CHINGY'S
POWERBALLIN' WITH JANET JACKSON, LIL' WAYNE,
DAVID BANNER, NATE DOGG, R. KELLY, G.I.B., BUN B AND ZIGGY ON FOLLOW UP TO HIS TRIPLE PLATINUM JACKPOT
Triple Platinum rapper Chingy is joined by a stellar crew on his sophomore album, Powerballin', which will be released by Capitol Records on November 16. Janet Jackson, Lil' Wayne, David Banner, Nate Dogg, R. Kelly, G.I.B., Bun B and Ziggy are among the artists featured on the St. Louis-based rapper's follow-up to his debut album, Jackpot, which entered the Billboard Top 200 at #2 in mid-2003 and is still charting as a Top 40 Rap album.
In just two weeks, "Balla Baby," Powerballin's lead single, has reached an audience of 20 million. It's in the Top 25 at Top 40 Rhythmic radio, and Top 40 Mainstream stations are jumping on the track well in advance of the mid-October add date at that format. The accompanying video has just been added by BET and goes into rotation this week at MTV after debuting on TRL on September 23. It was directed by Jeremy Rall (Snoop Dogg, Ludacris, Bennie Man, Floetry) and features a guest appearance by David Banner.
A "Balla Baby" ring tune was made available to all EMI-approved wireless carriers three weeks prior to the radio add date. Capitol is the first major label to release a ring tune to Mobile Service Providers (MSPs) before street date. A special "Balla" edition of the CD with three extra tracks and a bonus 30-minute DVD documentary will be available at retail for a limited time.
Chingy will kick off a series of seven television appearances with a performance on "The Tonight Show With Jay Leno" on November 5. Also scheduled are "Showtime at the Apollo" (11/13), "Late Night with Conan O'Brien" (11/16), "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" and "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" (both airing on 11/23), "Last Call with Carson Daly" (11/26) and "Soul Train" (12/8).
Chingy will be the Yahoo Artist of the Month in October, and his new website will launch on October 11.
"This Powerballin' album is basically a celebration of my coming from nothing to have a little bit," says Chingy. "It's about me accomplishing my goals and my celebrating that. I'm also talking about what went on after I made the Jackpot album."
The track listing for Powerballin' is as follows:
1. Haters 101 (Intro)
2. Give Em Some Mo
3. Fall'N featuring G.I.B.
4. Balla Baby
5. Jackpot The Pimp Pt. 2 (Skit)
6. Leave Wit Me featuring R. Kelly
7. Make That Ass Talk featuring Ziggy
8. I Do
9. Don't Worry featuring Janet Jackson
10. All The Way To St. Lou featuring David Banner & Nate Dogg
11. 26's featuring Lil' Wayne
12. We Clubbin'
13. We Do featuring Bun B
14. Wurr Da Git It Gurlz At featuring G.I.B.
15. Bring Da Beef featuring G.I.B.
16. (Outro)
In addition to the above tracks, the special "Balla" limited edition CD, which will be accompanied with a bonus 30-minute DVD documentary, will include the following tracks:
17. Balla Baby Remix featuring Lil' Flip and Boozie of the G.I.B.
18. What Up Wit It featuring G.I.B.
19. Don't Really Care
BIOGRAPHY
Going
on the road with Nelly in 2002 paid tremendous dividends for Chingy,
the newest member of Ludacris’ Disturbing Tha Peace family. The St.
Louis rapper studied Nelly’s every move and learned the ins and outs
of artist promotion. "I watched how everything goes," Chingy
says. "From meet and greets, tour buses and backstage, I was new
to all that."
Influenced by LL Cool J, Run DMC, DJ
Quik,
Snoop Dogg, Nelly, Ludacris and others, Chingy quickly built a solid
reputation in St. Louis and earned himself a slot opening for Nelly in
2002.
Now, Chingy is ready to put his experience to
work with his explosive debut album entitled "Jackpot". A
sizzling collection of celebratory selections that focus on having fun
and beautiful women, "Chingy" is sure to get the party
started.
Already enjoying radio and club play in
Atlanta and St. Louis, single "Right Thurr" features Chingy
rapping over a thick, percolating beat about the type of woman that
will always catch a man’s eye, even if he isn’t looking. "Say
you’re riding, doing well and then you see a girl that blows your
mind," he says. "You’ve got to have that ‘Right Thurr.’
You want to follow her."
Odds are, women will want to follow Chingy
after hearing this addictive cut. "She threw it at me like a
shortstop," Chingy boasts on the song, and with this type of hit
to his credit, there’s no reason why women wouldn’t.
Chingy then teams with Murphy Lee of the St.
Lunatics on "Sample Dat Ass," an irresistible club track
with blips and stutter scratches that will have every dancefloor in a
frenzy. The heavy bass and stuttery beat of "Hit the Club"
works well with Chingy’s festive lyrics about dancing and parties.
If Chingy sounds like a natural rhyming on
these types of club cuts, it’s because he enjoys being out and
about, having fun. "I be clubbing and kicking it and that part of
my personality just comes out when I’m making my music," he
explains. "I’m a fun person. I try not to get down about
things. That’s why the club songs, you’re going to get them a lot
from me."
But Chingy knows that there’s more to life
than partying. To this end, he delivers "Let’s Get Ends."
Here, he retraces his steps as an aspiring rapper. Hip-hop fans will
notice that the "Let’s Get Ends" chorus plays off the
chorus of Whodini’s classic "Friends" singles, one of
Chingy’s favorite songs.
Elsewhere, Chingy teams up with Disturbing
Tha Peace members I-20 and Titty Boy on the boast-heavy "Where
You From" and shouts out virtually every major city in America on
"Chingy Jackpot."
Regardless
of topic, Chingy makes a point to keep his lyrics lively and relevant
since he knows that good writing helps strong songs become hits.
"I try to write clever," he says. "You’ve got to
write clever in order to make sure everything flows from one sentence
to the next."
As Chingy flows, it’s the production work
of Trak Starz that makes his music magical. Also from St. Louis, the
Trak Starz were discovered by Disturbing Tha Peace executive Chaka
Zulu. Even though Chingy and Trak Starz knew each other from the St.
Louis hip-hop circuit, Zulu put them together officially and the
results, as evidenced throughout "Chingy," are masterful.
"They’re the best producers right
now," Chingy says. "They’re steaming hot and they’ve got
a different sound. It’s an edgy, rough, street calligraphy
sound."
Growing up in St. Louis, Chingy saw plenty of
edgy and rough situations. But, he chose not to dwell on the negative
that sometimes greeted him in his native Walnut Park section of the
North Side of St. Louis. Instead, Chingy maintained a deft balance of
the streets and school before deciding to dedicate himself to rapping.
By the time he was 8, Chingy was a mainstay
in St. Louis recording studios. Recording came naturally to Chingy, a
life-long music fan. "I love the sound of music," he says.
"I grew up listening to Michael Jackson, Marvin Gaye, the
Temptations. Music made me think, and party. I wanted to express
myself like those artists were. Talking on a record sounded like a
good idea to me."
Even though Chingy knew he wanted to be a
rapper, he had a hard time deciding on his stage name. Thugsy and H
Thugs were his original choices, but he had second thoughts. "I
didn’t want to be known as a thug," he says. "My friends
would say that Chingy had a nice ring to it."
So does his music.
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