May 29th, 2007

DMX Greatest Hits On The Way June 12th


One of the most doggedly successful stories in the history of Def Jam Recordings belonged to rapper and megastar DMX – the only artist in history to have his first five albums debut at #1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart between 1998 and 2003.  With cumulative Def Jam album sales totaling 15 million copies in the U.S. alone, and nearly four times that number in worldwide record sales, DMX’s career at the label is summed up with the release of THE DEFINITION OF X: PICK OF THE LITTER.  The 20-track collection, including a sizable one dozen chart singles, will be released June 12th.

DMX (aka Earl Simmons) debuted on the album charts as a Def Jam solo artist on June 6, 1998, when It’s Dark and Hell Is Hot entered at #1. It was pumped by his first litter of single picks – “Get At Me Dog” featuring Sheek of The Lox, “Stop Being Greedy” (aka “Survival Of the Illest”), “How’s It Goin’ Down” featuring Faith Evans, and “Ruff Ryders’ Anthem” – which comprise, of course, the first four cuts on THE DEFINITION OF X (after the “Prayer III” intro).  It’s Dark and Hell Is Hot stayed on both the pop and R&B charts for over 100 weeks each and was certified 4x-platinum.

            During that debut album’s incredible 2-year run, DMX’s second album, Flesh Of My Flesh, Blood Of My Blood was released in December ’98, featuring a guest list topped by Jay-Z and the Lox on “Blackout” and Swizz Beats and Drag-On on “No Love 4 Me.”  In addition to those two, THE DEFINITION OF X also includes “It’s All Good” and the single “Slippin’.”  Flesh Of My Flesh, Blood Of My Blood again entered at #1 where it chewed up the competition for 4 weeks, and spent over a year on the charts as sales blew up to triple-platinum. 

            DMX’s third album, …And Then There Was X, entered at #1 on January 1, 2000.  A new trio of single picks – “What’s My Name,” the all-time classic “Party Up (Up In Here),” and the unforgettable “What These B*tches Want” (featuring Sisqó, aka “What You Want”) – kept the album on the charts for more than a year and a half and sent it to 5x-platinum.  Along with the three singles, THE DEFINITION OF X adds the albums tracks “Here We Go Again” and “One More Road To Cross.”

            The year 2000 also marked DMX’s movie debut, in the lead role of Belly, the first film by video director Hype Williams.  That same year, DMX also appeared in Romeo Must Die, the film that established Jet Li’s career in America, directed by Andrzej Bartkowiak.  The same director was responsible for DMX’s third movie, Exit Wounds (starring Steven Seagal), a #1 box office opener that won DMX a multi-film contract with Warner Bros. 

            A near-two year span between albums did not diminish his popularity, as The Great Depression entered the charts at #1 in November 2001.  The RIAA platinum best-seller stayed on the charts through the first half of 2002, amped by two signature singles, “We Right Here” and “Who We Be.” 

            DMX’s fourth major film was the 2003 reunion with Jet Li and director Bartkowiak in Cradle 2 The Grave.  The movie opened #1 at the box office and its Bloodline/Def Jam sound­track, which led off with DMX’s “X Gon’ Give It To Ya” (one of three tracks he contributed to the album) struck RIAA gold.  His next (and final) Def Jam solo album Grand Champ marked his fifth consecutive #1 debut (October 2003), a chart feat not likely to be matched again.  From that album, THE DEFINITION OF X reprises “The Rain” and his last chart single for the label, “Where The Hood At.”

            In 2007, THE DEFINITION OF X brings his career full circle with the essentials of his hitmaking Def Jam years.

            Journalist Smokey D. Fontaine, co-author of E.A.R.L.: The Autobiography of DMX, which was published in 2003, called his subject, “One of the most memorable MCs of all time.  The only artist who has spent a career inspiring followers around the world to bark and rhyme in loud bursts of manic, ghetto energy, only then to get them to read and rap and think and cry in private moments of honest thought and introspection.  No one in hip-hop has ever done it better.  No one has meant more.”



11 Responses to “DMX Greatest Hits On The Way June 12th”

  1. NOT REALLY >> Says:

    BOOO GO AWAY .. 1st bitches

  2. Jince Says:

    E.A.R.L. was an incredible book…..there was one part of in it that struck me dumb…he talks about how he boned some 30 somethin year old woman when he was 12………..GOD fucking DAMN

  3. T Baby Says:

    only his first 2 albums get play.

    the rest… nawwww.

  4. GLOCK Says:

    T BAYBY DONT FORGET AND THEN THERE WAS X, THAT ALBUM WAS A CLASSIC TOO. SO DMX DID IN FACT HAVE 3 GEAT ALBUMS. AND THEN THERE WAS X HAD ALOT OF CHART TOPPING SINGLES. SHIT WAS FIRE.

  5. Gutta C Says:

    fuck EARRRRRRRRRRRRL

  6. MaG Says:

    AND THEN THERE WAS X WAS A CLASSIC

  7. blanco montana aka cant feel my face Says:

    wow its alotta hatin goin im not a super fan of x but u cant deny his presence he brong us out of the shiny suit era so i thank him for dat n u gotta admit wen he first came out if u was in da streets or growin up he was the shyt plus ive only read 2 books in my whole life n 1 of them was e.a.r.l that shyt was real he had a fuked up child hood n made it through hes realier then 99.99 percent of all rappers notice how most rappers dont tell much bout thery life from childhood to adolsents (even good rapperslike jada,t.i,jeezy,)its cuz they aint start poppin off on the street level till they was older x was stealin cars n bringin em bak to projects at 13

  8. blanco montana aka cant feel my face Says:

    i dont even real list em as 1 of my top 20 rappers but the nigga is real on a hood level n as a person plus he dont front like all these other rappers

  9. anon Says:

    dmx is legendary in my books.. it disappoints me that he’s f*ckin underrated in todays world of hip-hop, he deserves his shine str8 up

  10. KillaCalifornia213 Says:

    X definintely got the hood ties and still has the hood in him..

    But sometimes, this fool is just stupid ignorant.

    Getting arrested for stupid shit and smoking crack and what not.

    First two albums were hot..

    Plus, ‘Get it on the floor’ bumps in the ride to this day.

  11. Jboogie123 Says:

    Yooo Man DMX was the truth man…Coming out w/ the LOX was MAJOR….He brought the LOX and their HOOd style out..The only ni99a that Cry he showed he’s a Man…X is ma ni99a and he keeps it real. Nowadays ni99as talkin bout POP Drop and LOck it or Aunt Jackie..Fuck all That shit back in the 90’s X rep Blood hardcore so u wanted to wear RED and B hard as X(No pun intended)

    He REally had Classics Man…Its Dark and Hell it’s HOT-My #1 of all time..EZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZz

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