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Money-B
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Ronald Brooks, better known by his stage name Money-B, is an American rapper, best known for being a member of the funk and rap group Digital Underground. He is a member of Raw Fusion with DJ Fuze whom they had two albums, Live From the Styleetron and Hoochified Funk.
Key Information
He had a solo album named Talkin' Dirty which features Digital Underground released in 1999.
Money-B contributed, edited the script and acted as himself for the Digital Underground portion of the 2017 Tupac biopic All Eyez on Me.
Discography
[edit]- Solo albums
- 1999: Talkin' Dirty
- 2007: Mandatory Vol. 1
- 2009: 4 Tha Funk Of It
- Collaboration albums
- 1991: Live from the Styleetron (with Raw Fusion)
- 1994: Hoochiefied Funk (with Raw Fusion)
- Guest appearances
- 1992: "Call It What You Want" (with Above The Law feat. 2Pac & Money-B)
- 2010: "The Club" (with Big Bossolo) album The Birth
References
[edit]External links
[edit]Money-B
View on Grokipediafrom Grokipedia
Money-B, born Ronald Brooks (September 22, 1969) in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is an American rapper and a longtime member of the Oakland-based hip hop group Digital Underground, renowned for blending funk, humor, and rap in the late 1980s and 1990s.[1][2][3]
After relocating to Oakland, California, Brooks immersed himself in the Bay Area's burgeoning rap scene, where his dedication to hip hop—described by group leader Shock G as someone who "eats, sleeps, and drinks hip hop"—led to his recruitment into Digital Underground in 1989 alongside DJ Fuze.[4][2] As the group's primary emcee, Money-B contributed a hardcore Oakland rapping style that complemented the ensemble's P-Funk influences, helping propel their debut album Sex Packets (1990) to platinum status with hits like "The Humpty Dance" and launching the career of then-member Tupac Shakur during his early days as a backup dancer and rapper.[2][5][3]
Beyond Digital Underground, which earned Grammy nominations and influenced West Coast rap, Money-B co-led the side project Raw Fusion with DJ Fuze, releasing albums such as Live from the Styleetron (1991) and Hoochified Funk (1994) that featured collaborations with artists like 2Pac and Saafir.[5][6] His solo endeavors include the album Talkin' Dirty (2000) and various mixtapes, showcasing his versatile flow and ties to the group's legacy, while he has also appeared in films like Nothing But Trouble (1991) and continued performing into the 2020s.[7][8]
