Wale

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The self-proclaimed “Ambassador of Rap for the Capital,” Wale (pronounced “wah-lay”) was able to transcend his status as local sensation and become a national rap contender using go-go-inspired hip-hop as the vehicle for his clever wordplay and music. Most of the major singles that ensued for him, however, were melodic slow jams spread across the tail-end of the 2000s and well into the late 2010s. These hits, such as “Lotus Flower Bomb” and “Bad,” supported albums that regularly landed near or at the top of the Billboard 200, including the chart-topping The Gifted (2013) and The Album About Nothing (2015). The proper full-length studio releases were supplemented with numerous mixtapes, featured appearances on hits by the likes of Waka Flocka Flame and Rick Ross, and starring roles on multiple volumes in Maybach’s Self Made compilation series. The rapper closed out the 2010s with Wow...That's Crazy (2019), his fourth solo full-length release to enter the Top Ten of the Billboard 200. In the 2020s, he has added to his discography with an EP, The Imperfect Storm (2020), and his seventh album, Folarin II (2021).
Olubowale Victor Akintimehin was born in Washington, D.C. in 1984 to Nigerian immigrants who’d arrived in America five years earlier. Although the family moved to Maryland when the future rapper was ten years old, Wale was mostly raised in suburban D.C. He attended both Robert Morris College and Virginia State University on football scholarships, and eventually transferred again to Bowie State. The music bug had already bitten him hard, though, and soon he quit college altogether to turn to a recording career. He got his first airplay circa 2003/2004 with “Rhyme of the Century,” thanks to the help of a local radio DJ who believed in his potential. This landed him in the Unsigned Hype column in Source magazine the following year.
In 2006, Wale signed with the local start-up imprint Studio 43 and enjoyed a string of hits in the D.C./Maryland/Virginia area that year. Many of those records sampled from ’80s go-go — a rawer, percussion-driven offshoot of disco originating in D.C. — like the popular “Dig Dug,” a tribute to Ronald "Dig Dug" Dixon of go-go band the Northeast Groovers. Smart use of the Internet and MySpace was also a big factor in his success, as it helped über-producer and DJ Mark Ronson (known for his work with Amy Winehouse, Christina Aguilera, and Rhymefest) to catch wind of the go-go MC in 2007. Wale struck a production deal with Ronson’s own imprint, Allido, and released the 100 Miles and Running mixtape that summer. Despite not being signed to a major label, he was met with positive press from a number of sources, ranging from XXL magazine to The New York Times.
After a bidding war that included offers from Epic, Atlantic, and Def Jam, Interscope finally grabbed Wale for its roster in early 2008. Among the rapper’s first major-label singles the following year were the boisterous “Chillin,” featuring a hook from Lady Gaga, and the go-go-inflected “Pretty Girls,” assisted by Gucci Mane. Those hits preceded and appeared on the full-length Attention Deficit, which arrived in November 2009 and entered the Billboard 200 at number 21. Momentum was sustained with a featured spot on Waka Flocka Flame’s multi-platinum “No Hands.” More significantly, the first fruit of a new deal with Rick Ross’ Warner-supported Maybach Music Group was the compilation Self Made, Vol. 1, in which Wale was prominent. The album’s “That Way” became the rapper’s first gold-certified single as a lead artist.
The rapper’s second full-length and first proper release for MMG, Ambition, landed in November 2011 and hit number two on the Billboard 200. Its success was driven by the mellow slow jam “Lotus Flower Bomb.” One of the year’s biggest radio hits, the Miguel collaboration topped Billboard’s R&B/hip-hop chart, cracked the Top 40 of the Hot 100, and was later nominated for a Grammy Award in the category of Best Rap Song. Between albums, Wale played a major role in Self Made, Vol. 2, highlighted by “Bag of Money,” and supporting roles on tracks from within and outside the Maybach family, such as Ross’ “Diced Pineapples” and Cash Out’s “Hold Up.” In June 2013, the Wale album-release gap was closed by The Gifted, a number one Billboard 200 hit due in part to the multi-platinum ballad “Bad” — the one with the squeaking bed springs — featuring Tiara Thomas (or Rihanna on the remix). MMG’s third Self Made volume, with Wale understandably less involved, was out within only a few months.
Wale’s commercial presence remained at a high level during the latter half of the 2010s. He received a boost as one of the several artists on “Ride Out,” recorded for the Furious 7 soundtrack. Influenced by the TV sitcom Seinfeld but hardly lightweight in much of its subject matter, The Album About Nothing landed in March 2015 and became Wale’s second number one album. Usher, Jeremih, and J. Cole were among the guests, while Jerry Seinfeld himself acted as narrator. A series of singles that began near the end of 2016 — including “My PYT,” Wale’s seventh Top 20 R&B/hip-hop single — led to Shine, issued in May 2017. After parting ways with Atlantic, Wale signed with Warner and returned in 2018 with a trio of EPs: It's Complicated, Self Promotion, and Free Lunch. The next year, he scored a number 22 pop hit with the Jeremih collaboration “On Chill,” and followed it that October with Wow...That's Crazy, an album that entered the Billboard 200 at number seven. Along with collaborations like “Won Le Ba” with Davido and Shizzi, 2020 brought a new Wale EP called The Imperfect Storm. He teamed up with Westside Gunn and Smoke DZA in early 2021 for the wrestling-themed Griselda release “The Hurt Business.” Later in the year, Wale issued “Angles” featuring Chris Brown and “Down South” with Maxo Kream and Yella Beezy. Those two singles appeared on Folarin II, an October arrival that hit the Billboard 200 at number 22. In 2022, Wale’s 2010 mixtape More About Nothing was released on streaming services after spending years as a fan-circulated favorite. Part of a Seinfeld-related series that began with 2008′s The Mixtape About Nothing, sequel More About Nothing had many uncleared samples of dialogue from the television series that kept it tied up in legal limbo. It was released to streaming when Seinfeld himself stepped in to expedite the clearing of the samples. ~ Cyril Cordor & Andy Kellman