|
CJ Mac (born Bryan Ross on March 12, 1969), is an American rapper and actor. He released his debut EP, ''Color Me Funky'', independently in 1991, under the name "CJ Mack." The album is out of print, and extremely rare. He returned in 1995 and released his second album, ''True Game'' on Rap-A-Lot Records, in 1995 with producer Mad. He was originally going to release the album through Ruthless Records. He appeared in the movie ''Thicker than Water'' with Mack 10 and Fat Joe, where he played a drug lord called Gator. His second album, ''Platinum Game'', featured various west coast rappers and peaked at 77 Top R&B/Hip-hop albums.〔(Allmusic charts )〕 CJ Mac also directed a documentary called ''On the C-Walk''. He is also known for working with Death Row Records in late 2000 with his song "I Ain't Fuccin Wit' Cha" (from ''Too Gangsta for Radio''), in which he insulted Dr. Dre for leaving the label and declaring gangsta rap dead, as well as artists Hittman, Eminem, Snoop Dogg and Aftermath Records. CJ Mac is also known for collaborating with artists C-Bo, Dresta, Poppa LQ, Mack 10, Techniec, Scarface and WC. ==Discography== *1991: ''Color Me Funky (as C.J. Mack) *1995: ''True Game'' *1999: ''Platinum Game'' 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「CJ Mac」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
|