Beast Mode from 2010 found him moving UTP to the E1 family of labels, but it was a short-lived relationship. Fresh would be absent from his 2009 Atlantic release Cocky & Confident, but Juvenile would take a co-production credit for the first time in his career. The hurricane and its grim aftermath were hot topics on his chart-topping 2006 effort Reality Check, an album that featured production from Scott Storch, Cool & Dre, and Lil Jon with one lone cut coming from Mannie Fresh. A year later, Juvenile was signing a new solo career contract with Asylum when his Slidell, Louisiana, home was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina. Billboard Hot 100, Juvenile had his third platinum album award.Ī clean break with Cash Money came in 2004 when he released the single 'Nolia Clap' with his new group UTP on the Rap-A-Lot label. Juve the Great carried both imprints when it landed in 2003, and when its single 'Slow Motion' featuring Soulja Slim climbed to the top of the U.S. UTP promised an album titled 600 Degreez but it failed to arrive, and soon, Juvenile's management had brokered a deal where his next album would be a Cash Money/UTP co-release. His 2001 album Project English went gold but the rapper would leave the Cash Money label soon after its release, claiming financial mismanagement and forming his own label and management team, UTP. Warlock jumped on the bandwagon that year as well with a remixed version of Being Myself. Both debuts were produced in total by Mannie Fresh, who was back for Juvenile's 1998 solo release 400 Degreez, his platinum-selling, breakthrough effort thanks in part to the successful singles 'Ha' and 'Back That Azz Up.' Two more platinum awards came Juvenile's way in 1999 with the successful solo album Tha G-Code and the Hot Boys' sophomore release, Guerrilla Warfare. Juvenile joined fellow Cash Money rappers Lil Wayne, B.G., and Turk in the Hot Boys, who also released their debut album, Get It How U Live!, in 1997. Cash Money label owners Ronald 'Suga Slim' Williams and Brian 'Baby' Williams brought the post-bounce Juvenile on board in 1997, releasing his noticeably more gangster album Solja Rags that same year. The Warlock record label released his debut album, Being Myself, in 1994, but the bounce craze failed to spread past New Orleans so the rapper's quest for national success was back at square one. Besides an affiliation with the bounce group U.N.L.V., Juvenile was featured on two tracks from bounce artist DJ Jimi, 1991's 'It's Jimi' and 1993's 'Bounce (For the Juvenile).' Billboard Hot 100 with his 2004 single 'Slow Motion.' Born Terius Gray, Juvenile was one of the initial figures involved in New Orleans' 'bounce' craze of the early '90s, an uptempo style of hip-hop that combined gangster rap and party music. Having come up in the Hot Boys group alongside superstar Lil Wayne, New Orleans rapper Juvenile is a Southern hip-hop veteran, and a chart-topping one as well, having climbed the U.S.
The interrogative 'Ha' and the declarative 'Back Dat Azz Up' were this album's big singles, but the samba-flavored 'Following Me Now' and the bulbous 'U.P.T.' Are pretty awesome as well. He has a crunchy, at-times indecipherable growl that grinds beneath the track, providing perfect counterpoint to Mannie Fresh's loose and funky New Orleans bounce. The hurricane and its grim aftermath were hot topics on his 2006 album Reality Check.Juvenile wears many hats: He's a self-professed 'magnolia soldier,' a former alligator wrestler and - after the release of 400 Degreez - a Southern rap legend. As he was signing a new contract with Asylum his Slidell, Louisiana home was destroyed by Hurricane Katrina. The 2005 single from the UTP Playas “Noila Clap” was another big track and Juvenile was ready once again to shopping for a new label. The album went nowhere and a year later he was back on Cash Money and releasing Juve the Great which featured the chart-topping hit “Slow Motion”. In 2002 he left Cash Money and formed his own collective, the UTP Playas (Uptown Project Playas), with whom he recorded a posse album, The Compilation. The year ended with the release of a new studio effort, Tha G-Code, followed by Project English two years later in 2001. In 1999, with Juvenile’s popularity growing, Solja Rags was reissued nationally, and Warlock jumped on the bandwagon with a remixed version of Being Myself. He eventually crossed paths with Cash Money label owners Ronald “Suga Slim” and Brian “Baby” Williams, who issued 1996’s Solja Rags the album became a major underground hit, and set the stage for the release of 1998’s 400 Degreez. After beginning his performing career while in his teens, he released a 1995 album on Warlock titled Being Myself. New Orleans-based rapper Juvenile was born Terius Gray.