Coolio

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Coolio was one of the first rappers to balance pop accessibility with gritty, street-level subject matter and language. Despite his nods to hardcore, his music was clearly more happy-go-lucky at heart; he shared the West Coast scene’s love of laid-back ’70s funk, and that attitude translated to his music far more often than Dr. Dre’s Death Row/G-funk axis. Save for the somber Grammy-winning chart-topper “Gangsta’s Paradise,” most of Coolio’s hits were exuberant, good-time party anthems, and he created an ingratiating, fun-loving persona in the videos that supported them. He was also popular with younger audiences and became a favorite on Nickelodeon comedy shows. In the process, Coolio took the sound of West Coast hip-hop to wider audiences than ever before, including those put off by — or too young for — the rougher aspects of G-funk. Coolio helped lay the groundwork for an explosion of hardcore-themed pop-rap (most notably Puff Daddy’s Bad Boy empire), and played an underappreciated role in making hip-hop the mainstream pop music of choice for a new generation. Known most for his first two full-lengths, the Top Ten hits It Takes a Thief (1994) and Gangsta's Paradise (1995), Coolio bowed out with From the Bottom 2 the Top (2009), though he continued to contribute guest verses to tracks through the late 2010s, a few years before his death in 2022.
Coolio was born Artis Leon Ivey, Jr. on August 1, 1963, in the South Central L.A. area of Compton. As a young boy, he was small, asthmatic, highly intelligent, and a bookworm, which often made life outside the home difficult. His parents divorced when he was 11, and searching for a way to fit in at school, he started running with the Baby Crips and getting into trouble. Even so, he still wasn’t really accepted and was never formally inducted into the gang; he tried to make up for it by creating a menacing, unstable persona and carrying weapons to school, and his once-promising scholastic career wound up falling victim to his violent, poverty-stricken environment. At 17, he spent several months in jail for larceny (apparently after trying to cash a money order that had actually been stolen by one of his friends). After high school, he studied at Compton Community College; he also began taking his high school interest in rap to the stage and took his performing name from a dozen contests in which someone called him “Coolio Iglesias.” He became a regular on Los Angeles rap radio station KDAY and cut one of the earlier SoCal rap singles, “Watcha Gonna Do.” He also fell prey to crack cocaine addiction, which derailed his music career. Coolio entered rehab and straightened himself out by taking a job as a firefighter in the forests of northern California. Upon returning to L.A. a year later, he worked various odd jobs — including security at Los Angeles International Airport — while getting his rap career back on track.
Coolio cut another single, “You’re Gonna Miss Me,” that went nowhere. However, he began making connections in the L.A. hip-hop scene, meeting up with WC and the Maad Circle and guesting on their 1991 debut album, Ain't a Damn Thang Changed. He then joined a collective dubbed the 40 Thevz and wound up landing a deal with Tommy Boy. Accompanied by DJ Brian "Wino" Dobbs, Coolio recorded his debut album, It Takes a Thief, which was released in 1994. The lead single, “County Line,” was a humorous recounting of the indignities of welfare, but the record really took off when “Fantastic Voyage,” a rap remake of the funk classic by Lakeside, was released as a single. Accompanied by a typically playful video, “Fantastic Voyage” rocketed to number three on the pop chart, pushing It Takes a Thief into the Top Ten and past the platinum sales mark. Many critics and listeners welcomed his friendlier, gentler approach to the gangsta-dominated West Coast sound, in spite of the fact that some of his album cuts tackled hardcore themes in a similarly profane manner.
Following up his breakthrough success, Coolio teamed up with gospel-trained singer L.V. on a tune based on Stevie Wonder’s Songs in the Key of Life cut “Pastime Paradise.” “Gangsta’s Paradise” was a social statement about ghetto life, and the music was dark, haunting, and spellbindingly atmospheric. In other words, it was nothing like what the public had come to expect from Coolio, and a less than enthusiastic Tommy Boy discouraged him from putting it on an album, instead placing it on the soundtrack to the film Dangerous Minds, which starred Michelle Pfeiffer as a tough inner-city teacher. Released as a single, “Gangsta’s Paradise” was a staggeringly huge hit. It became Coolio’s first number one pop single and was equally successful in the U.K. Its chart longevity in the U.S. was such that, even with the Mariah Carey/Boyz II Men duet “One Sweet Day” setting a new record for most weeks at number one that year, “Gangsta’s Paradise” still managed to beat it out as the number one single of 1995. It was such a phenomenon that when Weird Al Yankovic recorded the parody “Amish Paradise” (authorized by Tommy Boy but not Coolio, leading to much discord), the accompanying album Bad Hair Day became his biggest-selling record ever. Naturally, “Gangsta’s Paradise” was featured on Coolio’s next album, released toward the end of 1995, and naturally, it was the title track. It later won a Grammy for Best Solo Rap Performance.
The triple-platinum Gangsta's Paradise album kept the hits coming: the bright party anthem “1, 2, 3, 4 (Sumpin’ New)” hit the Top Ten in 1996, and the safe-sex anthem “Too Hot” was fairly popular as well. Meanwhile, Coolio toured the world, contributed the theme song to the Nickelodeon comedy series Kenan and Kel, and began pursuing an acting career, making his screen debut with a cameo in the 1996 comedy Phat Beach. He would also land a small role in the following year’s Batman & Robin. Coolio’s third album, My Soul, could well have been expected to be a major event, given his massive success last time out. However, things had changed drastically by the summer of 1997: the specter of the 2Pac/Biggie murders still hung heavily over the hip-hop landscape, and Puff Daddy was rapidly becoming a breakout star with the young audience that had previously belonged to Coolio. My Soul’s lead single, the elegiac “C U When U Get There” (which sampled Pachelbel’s “Canon in D”), fit the mood of the times and reached number 12. The album debuted at number 39 and was eventually certified gold.
Coolio appeared regularly on the revived Hollywood Squares and set up his own label, Crowbar, which in 1999 issued Coolio's Crowbar Records Presents, a showcase for the short-lived label’s numerous signees. Also in ’99, Coolio played triplets in the film Tyrone. He continued to take a number of small film roles, but his much-delayed fourth album remained only a rumor until 2001, when Japan’s Victor label issued Coolio.com. Some of the material from that album reappeared on El Cool Magnifico, issued in the States on Dragon Riders in 2002. Among the guest artists were Daz Dillinger, B Real, and Krayzie Bone, while Kenny Rogers was featured on “The Hustler.” Coolio recorded for a series of independents through the rest of the decade, issuing The Return of the Gangsta, Steal Hear, and From the Bottom 2 the Top. The last of these projects arrived between the first episodes of the reality television program Coolio’s Rules and the web series Cookin’ with Coolio (the latter of which coincided with a book of the same title). Small roles on film and television, and assorted guest verses, followed into the early 2020s. On September 28, 2022, Coolio was discovered unconscious at a friend’s house in Los Angeles, and was pronounced dead at the scene. He was 59 years of age. ~ Steve Huey