
Lil' O
Return Of The Real - Screwed & Chopped
© 2008 Southern Playas United (852720080165)
Chopped And Screwed Southern Rap From Texas.
tracks
- 1 Return Of The Real - Screwed
- 2 The Hood Done Took Me Under - Screwed
- 3 Something Keeps Telling Me - Screwed
- 4 Doggin These Hoes - Screwed
- 5 H-Town Sh*t - Screwed
- 6 F**k Lil’ O - Screwed
- 7 Ya Checking Out Pt. 1 - Screwed
- 8 My Attitude - Screwed
- 9 Hoggin - Screwed
- 10 We Hustlas - Screwed
- 11 Drive Slow - Screwed
- 12 Ya Checking Out Pt. 2 - Screwed
- 13 Real Trap Ni**a - Screwed
- 14 I’m From H-Town - Screwed
- 15 Thanks Fo The Luv - Screwed
- 16 Screwed
try this
albums you will love
- UGK: The Bigtyme Way 1992 -1997
- EM JAY: Dat Funky Hood Sh!t
- BIG UNK: Tolerated But Hated
- BIG POKEY, J DAWG & LIL C: Keep On Stackin 3 - Screwed
- POINT BLANK: Yall Gat Me Fuxxed Up Vol. I
- SHAN-NO: From Me To You
- K-RINO: Triple Darkness - Wreck Time
- K-RINO: Triple Darkness - The Lyrics
- K-RINO: Triple Darkness - Coalition Ambush
- GRIT BOYS: The Movement mixed by Paul Wall
- KUWAIT: The Face Of God
- PETER ROLE: Beastmode
- BILLY COOK: Kiss Tha Cook
- FAT BASTARD: Hungry in the Game
- GANXSTA NIP: Still Psycho
- 7303 RECORDS: A Skee Taste: the Compilation
- BIG POKEY & E.S.G.: Screwed Up Gorillaz
- KILLA KYLEON: Killa Music
- BIG POKEY & E.S.G.: Screwed Up Gorillaz - Slowed & Chopped
- G-RAPP THE GENERAL: Military Mindz: Screwed
- KILLA KYLEON: Killa Music Slowed & Chopped
- THE TERRORISTS: Detonate The Landmines
- LIL KEKE, LIL C & J DAWG: Keep On Stackin 4
- DEEP SOUTH COALITION: Chambers Of Da South
- SHOWTYME & DOUGIE D: Breakin Bread
genres you will love
By Location
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links
notes
His father was a doctor and Lil’ O and his four brothers and one sister had a middle class upbringing. His mother passed away from lung cancer when Lil’ O was just 13 and suddenly his father’s conservative African values began to chase him to rebellion.[2]
Soon after his mother’s death, Lil’ O began hanging in the streets with friends who were in the drug game, and he quickly became addicted to the fast money that drug dealing brought in. “I got street fame, women, and a lot of money quickly and easily,” he says. Of course, he eventually got collared. After his arrest, his father kicked him out of the house and Lil’ O fell deeper into the lure of the drug game. While out on bond, O continued to sell drugs and was caught again. This time he attempted to swallow the evidence before the police could arrest him. He swallowed an ounce-and-a-half of crack cocaine and his lungs collapsed. He was put on life support and his father was told to prepare for his death. “It’s really a miracle that I woke up at all,” says Lil’ O. “I was breathing through tubes on my deathbed and I looked down and saw that my ankles were cuffed to the bed. I realized, if I recovered I was going to jail, and if I didn’t I was going to die.”[3]
He went to Xavier University in New Orleans, where he studied business. Away from the drugs and the street life of Southwest Houston, Lil’ O also began to dabble in one of his first loves – hip hop. “Man, when I was growing up, LL Cool J came out with ‘Radio’ and that was it, I was hooked. I never thought about rapping as a career because I was making so much selling drugs, plus the money came faster than it does in the rap game,” says O. While at Xavier, he recorded “Can’t Stop” – featuring vocal contributions from the ladies that would go on to earn renown as Destiny’s Child. The track soon became Lil’ O’s debut single and went on to score an instant local hit. Regardless, Lil’ O eventually found himself out of school and back in Texas, again exposed to the same lifestyle he’d tried to leave behind. He then signed with the Houston-based indie label GameFace Entertainment, but also began selling drugs again.[4]
After being released from prison, Lil’ O left the drug game behind for good and focused on his music completely. He also enrolled at the University of Houston–Downtown ("UHD") and majored in business. “Some days I wouldn’t feel like going to class, and then I would look across the street at the county jail and remember how I felt when I was in there. That would be all the motivation I would need to get myself to class,” says Lil’ O with a hearty laugh.[5]
He dropped his debut album in 2000 "Blood Money" that garnered him major down south hits like the "Playa's Get Choose" and "Rags to Riches", the album sold over 30,000 copies independentlly.[6] Many albums later, his album "Da Fat Rat With The Cheeze" sold in high numbers.[7] He collaborated with Big Hawk on the hit single "Back Back". "Back Back" led him back to a nationwide deal with Atlantic Records, which he later left in 2003.[8]
He has collaborated with many southern rap artists like Lil' Keke, Fat Pat, Big Hawk, Big Pokey, Big Moe, Trae, Southside Playaz, Mr. 3-2, E.S.G., Lil' Flip, Big Mello, Yungstar, Al-D, Lil' Troy, UGK and Chamillionaire.