Royce Da 5’9″ – Mixtape (feat. DJ Premier, Gang Starr, Group Home, Black Milk, Bun B, eLZhi & more)
DaRocknessMonsta DaRocknessMonsta
24.4K subscribers
4,369 views
0

 Published On Feb 25, 2023

1. Royce Da 5’9″ – Shake This (Prod. By Premier) 0:00
2. NYG’z – Ya Dayz R Number’D (feat. Lady Of Rage, Bumpy Knuckles & Royce Da 5’9″) 4:33
3. Royce Da 5’9″ – Scary Movies (The Sequel) 8:44
4. Gang Starr – What’s Real (feat. Group Home & Royce Da 5’9″) 12:10
5. Black Milk – Deadly Medley (feat. Royce Da 5’9″ & Elzhi) 15:26
6. PRhyme – Streets at Night 18:57
7. Royce Da 5’9″ – Lights Out 22:24
8. Royce Da 5’9” & DJ Premier – U Looz 25:00
9. DJ Revolution – Do Your Thing (feat. Guilty Simpson & Royce Da 5’9″) 26:31
10. Royce Da 5’9” & DJ Premier – You Should Know (feat. Dwele) 29:36
11. Royce Da 5’9 – Hip Hop 34:06
12. Royce Da 5’9″ – Second Place 37:50
13. Royce Da 5’9″ – Somethings Wrong Him (feat. 6 July) 41:33
14. DJ Premier & Royce Da 5’9″ – Hood Love (feat. Bun B & Joell Ortiz) 45:28
15. DJ Premier Skit 50:30
16. Royce da 5′9″ – Nickle Nine Is… 51:41
17. eLZhi & Will Sessions (feat. Royce da 5’9″ & Stokley Williams) – Life’s a Bitch 56:33

Ryan Daniel Montgomery, known professionally as Royce da 5'9" (or simply Royce 5'9"), is an American rapper, songwriter, and record producer. Montgomery is currently one half of the rap duo Bad Meets Evil with fellow Detroit rapper Eminem, and is one half of the hip hop duo PRhyme with producer DJ Premier. He was also one quarter of the Shady Records hip hop group Slaughterhouse with Joe Budden, Joell Ortiz and Kxng Crooked. Alongside his recording career, Montgomery served as a ghostwriter for the likes of Puff Daddy and Dr. Dre. Online magazine About.com ranked the rapper as one of the "Top 50 MCs of Our Time (1987–2007)".

In an interview with DJ Vlad, Royce stated that his first stage name was "R-Dog", which was short-lived. He moved to Oak Park, Michigan when he was ten years old, later acquiring the nickname "Royce" in high school after wearing a chain with an R pendant resembling the Rolls Royce symbol. Royce's name comes from his height, 5 feet 9 inches (175 cm), but the numbers five and nine have been in his life numerous times as he "found his calling" as a rapper in 1995 and in his song "Tabernacle" he discusses his grandmother dying on the fifth floor of a hospital and his first son being born on the ninth.

He started rapping at age 18, influenced mainly by Ras Kass, Redman, Tupac Shakur, The Notorious B.I.G., Esham, Heltah Skeltah, LL Cool J, Nas, Jay-Z, Detroit's Most Wanted, and N.W.A.

Through his manager Kino Childrey, Royce was introduced to fellow Detroit rapper Eminem on December 29, 1997. The two formed a duo, Bad Meets Evil, and released several tracks together. On August 20, 1998, they appeared on The Stretch Armstrong and Bobbito Show for the first time. Royce appeared on Eminem's debut studio album The Slim Shady LP (1999), in which he was featured on a song called "Bad Meets Evil". They later collaborated on the track "Renegade", from which Royce's vocals would later be replaced with Jay-Z's on the latter's The Blueprint. Through Eminem, Royce was introduced to both Dr. Dre and execs at Game Recordings, but they parted ways after Royce refused Dre's request that he cut ties with Childrey.

Royce signed his first recording contract in 1998, a $1-million deal with Tommy Boy Records. He had rejected an offer beforehand from Dr. Dre's Aftermath Entertainment of $250,000 and unlimited beats, a move that he called his "biggest regret" in a 2016 interview with Complex. After Tommy Boy Records shut down, he signed a deal with Columbia and Game Recordings where he started recording an album called Rock City, referring to Detroit's former status as home to Motown Records. When the project was heavily bootlegged, Royce left the label for Koch to re-record some of the album, eventually releasing it in 2002 as Rock City (Version 2.0). Despite poor album sales, the DJ Premier-produced single "Boom" gained Royce some underground recognition and eventually resulted in the two working together more closely.

In 2002, Royce had a falling out with D12 including mutual friend and group member Proof, which sparked a public rivalry that resulted in Royce releasing a total of three diss tracks. The first, "Shit on You", was recorded over the instrumental of D12's track of the same name and mainly attacked group member Bizarre. Following Royce's second track, "Malcolm X", D12 responded with "Smack Down", over the instrumental of 50 Cent's "Back Down". Proof himself released the tracks "Many Men", over the instrumental of 50 Cent's "Many Men (Wish Death)"; and "Beef Is Ova", with rap group The Purple Gang. Royce responded with his third track, "Death Day", recorded over 50 Cent's "In Da Club".

show more

Share/Embed