About Kid Rock
Friday, November 3, 2017
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ORIGIN
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Romeo, MI
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GENRE
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Rock
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BORN
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17 Jan 1971
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One of the unlikeliest success stories in rock at the turn of the
millennium, Detroit rap-rocker Kid Rock shot to superstardom with his
fourth full-length album, 1998's Devil Without a Cause. What made it so
shocking was that Rock had recorded his first demo a full decade before,
been booted off major label Jive following his Beastie Boys-ish 1990
debut, Grits Sandwiches for Breakfast, and toiled for most of the decade
in obscurity, releasing albums to a small, devoted, mostly local fan
base while earning his fair share of ridicule around his home state.
Nevertheless, Rock persevered, and by the time rap-metal had begun to
attract a substantial audience, he had perfected the outlandish, over
the top white-trash persona that gave Devil Without a Cause such a
distinctive personality and made it such an infectious party record.
As rap-metal acts like Korn, Limp Bizkit, and Rage Against the Machine began to dominate the hard rock landscape, Atlantic Records decided to take a chance on signing Rock. Devil Without a Cause didn't do much upon its initial release in August 1998, but a big promotional push from the label and MTV helped make the album's second single and video, "Bawitdaba," a nationwide smash. The follow-up, "Cowboy," achieved similar success, and suddenly, after a decade of trying, Kid Rock was a superstar with a Top Five, seven-times-platinum album and a gig at Woodstock 1999. While pondering how to follow up Devil, Rock acquired the rights to his indie label recordings and remixed or re-recorded the best material for The History of Rock, which was released in the summer of 2000 and featured some new songs as well. Sadly, after being forced to take a break from touring a year earlier by his medical difficulties, Joe C. passed away in his sleep on November 16, 2000. Even with a tragedy like this in his life, Rock continued work on his follow-up to Devil Without a Cause. The media focused more on his relationship with actress Pamela Anderson than his musical career, which many magazines were beginning to ridicule. His DJ, Uncle Kracker, had a successful solo career during the spring and summer of 2001, leaving Rock without one of his most frequent collaborators. Still, by the winter of that year he had completed work on Cocky and had released "Forever" to success on rock radio. In fall 2003, Kid Rock returned with a self-titled effort. A cover of Bad Company's "Feel Like Makin' Love" marked the first single. The cover art to his 2006 live album, Live Trucker, paid tribute to Bob Seger's Live Bullet. Just a year later, the studio record Rock N Roll Jesus came out, landing at number one and selling 172,000 copies in its first week. Kid Rock left Warner after First Kiss, signing with the country-oriented label Broken Bow Records. In July of 2017, he released his first two singles for the label -- "Po-Dunk" and "Greatest Show on Earth," both released on the same day -- but they were overshadowed by rumors that Rock planned to run for the U.S. Senate in his home state of Michigan. Rock dismissed those rumors on the October 24 episode of the Howard Stern Show, saying his next project was promoting Sweet Southern Sugar, an album released in November 2017. |
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