retrieved January 2,
- ^"Sir Mix-A-Lot / Ray, Anthony". . 28 October Retrieved January 2,
- ^Blecha, Peter. "Nastymix Records' party marks Gold Record awarded to Sir Mix-a-Lot's SWASS album on April 29, ". . Retrieved 1 April
- ^Karlinsky, Malia (20 September ). "Rapping with the King of Old School: Seattle's own Sir Mix-A-Lot". Seattle Refined. Sinclair Broadcast Group. Retrieved 1 April
- ^Weingarten, Christopher R. (6 November ). "Best of ' How Sir-Mix-A-Lot's 'Posse on Broadway' Put Seattle on Rap's Map". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 1 April
- ^ abcdHuey, Steve (). "Sir Mix-A-Lot – Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved
- ^Henderson, Alex. "Rap-Metal". AllMusic. Retrieved June 24,
- ^ abc"Gold & Platinum". RIAA. Retrieved
- ^"Sir Mix-A-Lot – Charts & Awards – Grammy Awards". AllMusic. Retrieved
- ^Rosen, Craig; Newman, Melinda (Jun 27, ). Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. p.4. Retrieved 19 August
- ^Horowitz, Steven J. (September 12, ). "Sir Mix-A-Lot on Nicki Minaj's 'Anaconda,' Booty Fever & New Music". Billboard. Retrieved 11 August
- ^Kaufman, Gil (). "Sir Mix-A-Lot Hoping Baby's Got Comeback". MTV News. Archived from the original on August 6, Retrieved
- ^"Shhhh… Don't Tell 'Em That". . Retrieved 27 June
- ^Martins, Chris (18 July ). "Sir Mix-a-Lot's Puscifer Remix Laces 'Conditions of My Parole' With Noisy Wubs". SPIN. Retrieved 2 March
- ^"Washington's Lottery - Happy Holidays Lottery". Archived from the original on Retrieved
- ^Cross, Charles R. (). "Sir Mix-A-Lot had a lot of fun with Seattle Symphony". Retrieved
- ^Coleman, Miriam (). "Sir Mix-a-Lot to Perform Classical Music Version of 'Baby Got Back' With Seattle Symphony". . Archived from the original on Retrieved
- ^Zak Burns (). "Sir Mix-A-Lot hit gets the Seattle Symphony treatment - Local News". Retrieved
- ^"Nicki Minaj - Anaconda". Archived from the original on Retrieved
- ^Harling, Danielle (). "Nicki Minaj's "Anaconda" Dubbed New & Improved "Baby Got Back" By Sir Mix-A-Lot Get The Latest Hip Hop News, Rap News & Hip Hop Album Sales". Retrieved
- ^"TNT X Sir Mix-A-Lot X LK - Streets Don't Love Me". Archived from the original on Retrieved
- ^Caramanica, Jon (October ). VIBE. Vibe Media Group. p. Retrieved 19 August [permanent dead link]
- ^"Wheedle's Groove Seattle International Film Festival Jennifer Maas USA - Films". Archived from the original on Retrieved
- ^"'Sir Mix-A-Lot's House Remix' Starring The Grammy Award-Winning Rap Artist Premieres On DIY Network June 30". . Discovery, Inc. Retrieved 19 August
- ^"Cards Against Humanity Presents: Ass Pack + s Nostalgia Pack". Retrieved 5 November
- ^"All GRAMMY Awards and Nominations for Sir Mix-a-Lot". Retrieved
- ^"Awards for Sir Mix-a-Lot". Retrieved