Lord Finesse

Lord Finesse

Lord Finesse at a Combat Jack Show in 2014.
Background information
Birth name Robert Hall, Jr.
Born (1970-02-19) February 19, 1970
Origin The Bronx, New York
Genres Hip hop
Years active 1989–present
Labels Wild Pitch/EMI Records
Giant/Reprise/Warner Bros. Records
Penalty/Tommy Boy/Warner Bros. Records
Associated acts Diamond D, Big L, Fat Joe, Chill Rob G, Showbiz & AG, Ice-T, D.I.T.C., O.C, Ak Skills

Lord Finesse (born Robert Hall, Jr.; February 19, 1970[1]) is a hip-hop artist and producer, from The Bronx, New York, best known as the leader of the D.I.T.C. crew. About.com ranked him number 29 on its list of the Top-50 Hip-Hop Producers.[2]

Career

In 1989, Finesse and his former partner DJ Mike Smooth signed with Wild Pitch Records, home of other popular hip hop artists such as Gang Starr, Main Source, Chill Rob G, Percee P and O.C. In 1990, the duo released their debut album Funky Technician.[3] The album featured production from future star beat-makers DJ Premier, Diamond D and Showbiz. Soon after, Finesse formed the popular New York underground crew D.I.T.C., an acronym for "Diggin In The Crates", together with Showbiz & A.G. and Diamond D. Future members included Fat Joe, O.C., Buckwild, and Big L.

Finesse returned as a solo artist in early 1992 with his second effort, Return of the Funky Man. The album featured guest appearances from Percee P and AG. The album's title track peaked at number 13 on the Hot Rap Singles chart. Return of the Funky Man also included a couple of songs that were produced by Finesse himself, and this would be the start of a career as a much respected hip-hop producer. In 1994 Finesse made a production appearance on The Notorious B.I.G.'s classic debut Ready to Die, on the track "Suicidal Thoughts". In 1995, he produced a big portion of Big L's debut album Lifestylez Ov Da Poor & Dangerous, including the single "M.V.P." and made an appearance on one of the album's highlight songs "Da Graveyard". He returned as an artist in 1996 with the now rare 12" single "Check The Method" and then the acclaimed album The Awakening. Finesse produced the entire album himself, and enlisted a large number of guests, including KRS-One, MC Lyte, Akinyele, Diamond D, Showbiz & A.G., O.C. and Kid Capri. The underground single "Actual Facts" featuring Sadat X, Large Professor and Grand Puba, was included as a hidden track on the album.

Finesse hasn't released a studio album since this effort, but has continued his production work. In 1997, he produced the title track to O.C.'s acclaimed effort Jewelz and the track "Channel 10" off of Capone-N-Noreaga's debut The War Report. Finesse released a mixtape called Diggin' On Blue in 1999. Later in the year, he produced the track "The Message" on Dr. Dre's seminal 2001 album. Finesse is currently working on a Funky Technician remix project, as well as a new D.I.T.C. album. Along with these projects, he and DJ Premier are working on a posthumous Big L album.

In 1998, Finesse provided the vocal sample on the hook to "The Rockafeller Skank", a hit single by British musician Fatboy Slim from his album You've Come a Long Way, Baby. The song features Finesse's repeated line "Right about now, the funk soul brother. Check it out now, the funk soul brother".

Lord Finesse returned to the mic on Handsome Boy Modeling School's album White People in 2004. He was featured on the song entitled "Rock 'N' Roll (Could Never Hip-Hop Like This) pt. 2", collaborating with famous old-school DJ's Grand Wizard Theodore and Jazzy Jay. Chester Bennington and Mike Shinoda from Linkin Park make appearances, as well as Rahzel, then of The Roots.

In June 2012, Finesse filed a $10 million lawsuit against Mac Miller, Rostrum Records and DatPiff for the use of a sample of Finesse's song "Hip 2 Da Game" used in Miller's 2010 mixtape song "Kool-Aid and Frozen Pizza", even though the song was not commercially released and Finesse was given credit for the sample from the beginning. A case can be made that the song "made money through YouTube ads and Lord Finesse could be entitled to some of those, but instead Finesse believes that his beat has been instrumental to all of Mac's success." This was done even though the song is itself based on an Oscar Peterson sample, which he himself never paid for.[4] In January 2013 the lawsuit was settled outside of court with actual legal results not revealed.

In 2014, Lord Finesse produced a remix for Swedish rap group Looptroop Rockers single "Another Love Song".

Discography

Albums

List of albums, with selected chart positions
Title Album details Peak chart positions
US R&B
Funky Technician 93
Return of the Funky Man 95
The Awakening 36

Singles

Album information
  • Singles: "Baby, You Nasty"/"Track the Movement", "Funky Technician"/"Bad Mutha", "Stricly for the Ladies"/"Back to Back Rhyming"
  • Singles: "Return of the Funky Man"/"Fuck Em", "Party Over Here"/"Save That Shit"
  • Singles: "Hip 2 Da Game"/"No Gimmicks", "Gameplan"/"Actual Facts"

References

  1. Archived February 19, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
  2. "Top 25 Hip-Hop Producers". Rap.about.com. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
  3. Kurutz, Steve. "Biography: Lord Finesse". Allmusic. Retrieved 23 May 2010.
  4. Rosenthal, Eric. "Mac Miller Gets Sued By Lord Finesse For Using His Beat On A Mixtape - The 25 Biggest Hip-Hop Fails of 2012". Complex. Retrieved 2015-11-04.
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