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Ludacris

Ludacris

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Albums

Brave

Release Therapy
(UK)

The Red Light District
(UK / Oz)

RD: 03.10.2007

More info on: Brave
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RD: 07.10.2006

More info on: Release Therapy
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RD: 03.05.2005

More info on: The Red Light District
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Confessions

Word Of Mouf
(Explicit)

The Life

RD: 20.03.2004

More info on: Confessions
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RD: 26.11.2001

More info on: Word Of Mouf
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RD: 03.04.2001

More info on: The Life
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The Life

RD: 02.04.2001

More info on: The Life
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Singles

Chopped 'N' Skrewed

Runaway Love Hit Pack
(Edited)

Unpredictable

RD: 30.09.2008

More info on: Chopped 'N' Skrewed
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RD: 02.06.2008

More info on: Runaway Love Hit Pack
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RD: 07.04.2006

More info on: Unpredictable
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Unpredictable

Oh

Oh

RD: 07.04.2006

More info on: Unpredictable
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RD: 20.02.2006

More info on: Oh
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RD: 01.08.2005

More info on: Oh
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EPs

Oh

Yeah!

RD: 11.07.2005

More info on: Oh
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RD: 09.03.2004

More info on: Yeah!
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Compilations

Jennifer Hudson

Jennifer Hudson

R&B Classics Collection

RD: 29.09.2008

More info on: Jennifer Hudson
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RD: 29.09.2008

More info on: Jennifer Hudson
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RD: 04.08.2008

More info on: R&B Classics Collection
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Double Up

Double Up

Double Up

RD: 11.06.2007

More info on: Double Up
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RD: 25.05.2007

More info on: Double Up
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RD: 25.05.2007

More info on: Double Up
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Ludacris Presents...Disturbing Tha Peace
(Explicit Version)

Trauma

Street's Disciple II - Fourteen Songs

RD: 09.12.2005

More info on: Ludacris Presents...Disturbing Tha Peace
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RD: 06.12.2005

More info on: Trauma
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RD: 28.03.2005

More info on: Street's Disciple II - Fourteen Songs
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Goodies

Goodies

Street's Disciple

RD: 06.03.2005

More info on: Goodies
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RD: 22.01.2005

More info on: Goodies
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RD: 30.11.2004

More info on: Street's Disciple
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Street's Disciple

Goodies

Confessions

RD: 29.11.2004

More info on: Street's Disciple
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RD: 25.10.2004

More info on: Goodies
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RD: 04.10.2004

More info on: Confessions
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U Gotta Feel Me

U Gotta Feel Me

Cee-Lo Green... Is The Soul Machine

RD: 14.06.2004

More info on: U Gotta Feel Me
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RD: 30.03.2004

More info on: U Gotta Feel Me
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RD: 01.03.2004

More info on: Cee-Lo Green... Is The Soul Machine
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The Neptunes Present... Clones

Indecent Proposal

Speakerboxxx / The Love Below

RD: 16.08.2003

More info on: The Neptunes Present... Clones
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RD: 02.03.2003

More info on: Indecent Proposal
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RD: 20.01.2003

More info on: Speakerboxxx / The Love Below
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Jagged Little Thrill

Instructions (Clean Version)

Instructions (Explicit Version)

RD: 02.04.2002

More info on: Jagged Little Thrill
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RD: 30.10.2001

More info on: Instructions (Clean Version)
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RD: 29.10.2001

More info on: Instructions (Explicit Version)
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Jagged Little Thrill

RD: 26.06.2001

More info on: Jagged Little Thrill
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Top Songs

01 Area Codes  (Album Version)
02 Pass Out  (Album Version (Explicit))
03 Two Miles An Hour  (Album Version (Explicit))
04 Intro (Ludacris/The Red Light Distr...  (Album Version (Explicit))
05 Large Amounts  (Album Version (Explicit))
06 Hopeless  (Album Version (Explicit))
07 Blueberry Yum Yum  (Album Version (Explicit))
08 Spur Of The Moment  (Album Version (Explicit))
09 Number One Spot  (Album Version (Explicit))
10 Get Back  (Album Version (Explicit))
11 Skit (Ludacris/The Red Light Distri...  (Album Version (Explicit))
12 Pimpin' All Over The World  (Album Version (Explicit))
13 Child Of The Night  (Album Version (Explicit))
14 The Potion  (Album Version (Explicit))
15 Get Back  (Sum 41 Rock Remix)
 

