DJ Eddie F
Ferrell in 2011
Ferrell in 2011
Background information
Birth nameEdward Ferrell
Born (1968-03-25) March 25, 1968
Mount Vernon, New York, U.S.
GenresHip hop, R&B
Years active1986–present
LabelsUptown, LaFace, Motown, Untouchables

Edward Ferrell is an American record producer, DJ, songwriter, and record executive. He initially gained recognition as a member of the group Heavy D and the Boyz, where the group released five studio albums for Uptown Records. By the mid-1990s, he produced for various artists including Mary J. Blige, Donell Jones, Erick Sermon, Guy, LL Cool J, Angie Stone, and Al B Sure!. Also during the 1990s, he held executive positions at Motown and LaFace Records, and prior, founded his own label, Untouchables Entertainment.[1]

A key figure in hip hop/R&B sampling, Ferrell is credited with creating the first "featured artist remix" whereby a track was musically reworked and replaced by an entirely new track (remixed) with an additional verse. The first project that did so was the 1990 remix of Johnny Gill's "Rub U The Right Way" remix featuring C.L. Smooth.

Career

Based in Mount Vernon, New York, Edward Ferrell first became known professionally as the co-founder and member of the new jack swing group Heavy D & the Boyz in the late 1980s. As the group was signed to Uptown Records, he made his initial entry into production for his involvement on the two debut singles from the label, "Uptown Is Kicking It" and "Mr Big Stuff;" the latter of which was included on the label's breakout project, the gold-certified Heavy D & the Boyz debut album, Living Large (1987). Ferrell served as the DJ and produced each of the groups subsequent releases. Meanwhile, he was credited with his affiliation with much of the talent coming out of the Mt. Vernon area, including Al B. Sure!, Dave "Jam" Hall, Kenny Smoove, as well as Sean "Diddy" Combs, who lived with Ferrell in his home studio loft for a while during the early stages of his Uptown Records intern career. Prior, in the late 1980s, he founded the record label Untouchables Entertainment.[2]

By the early 90s, Ferrell had discovered the rap duo Pete Rock & CL Smooth and R&B trio Intro. In 1990, he composed the theme song music for the Fox television series In Living Color starring then-upcoming comedians Jamie Foxx, Jim Carrey, Marlon Wayans and Jennifer Lopez. By the mid-90s, he had held the title of Vice President of A&R for LaFace Records, reporting to co-owner and founder L.A. Reid, and was responsible for assisting Reid in managing its talent roster which included Usher, OutKast, TLC, Goodie Mob, Organized Noize, and Toni Braxton. He would also serve as A&R for the Grammy Award-winning album of The Tony Rich Project, Words (1996).

In 1994, Ferrell released Eddie F. and the Untouchables: Let's Get It On album for Motown. Spotlighting the works of his Untouchables group, the compilation featured the only known in-studio collaboration of two then-upcoming hip-hop rappers at the time, Tupac Shakur and the Notorious B.I.G., on the title track "Let's Get It On" - which also featured Heavy D and Grand Puba. Also on Motown, he served as Executive Vice President of A&R - managing a superstar roster including Queen Latifah, Diana Ross, The Temptations, and Boyz II Men, as well as newcomers 98 Degrees, 702, Taral Hicks, and his personal signing of Mario Winans. During this time, he discovered a then-unknown Chicago singer named Donell Jones.

Ferrell quickly invested in Jones. He then secured a distribution outlet for Jones and further developed his relationship with LA Reid and LaFace Records spawning the hit single "U Know What's Up" featuring Left Eye of TLC, which was also produced by him. Some of the notable albums and Greatest Hits projects he has served as A&R and/or executive producer include Pete Rock & CL Smooth - Mecca and the Soul Brother, INTRO - Intro, Donell Jones - Where I Wanna Be & Story of My Heart, The Tony Rich Project - Words, Stevie Wonder - Song Review: A Greatest Hits Collection, and RUN DMC - RUN DMC.

See also

  • Category:Albums produced by Eddie F

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.