Trouble rapper wiki

  • Jamichael jones
  • MC Trouble

    Birth name

    LaTasha Sheron Rogers

    Born

    30 July 1970
    Los Angeles, California, United States

    Origin

    Los Angeles, California, United States

    Died

    4 June 1991 (aged 20)
    Los Angeles, California, United States

    Genre

    Hip hop

    Occupation(s)

    Rapper

    Years active

    1987-1991

    Label

    Motown

    Associated acts

    Jazzie Redd, L.A. Jay

    LaTasha Sheron Rogers (30 July 1970 - 4 June 1991), better known by her stage name MC Trouble, was an American rapper from Los Angeles, California. The first female rapper signed to Motown Records, she released her only album, Gotta Get a Grip, in 1990 to moderate sales and reviews. 

    Rogers was born with epilepsy and required daily treatment to prevent seizures. While working on her second album, she died in her sleep on 4 June 1991 shortly after suffering an epileptic seizure that resulted in heart failure. She was buried in Inglewood Park Cemetery, in which her tombstone erroneously lists her year of death as 1992 instead. 

    Her posthumous single "Big Ole Jazz" was released in 1992 on the House Party 2 soundtrack, resulting in a second and final hit on the Billboard Rap Singles chart. The song "Vibes and Stuff" by A Tribe Called Quest from their 1991 album The Low End Theory is dedicated to Rogers.

    Discography[]

    This page uses Creative Commons Licensed content from Wikipedia (view authors).

    "I Knew You Were Trouble"
    Single by Taylor Swift

    Recorded

    2011-2012
    January–April 2021 (Taylor's Version)

    Released

    October 9, 2012 (promotional single)
    October 22, 2012 (album)
    December 10, 2012 (single)
    November 12, 2021 (T.V.)

    Studio

    Conway Recording Studio
    (Los Angeles, California, U.S.)

    MXM Studios
    (Stockholm, Sweden)

    Genre

    Dance pop, pop rock, teen pop, dubstep

    Length

    3:39
    4:03 (Sammy Adams Remix)

    PreviousCurrentNext

    "Begin Again"

    "I Knew You Were Trouble"

    "22"
    "I Knew You Were Trouble" (stylized as "I Knew You Were Trouble." on the original version of Red) is the fourth track from American singer and songwriter Taylor Swift's fourth studio album, Red, released on October 9, 2012, through Big Machine Records. The song became the third single from the album on December 10, 2012. A remix version featuring the rapper Sammy Adams was released on November 2012. It is also the fourth track from her second re-recorded album, Red (Taylor's Version), released on November 12, 2021, through Republic Records.

    Background[]

    The song is rumored to be about Swift's ex-boyfriend, John Mayer.

    On October 8, 2012, Swift previewed the song on an episode of Good Morning America. Swift said of the song: "The song is about being frustrated with yourself because here you are heart-broken and you knew when you first saw that person you saw all these red flags and you just went for it anyway, so shame on me."

    In an interview with Billboard, published on December 4, 2014, Swift said of the song: "'I Knew You Were Trouble' was a big signal flare. When I did something like that, that I thought people were going to be freaked out over, and it ended up spending seven weeks at No. 1 on the pop charts, it felt like I had tried on something new that fit really well."

    Music video[]

    The music video be

  • Trouble rapper net worth
  • Mark Wahlberg racist hate crimes: The full list of actor's racially motivated attacks

    Mark Wahlberg’s history of racially motivated attacks has resurfaced after the actor was accused of hypocrisy for sharing a post supporting the Black Lives Matter movement.

    The Tedstar shared a picture of George Floyd, whose death sparked protests across the United States after a police officer knelt on his neck for nine minutes, to his Instagram feed last week in support of the Black Lives Matter movement.

    “The murder of George Floyd is heartbreaking. We must all work together to fix this problem,” he wrote. “I’m praying for all of us. God bless.”

    However, many commenters accused Wahlberg of hypocrisy given his history of using racial slurs and hate crimes as a teenager. The Independent has approached Wahlberg's representatives for comments on these accusations.

    While living in Boston in the 1980s Wahlberg was twice charged for race-related hate crimes, serving time in jail for one of the attacks.

    What were Wahlberg’s crimes?

    In 1986, a then 15-year-old Wahlberg and three friends were charged for chasing three black children and pelting them with rocks while yelling: “Kill the n*****s” until an ambulance driver intervened.

    The next day, Wahlberg harrassed another group of mostly black children (around the age of nine or 10) at the beach, gathering other white men to join in racially abusing and throwing rocks at them.

    A seemingly unrelated second incident occurred two years later in 1988, when Wahlberg attacked two Vietnamese men while high on the drug PCP.

    He called one man, Thanh Lam, a “Vietnam f***ing s***” and knocked him unconscious with a five-foot wooden stick, while punching another man, army veteran Johnny Trinh, in the eye later in the same day. Officers reported that Wahlberg used racist slurs to describe both men.

    Watch Apple TV+ free for 7 days

    New subscribers only. £8.99/mo. after free trial. Plan auto-renews until cancelled

    Try for free

    W

    Trouble (rapper)

    American rapper (1987–2022)

    Musical artist

    Mariel Semonte Orr (November 4, 1987 – June 5, 2022), also known by his stage name Trouble, was an American rapper from Atlanta. He released eight independent mixtapes before guest appearing alongside Migos on YFN Lucci's 2016 single "Key to the Streets," which received platinum certification by the Recording Industry Association of America. The following year, he signed with Mike Will Made It's EarDrummer Records, an imprint of Interscope Records to release his debut studio album Edgewood (2018), which entered the Billboard 200 and was supported by the single "Bring It Back" (with Drake). He entered a joint venture with Def Jam Recordings to release his second album Thug Luv (2020), which failed to chart.

    He was shot and killed at the age of 34 on June 5, 2022 during a home invasion.

    Early life

    Mariel Semonte Orr was born on November 4, 1987, in Atlanta, Georgia. He started rapping at the age of 14.

    Career

    In April 2011, Trouble released his debut mixtape December 17th, which featured on Complex's "25 Best Mixtapes of 2011". The mixtape included the song "Bussin'", which featured Yo Gotti, Waka Flocka Flame, and Trae tha Truth on the remix. In August 2011, Complex included Trouble in its "15 New Rappers To Watch Out For" list. In 2013, he was included in XXL magazine's "15 Atlanta Rappers You Should Know" list.

    In 2015, Trouble appeared on Lupe Fiasco's album Tetsuo & Youth, along with Glasses Malone, Trae tha Truth, Billy Blue, Buk, and Fam-Lay in the track "Chopper".

    In 2016, Trouble appeared on rapper YFN Lucci's single "Key to the Streets", which peaked at number 70 on the Billboard Hot 100.

    In March 2016, Trouble and labelmate Veli Sosa filmed a music video in North Carolina titled "Straight Out" from his 20

  • Trouble game