Hip-Hop MC from Suffolk County Long Island, USA. Affiliated with
Rawkus Records and other NYC underground labels.
The Long Island rapper finally reveals his long awaited debut album on
Nature Sounds. Banned from performing live in most of the United States from 1995 to 1998, banned from recording studios and damn near every rap label that ever existed, R.A. the Rugged Man is finally back for revenge. While most rappers live in a world of fantasy, R.A. is one of the few MC's that you can guarantee his rhymes are real life - as sick as it might sound. When asked about R.A., Biggie Smalls was once quoted as saying "I thought I was the illest."
Coming from a broken Long Island home, R.A.'s father was a gun toting Vietnam veteran/mental patient affected by Agent Orange. His family was forever changed by the potent chemical - his brother Maxx was born handicapped and blind, eventually dying at the age of 10, while his sister Dee Ann couldn't walk or speak. R.A. took refuge in hip hop, beginning his rap career at the age of 12, developing a style that killed all competitors citywide. After conquering the New York battle scene as a teenager, stories of his ruthless rhymes and outrageous stage presence had the recording companies at attention, and soon R.A. was the subject of a nine label bidding war. At 18, he signed to
Jive Records, but eventually was dropped for the violent, disgusting, and irresponsible behavior that would haunt him throughout his career.
Despite a notorious reputation for pissing off executives, R.A. developed a musical resume over the next 10 years that speaks for itself. Working with everyone from
Mobb Deep to
Notorious B.I.G., as well as producers such as
Erick Sermon,
Trackmasters,
DJ Quik,
Alchemist,
Havoc,
Buckwild, and
Ayatollah. He was featured on all three of Rawkus's Soundbombing albums alongside
Eminem and
Mos Def, as well as the platinum selling
WWF Aggression album. He recently signed a book deal with Testify Books, and his writing appears regularly in Vibe, King, Mass Appeal, and Rides. R.A. has accomplished all this without ever releasing an LP of his own. Rolling Stone Magazine recently compared R.A.'s rap flow to that of a blue-eyed Biggie Smalls.