Foxy Brown (born Inga Marchand on September 6 1978 in Brooklyn, New York) is an American rapper of Afro-Trinidadian and Indo-Trinidadian descent * known for her solo work as well as numerous collaborations and a brief stint as part of hip-hop supergroup The Album. She has released four albums: Ill Na Na (1996), The Firm (1997), Chyna Doll (1999), and Broken Silence (2001). After a bitter split with her record label Def Jam in 2003, Brown ended up in label limbo. In 2004 childhood friend and collaborator Jay-Z signed Brown to Def Jam and his Rocafella Records label, when he became the president of the company.
In 2005, while in the midst of recording her fourth studio album Black Roses, Brown faced another hardship when she was diagnosed with sensorineural hearing loss. The hearing impairment took 100% of Brown's hearing, but 20% was restored after an operation to repair it. A later operation restored 100% of her hearing *. Brown also landed in legal trouble when two manicurists who alleged that she assaulted them during a 2004 altercation pressed criminal charges against her. The trial is set for July.
Before she had released any material at all, Foxy Brown appeared on several 1995-1996 platinum singles, including her first credit, LL Cool J's "I Shot Ya," as well as Total's "No One Else" remix, Jay-Z's "Ain't No Nigga", Toni Braxton's "You're Makin' Me High" remix, and Case's "Touch Me, Tease Me" along with Mary J. Blige. The success led to a major-label bidding war at the beginning of 1996, and by March Brown had signed with the Def Jam label.
In 1996 Brown released her debut album Ill Na Na to mixed reviews but strong sales. The album was produced by Trackmasters, and featured appearances from Blackstreet, Method Man, and Kid Capri. It hit number seven its first week on the U.S. album chart. Despite some positive reviews, Ill Na Na was heavily criticized for its explicit lyrics, particularly because Brown was only sixteen years old at the time of the recording. The album went on to go platinum and launched two hit singles. Fellow raunchy female rapper and Brooklyn native, Lil' Kim, also appeared on the music scene around the same time and the media immediately created a rivalry between once friends Brown and Kim.
The East Coast gangsta rap supergroup The Firm never lived up to its excessive hype and instead became a brief footnote in the careers of its main participants. Including Brown the foursome included three other New York rappers — (Nas, AZ and Nature — but was actually the pet project of its producers: Nas Escobar (as he referred to himself at the time), Steve "Commissioner" Stoute, Dr. Dre, and the Trackmasters.
An early form of the Firm appeared on "Affirmative Action," a standout song from Nas' second album, It Was Written. Foxy Brown, AZ and Cormega joined Nas for the song — each taking a verse — and it became an album highlight as well as a much-talked-about song on the streets. The Firm's only album sold poorly but charted well upon its relase. Although debuting at number one on the Billboard 200 the album quickly fell off the charts.
Brown went on to release a single "Big Bad Mama" featuring Dru Hill from Def Jam's How to Be a Player soundtrack. It became a minor hit and set Brown up to launch another album.
Later that year, Brown was a spokesmodel for Calvin Klein Jeans. At the end of 1999, Brown and her fiancé Kurupt ended their five year relationship. By the year 2000, several of Brown's friendships in the industry, such as those with Jay-Z and Nas, became strained. Brown suffered from depression and entered rehab for an addiction to prescription painkillers. Also in 1999 Brown appeared on the cover of Essense magazine's August issue. The article was titled "Dignity or Dollars". In it Brown stated she wanted to clean up her image, even appearing clothed a lot more than she had previously and it countered the negative press she received for her Vibe magazine cover shot in which she posed wearing a silver bikini and suggestively holding her crotch.
Brown's personal problems continued to escalate. On March 6, 2000, Brown crashed her Range Rover in Flatbush, Brooklyn. Her injuries were minor but police arrested her for driving while her license had been suspended for not paying two parking tickets.
In 2002, Brown received her first Grammy nomination for Best Female Rap Solo Performance for her single "Na Na Be Like" from the Broken Silence album.