Biography

Ludacris rode the early-2000s Dirty South explosion to widespread popularity, as his songs enjoyed an enormous embrace, mainly by urban media outlets but also MTV and pop radio. The Atlanta-based rapper went from local sensation to household name after Def Jam signed him to its Def Jam South subsidiary in 2000. In addition to connecting him with super-producers like Timbaland, the Neptunes, and Organized Noize, Def Jam gave Ludacris remarkable marketing push. Ludacris thus quickly became one of the rap industry's most in-demand rappers, guesting on hits for everyone from Missy Elliott ("One Minute Man") to Jermaine Dupri ("Welcome to Atlanta") when he wasn't dominating the urban market with his own hits, most notably "What's Your Fantasy?," "Southern Hospitality," "Area Codes," and "Rollout (My Business)."

Before he became the Dirty South's most popular rapper, Ludacris DJed at an Atlanta radio station. He used the opportunity to hone his craft on the mic, learn about the industry, and make a name for himself throughout the Atlanta area, which had become the South's rap mecca starting in the mid-'90s. Eventually, he began aspiring toward a career as a rapper rather than as a radio jock, and after working with Timbaland -- appearing on the producer's Tim's Bio album (the original version of "Fat Rabbit") in 1998 -- Ludacris began taking his rap career seriously. He recorded an album, Incognegro (2000), and released it on his independently released Disturbing tha Peace label. Ludacris primarily worked with producer Shondrae for the album, though also with Organized Noize to a lesser extent. Incognegro sold impressively in Atlanta, where Ludacris was well known for his radio work.

Soon after Incognegro became the talk of Atlanta and "What's Your Fantasy?" became a regional hit, Scarface came knocking. Def Jam had given the veteran rapper the go-ahead to scout for talent in the South, since the Dirty South movement was gaining steam at the time and Def Jam wanted to start a Def Jam South subsidiary. Ludacris became Scarface's first signing, and Def Jam repackaged the tracks from Incognegro, along with a few new productions: a U.G.K. collaboration ("Stick 'Em Up"), a Neptunes production ("Southern Hospitality"), and a remix of his previously released song with Timbaland (retitled "Phat Rabbit"). Def Jam then gave the resulting album, Back for the First Time (2000), substantial marketing push, choosing "What's Your Fantasy?" (an explicit duet about sexual fantasies from both the male and female perspective) as the first single. Though some radio stations were hesitant to air such a provocative song, "What's Your Fantasy?" became an enormous success -- as did, to a lesser extent, its even more provocative remix featuring Foxy Brown and Trina -- opening the door for countless other truly "dirty" Dirty South songs that would soon become the norm rather than the exception.

Following his initial breakthrough with "What's Your Fantasy?," Ludacris remained ubiquitous. He toured the States with OutKast and released a flurry of successive hit singles: the Neptunes-produced "Southern Hospitality," the Timbaland-produced "Phat Rabbit," the Nate Dogg collabo "Area Codes," the Timbaland-produced "Rollout (My Business)," the Organized Noize-produced "Saturday (Oooh Oooh!)," the KLC-produced "Move Bitch." His second album for Def Jam, Word of Mouf (2001), peaked at number three on the Billboard album chart in October and hovered at the top of the charts for a long time. Furthermore, he contributed to hits for other artists during this same time, most notably Missy Elliott's "One Minute Man" and Jermaine Dupri's "Welcome to Atlanta," and also released another album, Golden Grain (2002), which featured his Disturbing tha Peace posse. The proper Ludacris follow-up, Chicken -N- Beer, was released in October 2003, and he returned a year later with Red Light District. In 2006, he returned with a more introspective album, Release Therapy, and vowed that he would be taken more seriously than in the past. ~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide