In 1999, Markie appeared on Len's song "Beautiful Day" on their album You Can't Stop the Bum Rush, as well as on Alliance Ethnik's album Fat Comeback. He also appeared of Fünf Sterne Delxue Will Smith, Meer Gayne? from the album Sillium. Markie also teamed up with Frankie Cutlass on his third single and music video titled "The Cypher Part 3" with some of Marley Marl's Juice Crew veterans. In 1997, a sample of a Markie recording appeared in the Rolling Stones' song "Anybody Seen My Baby?" from their album Bridges to Babylon. The CD was meant to raise awareness of the AIDS epidemic among African-American men. In 1996, Markie appeared on the Red Hot Organization's compilation CD, America Is Dying Slowly, alongside Wu-Tang Clan, Coolio, and Fat Joe, among others. He also rapped on the track "So Fresh" alongside Slick Rick on Will Smith's 1999 album Willennium. He also rapped on the song "Schizo Jam" on Don Byron's 1998 release, Nu Blaxploitation (Blue Note/Capitol) and worked with Canibus on the first track on the Office Spacesoundtrack (1999). He also made numerous guest appearances with the Beastie Boys on Check Your Head (1992), Ill Communication (1994), Hello Nasty (1998), and their anthology The Sounds of Science (1999). Markie responded in 1993 with the mischievously titled All Samples Cleared!, but his career had been hurt by the publicity emanating from the lawsuit, and the record suffered accordingly.įor the remainder of the decade, Markie occasionally made television appearances, including guest appearances on In Living Color (including as contestant Damian "Foosball" Franklin in the recurring game show sketch "The Dirty Dozens" and as Marlon Cain in "Ed Bacon: Guidance Counselor") and in a 1996 freestyle rap commercial on MTV2, as well as in the 1993 superhero film Meteor Man. This development reflected the increasing popularity of hip-hop and the financial stakes over which releases were set. In accordance with the ruling, Warner Bros., the parent company of Cold Chillin', had to pull I Need a Haircut from circulation, and all companies had to clear samples with the samples' creators before releasing the records. Records Inc., that altered the landscape of hip-hop, finding that all samples must be cleared with the original artist before being used. O'Sullivan's claim was upheld in a landmark ruling, Grand Upright Music, Ltd. Sales of the album were already low when Markie was served a lawsuit by Gilbert O'Sullivan, who claimed that the album's "Alone Again" featured an unauthorized sample from his hit "Alone Again (Naturally)". Records and was produced by Markie and his cousin Cool V. Markie's third studio album I Need a Haircut was released on August 27, 1991, on Cold Chillin'/Warner Bros. Martin, chronicles the rapper's woman problems. "Just a Friend" was ranked 81st on VH1's 100 Greatest One-Hit Wonders in 2000, and later as number 100 on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of Hip Hop in 2008. The song interpolates the 1968 song "You Got What I Need" by singer-songwriter Freddie Scott, whose basic chord and melody provided the base for the song's chorus. The single "Just a Friend", in which he alternates between rap and singing, became Markie's most successful single, reaching No. Records, produced by Markie, his cousin Cool V and Paul C. On October 10, 1989, Markie's second studio album, The Biz Never Sleeps was released on Cold Chillin'/Warner Bros. Biz also appeared briefly in the music video for Rob Base's single It Takes Two. The album also featured the underground hit singles "Nobody Beats The Biz", "Vapors", and "Pickin' Boogers". Markie released his debut album, Goin' Off, in 1988, which attracted a fair amount of attention, largely due to the lead single, "Make the Music with Your Mouth, Biz". My nickname in my neighborhood was Markie."īiz Markie was interviewed in the 1986 cult documentary Big Fun in the Big Town. My name used to be Bizzy B Markie, and after a while I put the Biz with the Markie. Grand Wizard Theodore was the DJ, and the rappers was Kevvy Kev, Master Rob and Busy Bee Starski. "Biz comes from the first hip-hop tape I heard. Regarding the origin of his stage name, the rapper said: Markie began his career in New York City nightclubs and later gained regional recognition by performing at colleges in Washington, D.C., Maryland, Virginia, and Pennsylvania. Markie was born in Manhattan, in the neighborhood of Harlem.
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