Frost (rapper) explained

Frost
Birth Place:Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Birth Date:31 May 1962
Years Active:1982–present

Arturo R. Molina Jr. (born May 31, 1962), [1] better known as Frost (originally Kid Frost), is an American rapper, songwriter and record producer from Los Angeles. He charted in the 1990s with his first four albums: Hispanic Causing Panic, East Side Story, Smile Now, Die Later and When Hell.A. Freezes Over. His most successful single is "La Raza"[2] which hit number 6 on the rap songs chart in August 1990. His 1990 debut album is credited as the first Chicano rap album.

Frost's music entered the Billboard 200 again in 2002 with the album Still Up in This Shit!. He is the father of record producer Scoop DeVille.

Early life

Molina was born and raised in Los Angeles, California, and occasionally lived with his family in military bases in Guam and Germany.[3] He is of Mexican descent. He began his music career in 1982 as Kid Frost as a tribute to his rival Ice-T, whom he often battled in the music industry. In an interview Frost stated that his first actual DJ was in fact Dr. Dre and DJ Yella. He soon became a breakdancer for Uncle Jamms Army.[4]

Career

In the mid-1980s, Frost released several pre-gangsta 12" singles on Los Angeles-based labels Electrobeat and Baja. In the late 1980s, Kid Frost moved to Virgin Records. His biggest hit, "La Raza", from his debut album Hispanic Causing Panic (1990), combined East L.A. and Tex-Mex elements and became an "East L.A. anthem."[5] Hispanic Causing Panic is credited as the first Chicano rap album, [6] and brought attention to Chicano rappers on the West Coast.[7]

Frost also established a Latin rap supergroup called Latin Alliance, which released their only album, Latin Alliance, in 1991. His second album, East Side Story was released in 1992.

In 1995, Frost dropped the "Kid" from his nickname and signed with Ruthless Records, Eazy-E's label (distributed by Relativity). Smile Now, Die Later was released that year. Above The Law were featured as guest rappers, alongside A.L.T., O.G.Enius and Kokane. Rick James also appeared on Frost's version of "Mary Jane". His second album for Ruthless, When Hell.A.Freezes Over, was released in 1997. Ice-T, Scoop, O.G.Enius and Domino also appeared as guest rappers. In 1998, Frost collaborated with South Park Mexican in "El Jugador" music video along with Low-G released by Dope House Records in the album. Frost was also featured in the songs: Cali-Tex Connect, and West Coast, Gulf Coast, East Coast also from the album

In 1999, Frost moved to a small independent label called Celeb Entertainment Inc. His first album for Celeb Entertainment titled This Was Then This Is Now Vol. I was released in 1999. Kurupt, King T, Baby Bash, Jay Tee, Jayo Felony, Xzibit, B-Legit and Cameo were featured on the CD. That Was Then This Is Now Vol. II was released in 2000. Frank V., Clika One, Jay Tee, Baby Bash and other guest rappers were also featured on the CD.

2002's Still Up In This Shit!, released by Hit-A-Lick and Koch Records, featured more Latin rap style and g-funk tracks as well as a hidden bonus rock track titled "Cannabis". Mellow Man Ace, Daz Dillinger, Baby Bash, A.L.T., Nino Brown, Don Cisco and other guest rappers appeared, and one track featured the group Tierra.

In 2004 Welcome to Frost Angeles was released on Thump Records, which was produced almost entirely by Frost and his son Scoop DeVille. Only the Intro is produced by Binky Womack, and Philly Blunt co-produced one track. Guest rappers included Cameosis, Genovese and Jay Tee. Frost again signed to Low Profile Records and released his album Till The Wheels Fall Off in 2006. It had various guest appearances which included Baby Bash, Scoop DeVille and Mr. Sancho.

Frost also performed music for films including "Bite the Bullet (Theme from Gunmen)" in the 1993 film Gunmen and "Tears Of A Mother" in the film No Mothers Crying, No Babies Dying, which featured Ice-T.

Frost is also an accomplished actor appearing in several films, as well as doing voice roles for fictional characters such as T-Bone Mendez from and contributing his song "La Raza".[8]

He was named vice president of the Music Division of Goldmark Industries on August 30, 2006. Frost also appeared in a cameo role in Snoop Dogg's "Vato" music video, as well as B-Real that same year. In 2009 Frost collaborated with Serio on the song In L.A. from the album N.T.I.R. Part 2 The Revenge of Serio he was also featured on the Frost and Serio Skit on the album.[9]

In 2016, Frost announced he has been diagnosed with cancer.[10]

Discography

See main article: Frost discography.

Studio albums

Collaboration albums

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kid Frost. https://web.archive.org/web/20240206070020/https://www.mtv.com/news/lq5f1p/kid-frost. dead. February 6, 2024. MTV. February 5, 2024.
  2. Kid Frost. Rolling Stone. May 2, 2023 . February 5, 2024.
  3. Book: The Virgin Encyclopedia of Dance Music. Colin Larkin. Virgin Books. 1998. First. 0-7535-0252-6. 125.
  4. Web site: [{{AllMusic|class=artist|id=p17735|pure_url=yes}} Frost > Biography]. Huey. Steve. AllMusic. August 25, 2018.
  5. News: Gold . Jonathan . August 20, 1990 . Weekend Reviews Kid Frost: Political Rap for Chicano Solidarity Pop music: His hit 'La Raza' is the first popular East L.A. anthem in years . Los Angeles Times . .
  6. McFarland . Pancho . Pancho McFarland . 2006 . Chicano Rap Roots: Black-Brown Cultural Exchange and the Making of a Genre . Callaloo . 29 . 3 . 939–955 . 10.1353/cal.2006.0150 . 4488380 . 161769104 . 0161-2492.
  7. Web site: Bad Subjects Magazine – "Hyper-Masculine and Misogynist Violence in Chicano Rap" . 2007-06-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110927225546/http://bad.eserver.org/issues/2002/61/mcfarland.html . 2011-09-27 . dead .
  8. Web site: GTA-SA. Rockstar.
  9. Web site: Serio. discogs. March 3, 2024.
  10. News: Kid Frost Announces He Has Been Diagnosed With Cancer The Source. Allah. Sha Be. March 2, 2016. The Source. August 25, 2018.