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Got a Chevy with pictures on it from pitchin crack I opened and read it, it said "We want hustlers" I got a letter from the government, the other day He's the biggest boss, comin outta the M-I-yayo I got some red beams, let's play connect the dots! I keep my ear to the STREETS like a cocker spanielīreak every bone in ya, you so out of placeīoom without a trace, you a bluff to block Never forget where you come or that block'll bang you I got gangstas that'll rearrange ya whole faceĪnd put your casket on ice, now that´s a cold case (ha!) Spit 30 large for cigars of you hoe niggaz (oww!) I´m already rich, so talk mo' figures (yup)

I got rifles that blow ya below ya bible belt I stay strapped like your neighborhood trap dealer Luda! I´m a hustler, BALLER, gangsta, CAP PEELER

Including his Thai food restaurant, Straits He expended his empire into multiple profitable businesses Many listeners heard Ludacris for the first time on “Phat Rabbit” – a lewd record with rattling, truck-ready production from Timbaland, that appeared on the latter’s 1998 compilation Tim’s Bio: Life From Da Bassment before being reused for Luda’s Def Jam debut Back for the First Time.With a wreckless disregard, for the haters
#LUDACRIS INTRO TV#
Ludacris was all over radio, clubs, and TV with his biggest singles, but he built a foundation with album cuts, remixes, and smaller-scale singles. And when he made Release Therapy, his Grammy-winning album that took on serious content instead of his usual lighthearted banter, he used “Warning (Intro)” to set the tone: “Here’s a temporary fix for your permanent flaws / This album helps you to release, cause life irkin’ us all.”Ĭult Classics (“Phat Rabbit,” “What’s Your Fantasy,” “Southern Hospitality,” “Ho,” “Number One Spot,” “Area Codes,” “The Potion,” “Made You Look (Remix)”) “Coming 2 America” jumpstarts Word of Mouf with an homage to Eddie Murphy’s classic film, painting Luda as royalty with punchline-heavy verses over regal horns by Bangladesh. “Southern Fried Intro’ might be his best, opening his fourth studio album Chicken-N-Beer with high-speed, tongue-twisting flows over production that’s anchored by heavy guitar riffs. You know a Ludacris song from the moment it comes on: He begins each of his records with a memorable combination of the laughs, energy and lyricism that his fans love him for. The Intros (“Southern Fried Intro,” “Coming 2 America,” “Warning (Intro)”) After lending his services to so many other artists that year, Luda ended 2004 with the release of his fifth album Red Light District, which would eventually go double platinum itself. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100, earned a platinum plaque, and had a video that featured one of the most memorable images of the 2000s: Ciara dancing on top of a car as Luda rhymed in the foreground.

And don’t forget “Oh,” the single from Ciara’s debut album Goodies that peaked at no. The trio reunited later that year for the seductive slow jam “Lovers And Friends,” which landed at no. Usher’s pitch perfect vocals, Lil Jon’s synthy production and throaty refrain, and Luda’s woman-friendly rhymes were a club match made in heaven for “Yeah!,” the single from Usher’s classic 2004 album Confessions that was later crowned as Billboard’s second biggest song of the decade. He spent the previous four years building his name with three solo albums on Def Jam South, and 2004 saw him cashing in. Ludacris put his stamp on some of the biggest songs of the 2000s, but the year 2004 was perhaps his biggest. The 2004 Championship Run (“Yeah!,” “Lovers And Friends,” “Oh”)
