Ey man this is another dude thats killin it out thur. This white boi is sick wit it Hip hop class of 09 stand up for this dude. If ur lookin' for skills and not random gangster facades i.e. (Rick Ross ex Correctional officer lol but i still got luv 4 the dude ) I digress neways i was sayin' listen 2 the shit this dude is puttin out he only talks on wat he knows and i respect that. Im feelin his take of Amillie and a freestyle called Sun God. Here's the wikipedia brief of this dude:
His first professional release was on June 13, 2008 when the DJ Drama and Don Cannon-helmed The Greenhouse Effect mixtape was released for free via Roth’s website Thedailykush.com. Roth was featured on the cover of XXL magazine’s annual Top 10 Freshmen: Hip-Hop’s Class ’09 issue. Roth is expected to release his untitled debut album on March 17, 2009.
Early Life
Roth grew up in the suburbs of Morrisville, PA, a small town roughly 30 miles Northeast of Philadelphia. Growing up, Roth was exposed to little hip-hop in his family, with his parents preferring “The Temptations, Earth, Wind & Fire… Bruce Springsteen and Dire Straits.” According to Roth:
The first CD I ever bought was Dave Matthews Band’s 'Crash'...That is how suburban I am...I finally got into hip hop in ’98 when I heard the Annie sample with Jay-Z....When I wrote my ‘A Millie’ freestyle, that was me listening to 10 years of hip hop and not relating to it at all. Like, Damn I don’t sell coke. Damn, I don’t have cars or 25-inch rims. I don’t have guns. I finally got to a point where I had the confidence to do this thing myself, and I was making music for me. And it turns out, a lot of people feel the same way I do.
Roth has also stated that:
“I was always from the outside looking in,” says Roth. “Hip-hop has always been very influential in the ‘burbs, [but] it’s just a matter of where we could relate to it. You find a lot of kids that are really confused. You look at them and they’re dressed out of character. They don’t look right. I figured out, I don’t have to dress this way, but you can still love hip-hop.”
During downtime in high school, Roth and his friends would rhyme and battle each other for fun, referring to their group as “the hip-hop workshop." In 10th grade, Roth began rapping as a hobby, writing and recording tracks in a friend’s basement and selling copies in high school. After selling 250 copies in two days, Roth felt that a career in hip-hop was a possibility. Upon graduation, Roth entered West Chester University and became an Elementary Education major, while continuing to record verses over other peoples’ beats. During sophomore year, Roth posted some of his verses on his Myspace page and sent a Friend Request to Scooter Braun, an Atlanta-based promoter and former VP of Marketing for Jermaine Dupri's So So Def. One week after speaking to Braun, Roth flew down to Atlanta and was immediately signed by Braun, who subsequently became his manager.
Career
After linking up with Braun, Roth dropped out of college and moved to Atlanta full-time to pursue a hip-hop career. As industry buzz grew, Roth was courted by a number of labels, includingSRC, Def Jam, Warner Bros and Atlantic. Braun organized a meeting between Roth and Jay-Z, where Roth was asked to rap for the Def Jam executive on the spot.[2] Roth would eventually sign a joint venture between Braun's Schoolboy Music and Steve Rifkind, chairman of SRC/Universal Records. On June 13, 2008, Roth put out his first professional release, theDon Cannon and DJ Drama-helmed The Greenhouse Effect, via the Internet. Roth was the first white rapper to be featured on Drama and Cannon’s influential Gangsta Grillz series.
Style
Roth's lyrics characteristically center around what has been called "middle-class minutiae." Like many hip hop songs, Roth's song “I Love College” is about partying with alcohol and marijuana, but includes innocuous lyrics such as “I can get pizza a dollar a slice” that have been identified as "far from threatening"
Roth has earned many comparisons to Eminem. About the comparison, Roth told Complex magazine:
Him and I are different artists. I think the music’s going to portray that as time goes on. The comparisons are just…it’s cool to be compared to Em, but he’s one of the number one selling artists of all time. I’d rather be compared to him than pretty much anybody else. I think content and everything we rap about is completely different. We’re different artists. We just happened to be under the same genre.
When asked about the comparison, Roth told Hiphopdx.com, “I think it’s too easy. ‘A white emcee with a sense of humor and a political side? Oh, let’s compare him to Em!’… I have nothing but respect for him though; he made it possible for me to be here, he opened the doors, but we come from an entirely different inspiration.” Roth has professed to Mos Def, The Roots, Biggie, and Outkast as being some of his main hip-hop influences.
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