In 2003, Brown returned to the music scene briefly on a DJ Kay Slay single called "Too Much For Me". In April Brown appeared on popular New York radio jock Wendy Williams' radio show, and revealed the details of her relationship with Def Jam President at the time, Lyor Cohen and Sean P. Diddy Combs. Brown accused both of illegally trading her recording masters. She also announced that Cohen shelved her long awaited fourth album The Fever because of her refusal to accept new contractual terms. Brown tearfully revealed that the overwhelming stress from Def Jam resulted in her having a miscarriage (she was expecting her first child with boyfriend Spragga Benz). Less than 24 hours after the interview was broadcast, Ill Na Na 2: The Fever mysteriously surfaced online for downloading and bootlegging. A few months later Brown appeared on the cover of the popular hip-hop magazine XXL, and shared her desire to leave Def Jam. In late 2003 Brown was released from the label.
In April 2005, female rapper Jacki-O alleged that she and Brown got into a physical altercation at a recording studio in Miami, Florida. Jacki said that Brown came in the studio during her session and expected her to "bow down" to her. She said that Brown constantly belittled her, and a heated argument ensued. Jacki alleged that verbal altercation eventually escalated into fist fight. While Brown did admit that there was definitely a verbal disagreement, she denied that it ever turned physical. Brown said that Jacki was "disrespectful" and that she exaggerated the incident to gain publicity for her upcoming project. * * *
On December 5, 2005, her attorney Joseph Tacopina said that Brown is almost totally deaf and that he cannot communicate with her verbally any more. Brown told reporters on December 15 that she was diagnosed with sudden hearing loss in May while she was recording her upcoming album.
Shortly after Tacopina spoke to the public about her hearing condition, news spread that Brown had fired him. According to reports, Tacopina was never given permission by Brown or her agent to discuss her medical condition to reporters.
On December 15, 2005, Brown held an emotional press conference in New York City, where she revealed that she is now 100% deaf due to sensorineural hearing loss. She also revealed that she had not heard another person's voice since May 2005. Brown underwent surgery in early 2006 in hopes of restoring her hearing. Post recovery, Brown said that she plans to finish working on her fourth solo album, Black Roses, for a 2006 release. At the conference, Brown was surrounded by many supporters, including her friend supermodel Tyson Beckford, hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons, Kimora Lee Simmons and rapper Doug E. Fresh.
She successfully had surgery that got her hearing back 100%, after a year of deafness. In interviews she stated that she went straight from the operating room to the studio in order to complete her album due out in December 2006.
| Year | Song | U.S Hot 100 | U.S. R&B | U.S. Rap | UK singles | Album |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1996 | "Ain't No Nigga" (with Jay-Z) | 50 | 17 | 4 | 31 | Reasonable Doubt |
| 1996 | "Touch Me, Tease Me" (with Case and Mary J. Blige) | 14 | 4 | 9 | - | Case |
| 1996 | "Get Me Home" (featuring Blackstreet) | - | - | - | 11 | Ill Na Na |
| 1997 | "Sunshine" (with Jay-Z) | 95 | 37 | 16 | 25 | In My Lifetime, Vol 1. |
| 1997 | "I'll Be" (featuring Jay-Z) | 7 | 5 | 2 | 9 | Ill Na Na |
| 1997 | "Big Bad Mama" (with Dru Hill) | 18 | - | 9 | 12 | Def Jam's How To Be A Player Soundtrack |
| 1999 | "Hot Spot" | 91 | 22 | 23 | 31 | Chyna Doll |
| 1999 | "I Can't" (featuring Total) | - | 61 | 45 | - | Chyna Doll |
| 2001 | "B.K. Anthem" | - | 82 | 22 | - | Broken Silence |
| 2001 | "Candy" (featuring Kelis) | 32 | 48 | 10 | 48 | Broken Silence |
| 2001 | "Oh Yeah" (featuring Spragga Benz) | 52 | 63 | - | 27 | Broken Silence |
| 2003 | "Too Much For Me" (with Amerie, Nas, & Baby) | - | 53 | - | - | The Streetsweeper, Vol 1 |
| 2003 | "I Need a Man" (featuring The Letter M) | - | - | - | - | The Fever |
| 2005 | "You Already Know" (with 112) | 32 | 3 | - | - | Pleasure and Pain |
| 2005 | "Come Fly With Me" (featuring Sizzla) | 62 | 45 | - | 42 | Black Roses |
1978 births | American rappers | People from Brooklyn | Def Jam affiliated performers | Female rappers | Living people | Rappers currently in prison | Rhythmic Top 40 acts | Afro-Trinidadians | Indo-Trinidadians
Foxy Brown (Rapperin) | Foxy Brown | Foxy Brown | Foxy Brown | Foxy Brown | Foxy Brown
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