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==Early life==
==Early life==
Z-Ro was born '''Joseph Wayne McVey''' in Houston’s notorious [[South Park, Houston|South Park]] neighborhood on January 19, 1977.<ref name="A.D. Bio" /> At age six his mother died, and he was shuttled from household to household in search of stability, eventually settling in the Ridgemont area of [[Missouri City]], [[Texas]].<ref name="A.D. Bio" /> When Z-Ro reached his late teens he was unemployed and resorted to drug dealing and hustling on the streets.<ref name="A.D. Bio" /> According to Z-Ro, listening to the music of [[2Pac]], [[Geto Boys]], Street Military, [[K-Rino]] and Klondike Kat inspired him to work harder for his goal of leaving the streets.<ref name="A.D. Bio" /> Z-Ro discovered his talent of [[freestyle rap]]ping and after going through a couple of recording studios to make a demo,<ref name="A.D. Bio" /> the CEO of a local label discovered and signed him.<ref name="A.D. Bio" He is a [[Crip|Hoover Crip]][http://www.artistdirect.com/artist/bio/z-ro/664377 Z-Ro Biography – ARTISTdirect Music]. Artistdirect.com. Retrieved on 2011-06-21.</ref>. Not known to most fans Z-Ro is a member of a [[Crip|Hoover Crip]] set.
Z-Ro was born '''Joseph Wayne McVey''' in Houston’s notorious [[South Park, Houston|South Park]] neighborhood on January 19, 1977.<ref name="A.D. Bio" /> At age six his mother died, and he was shuttled from household to household in search of stability, eventually settling in the Ridgemont area of [[Missouri City]], [[Texas]].<ref name="A.D. Bio" /> When Z-Ro reached his late teens he was unemployed and resorted to drug dealing and hustling on the streets.<ref name="A.D. Bio" /> According to Z-Ro, listening to the music of [[2Pac]], [[Geto Boys]], Street Military, [[K-Rino]] and Klondike Kat inspired him to work harder for his goal of leaving the streets.<ref name="A.D. Bio" /> Z-Ro discovered his talent of [[freestyle rap]]ping and after going through a couple of recording studios to make a demo,<ref name="A.D. Bio" /> the CEO of a local label discovered and signed him. Not known to most fans Z-Ro is a member of a [[Crip|Hoover Crip]] set.


==Career==
==Career==

Revision as of 15:10, 5 January 2012

Z-Ro
Background information
Birth nameJoseph Wayne McVey
Born (1977-01-19) January 19, 1977 (age 47)[1][2]
OriginHouston, Texas, US
GenresHip hop
Occupation(s)Rapper, Producer
Years active1994–present
LabelsAsylum
Rap-a-Lot
King of the Ghetto Ent.
WebsiteZ-Ro on Twitter
Template:MySpace

Joseph Wayne McVey (born January 19, 1977),[1][2] better known by his stage name Z-Ro, is an American rapper, singer and producer from Houston, Texas. He was named one of America's most underrated rappers by the New York Times.[3]

Early life

Z-Ro was born Joseph Wayne McVey in Houston’s notorious South Park neighborhood on January 19, 1977.[4] At age six his mother died, and he was shuttled from household to household in search of stability, eventually settling in the Ridgemont area of Missouri City, Texas.[4] When Z-Ro reached his late teens he was unemployed and resorted to drug dealing and hustling on the streets.[4] According to Z-Ro, listening to the music of 2Pac, Geto Boys, Street Military, K-Rino and Klondike Kat inspired him to work harder for his goal of leaving the streets.[4] Z-Ro discovered his talent of freestyle rapping and after going through a couple of recording studios to make a demo,[4] the CEO of a local label discovered and signed him. Not known to most fans Z-Ro is a member of a Hoover Crip set.

Career

In 1998, Z-Ro released his debut album, Look What You Did to Me. Z-Ro is also a member of the original Screwed Up Click, an assortment of rappers from Houston.[4] All of these things helped to escalate Z-Ro’s popularity throughout the South and by 2002 his talent and hard work caught the attention of Rap-a-Lot’s founder and CEO James Prince, who offered him a deal.[4]

In 2004, Z-Ro released his critically acclaimed Rap-a-Lot debut titled The Life of Joseph W. McVey.[4] The record was a huge success and helped expand Z-Ro’s fan base beyond the South.[4] In 2005, Z-Ro released Let the Truth Be Told, which was well received.[4] Z-Ro's 2006 album I'm Still Livin' was released while he was imprisoned for drug possession, to positive reviews.[5][6] It was called "a great album... powerful" but "relentlessly bleak" by The Village Voice[5] and "one of the best rap albums to come out of Houston" by the Houston Chronicle.[7] In 2010 he released his next album titled Heroin. In 2011 he announced a new album called Rother Vandross Sings The Blues, an all singing album, the lead single is "These Days".

Discography

Year Title Chart positions[8]
U.S. U.S. R&B
1998 Look What You Did to Me - -
2000 Z-Ro vs. the World - 90
2001 King of da Ghetto - -
2002 Screwed Up Click Representa - 58
2002 Z-Ro - -
2002 Life - 57
2003 Z-Ro Tolerance - -
2004 The Life of Joseph W. McVey 170 27
2005 Let the Truth Be Told 69 14
2006 I'm Still Livin' - 14
2007 King of tha Ghetto: Power 197 32
2008 Crack 48 12
2009 Cocaine 147 19
2010 Heroin 142 29
2011 Meth 90 12

References

  1. ^ a b "Texas Births 1926–1995". "Family Tree Legends".
  2. ^ a b Z-Ro Biography. Rapartists.com (1977-01-19). Retrieved on 2011-06-21.
  3. ^ Sanneh, Kelefa. (2007-05-27) A Hip-Hop Hurricane and Other Phenomena – New York Times. Nytimes.com. Retrieved on 2011-06-21.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Cite error: The named reference A.D. Bio was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  5. ^ a b Breihan, Tom (2006-12-07). "Project Pat and Z-Ro: The Unsung Heroes of Southern Rap". The Village Voice. Retrieved 2008-09-07.
  6. ^ Sanneh, Kelefa (2007-05-27). "A Hip-Hop Hurricane and Other Phenomena". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-09-07.
  7. ^ Peralita, Eyder (2006-11-06). "Z-Ro breaks ground, visits the past on new CD". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2008-09-07.
  8. ^ allmusic ((( Z-Ro > Charts & Awards > Billboard Albums )))

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