Jam Master Jay flys
DEF JAM Family on his private plane!
Interview
Run
DMC &
Rush Management Posse on the
JMJ's
Jet with
Fab Five Freddy. Afros,
LL Cool J,
3rd Bass, etc
...
Jason William Mizell (
January 21,
1965 –
October 30,
2002), better known by his stage name Jam Master Jay, was an
American musician and rapper. He was the DJ of the influential hip hop group Run–
D.M.C. During the
1980s, Run-D.
M.C. became the biggest hip-hop group and are credited with breaking hip-hop into mainstream music.
For his skill re-working riffs from classic guitar records, he was ranked
No. 10 on
Spin's list of the "
100 Greatest Guitarists of All
Time.[3] On October 30, 2002, while recording new music at his studio in
Jamaica, Queens, New York, Mizell was shot and murdered by an unknown assailant. He was 37 years old.
Mizell was born in
Brooklyn, New York.[4] At the age of 3 years he started playing trumpet and played bass, guitar, and drums in various bands prior to discovering turntables.[
4][5] He moved to
Hollis, Queens in
1975 with his family where he soon discovered the turntables and started
DJing at the age of 13.[4][6] He caught on quickly because of his musical experience and after a year of DJing he felt that he was good enough to play in front of people.[4][5]
Career
He first started playing at parks and later played at bars. He also began throwing small parties around the area.[5]
Once he got a pair of
Technics 1200s he improved rapidly since he was able to practice at night with headphones on when he was supposed to be sleeping.[5]
Mizell became a DJ because he "just wanted to be a part of the band".[5][7] Prior to joining Run-D.M.C. he played bass and drums in several garage bands.[6] In
1982 he hooked up with
Joseph "Run" Simmons and Darryl "D.M.C." McDaniels just after they graduated from high school and agreed to DJ for them because he wanted to be part of the band.[4][7] On Run-D.M.C's
album Raising Hell, Mizell played keyboards, bass, and live drums in addition to his turntable work.[4] Mizell remained in his childhood neighborhood in Hollis, Queens his entire life.
In
1989, Mizell established the label
Jam Master Jay Records, which scored a success in
1993 with the band
Onyx.[8] He also connected
Chuck D with
Def Jam co-founder
Rick Rubin.[citation needed] After achieving relative prominence, Mizell was known to use the alias Jay Gambulos so as to avoid unwanted public attention.[citation needed] He is also related to the
Mizell Brothers, a popular production team for
Gary Bartz,
Johnny "Hammond" Smith, and others.[citation needed]
In 2002, Mizell founded the
Scratch DJ Academy in
Manhattan to "provide unparalleled education and access to the art form of the DJ and producer."[9]
On consecutive
Christmas holidays, Mizell survived a car accident and a gunshot wound to the leg.
On October 30, 2002, at 7:30 pm[10] Mizell was shot and killed in a
Merrick Boulevard recording studio in
Jamaica, Queens.
The other person in the room, 25-year-old Urieco
Rincon, was shot in the ankle and survived.[8]
Following his death, several artists expressed their grief for the loss in the hip-hop community and remembered him for his influence on music and the genre.[11] Mizell was buried at the
Ferncliff Cemetery in
Hartsdale, New York.[12]
In
2003,
Kenneth "Supreme" McGriff, a convicted drug dealer and longtime friend of
Murder Inc. heads Irv and
Chris Gotti, was investigated for targeting Mizell because the DJ defied an industry blacklist of rapper
50 Cent that was imposed because of "
Ghetto Qu'ran", a song 50 Cent wrote about McGriff's drug history.[13]
In
April 2007, federal prosecutors named
Ronald "Tenad"
Washington as an accomplice in the murder.[14] Washington also is a suspect in the
1995 murder of
Randy "
Stretch"
Walker, a former close associate of the late rapper
Tupac Shakur, who was also murdered. According to court papers filed by the prosecution, Washington "pointed his gun at those present in the studio, ordered them to get on the ground and provided cover for his associate to shoot and kill
Jason Mizell." However, he was never convicted and no new suspects have been named.
- published: 10 Feb 2015
- views: 3199