Musical Chairs: MCs Who Made Power Moves by Switching Labels
Artists who found success after signing new deals.
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Bounce With Me - There’s no place like home as Shad Moss announced this weekend that he was leaving Cash Money after never releasing an album. Tired of being shelved with no release date in site, the artist formerly known as Bow Wow is now linking back up with Jermaine Dupri and Snoop Dogg, who brought the young MC into the game. After stints with So So Def/Sony/Columbia and briefly on Death Row, Bow stated that he has a new label situation in the works and, “I’m officially a boss. I now work for myself.”As Shad sets up his next power move, check out some more MCs who created new successes after switching labels and playing musical chairs. — Michael Harris (@IceBlueVA) (Photos from left: David Buchan/Getty Images for Environmental Media Association, Paras Griffin/Getty Images)
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Woo Hah!! Got You All In Check - Busta first opened up shop with The Leaders of The New School on Elektra in 1991 and continued his solo exploits there until he created Anarchy and bounced to J Records in 2001. The hits continued for Busta and his Flipmode Squad before he left the building again and delivered The Big Bang with Dr. Dre at Aftermath/Interscope.Motown then followed before he signed with Birdman’s squad and then broke north from Ca$h Money without releasing an album. It’s all about that Conglomerate status now, as Busta inked a deal with Republic to distribute his next project.(Photo: Kevin Winter/Getty Images for Coachella)
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Hate Me Now - Nas spent the first ten years of his career spitting Illmatic verses on Sony/Columbia before life became good at Def Jam after he and Jay Z waved the white flag and Jigga signed his former foe while he held the reigns at the legendary home of hip hop.(Photo: Kimberly White/Getty Images for Hennessy)
Photo By Photo: Kimberly White/Getty Images for Hennessy
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Survival of the Fittest - The official Queensbridge murderers caused Juvenile Hell on 4th & Broadway in 1993 but didn’t become infamous until 1995 after signing on the dotted line with Loud. Mobb Deep's murda muzik also let loose clips and stuck up Jive and 50 Cent's G-Unit/Interscope before they took their destiny into their own hands with Infamous Records. (Photo: Ross Gilmore/Redferns via Getty Images)
Photo By Photo: Ross Gilmore/Redferns via Getty Images
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Vapors - After Dre jumped ship and 'Pac was murdered, Snoop Dogg caught the first tank smoking as he escaped Death Row and joined Master P’s No Limit regime. Paying the cost to be the boss, the Long Beach great continued to stack up the deck with over 20 years of hits as Geffen, TVT, Priority, RCA and Sony have all seen several reincarnations of the D.O. Double G. (Photo: Kevin Winter/Getty Images for iHeartMedia)
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One Day It'll All Make Sense - Tired of borrowing dollars from Relativity, Common took his talents to MCA, who gave him new life when he delivered Like Water For Chocolate. Deciding to Be all he could be, he and his Chi-town brother Kanye then supplied some G.O.O.D. music for Geffen before he ventured on to Warner Bros and lastly reunited with his day one producer No. I.D., joining the ARTium/Def Jam fold last year. (Photo: Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
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Change the Game - Priority Records's work wasn't right, so Jay Z switched suppliers and went to Def Jam after dropping his debut Reasonable Doubt in 1996. Hov rocked with Def Jam and proved his American Gangster when he took over presidential duties of the iconic label in 2005. Deciding it was time to be his own boss of his own company, he kicked off Roc Nation in 2009, which enjoyed distribution deals with Atlantic and Universal. (Photo: Theo Wargo/Getty Images for Global Citizen Festival)
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Change Clothes...And Go - Skateboard P always did what made him “Happy” and not having to depend on a label is one of the perks of being a multi-platinum super producer. Pharrell’s 2006 solo debut In My Mind was released through Interscope while 2014’s Girl got him a solo platinum disc on the wall with Columbia. His group N.E.R.D. also went in search of a new label home that understood their music when they left Virgin for Interscope. (Photo: Mauricio Santana/Getty Images)
Photo By Photo: Mauricio Santana/Getty Images
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Follow Me Home - Jay Rock was TDE’s flagship artist and first kicked up dust with his hit single “All My Life” with Lil Wayne on Warner Bros. Not seeing the vision, TDE went it’s own way and the rest is history. Rock’s official debut came out in 2011 through a joint venture with TDE and Tech N9ne’s Strange Music.(Photo: Rick Diamond/BET/Getty Images for BET)
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Down and Out - Cam made his entrance through Sony/Epic’s doors, but they never could get it right. So the Diplomat let them know he was leaving and connected with his O.G. Damon Dash, scoring his first platinum plaque with Roc-A-Fella/Def Jam.After the Roc dismantled, the Harlem hustler then showed that cats from Harlem don’t have bosses and went on his Killa Season, showing that New York could get that independent money too when he partnered with Koch and Asylum.(Photo: Eugene Gologursky/Getty Images for SoundCTRL/Flash FWD)
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