Saigon (rapper)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Saigon | |
|---|---|
| Birth name | Brian Daniel Carenard |
| Also known as | The Yardfather, Saigiddy, 96-A-0549 |
| Born | June 1, 1977 |
| Origin | Brooklyn, New York,U.S. |
| Genre(s) | Hip hop |
| Occupation(s) | Rapper, Actor |
| Years active | 2001- 2007 |
| Label(s) | Atlantic Records, Fort Knocks Entertainment |
| Associated acts |
Just Blaze, Tru-Life, Jay-Z, Scram Jones |
| Website | Official site |
Brian Daniel Carenard (born June 1, 1977), better known by his stage name Saigon, was an American rapper.
Saigon is currently signed to Just Blaze's Fort Knocks Entertainment record label and is waiting on the release of his highly anticipated major label debut entitled The Greatest Story Never Told.
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Born in Brooklyn, New York, Saigon spent his upbringing in Rockland County.[1] At age 11 he began selling marijuana and at age 13 he had joined a neighborhood gang. By the time Saigon was 15 he had been charged with two counts of attempted murder,[2] landing him a 7-year prison sentence. Saigon developed his rhyming skill during while in prison. While incarcerated, he took the stage name Saigon from the influential Vietnam War book "Bloods" by Wallace Terry. After his prison release in 2000, he established the company Abandoned Nation, which was partly a nonprofit foundation that provided support for the children of incarcerated parents, but it also helped him and associated artists to pursue their music careers.[1]
After Saigon was released from prison he started to appear on mixtapes and make contacts inside the music industry. His first important musical contact was DJ/producer Mark Ronson[1], who gave him studio time and access to other valuable contacts. He appeared on Ronson's single "Ooh Wee" with Nate Dogg, Ghostface Killah and Trife Da God in 2003. The rapper later left Ronson's company, on good terms, in order to explore better options. In 2002, Saigon released his first mixtape Da Yard Father 1 - The Best of Saigon, which XXL ranked 14 on their top 20 artist-driven mixtapes list.[3] Saigon quickly gained popularity in the underground circuit and on the internet. Saigon continued to release mixtapes until signing to Just Blaze’s Fort Knox Entertainment in 2004.[2] Saigon was listed in tons of "Artists to Watch" columns (including in Time magazine) and graced the covers of many hip-hop publications throughout the early to mid-2000s.[1]
In 2005, Sai landed a recurring role in the popular HBO show, Entourage. Tha Yardfather appeared as himself in the second and third seasons of the show. Entourage is credited as being a big boost to his career, making him more recognizable to the mainstream U.S. population.
On the night of January 17, 2006, Saigon was stabbed in the temple with a beer bottle as he left a diner in the Chelsea section of New York.[4] A man approached Saigon and attempted to steal a chain of his, worth $18,000. When Saigon grabbed it back, a fight started. Saigon, bleeding from the head, tried to hail down a taxi (not wanting to get blood in his Mercedes Benz) but was unable to and drove himself to Bellevue Hospital where he received seven stitches.
On the night of September 18, 2007, Saigon was involved in a fight with Mobb Deep rapper Prodigy[5] at Havoc's album release party. After Saigon was pushed by a security guard, a minor struggle arose. After a few words were exchanged, Saigon punched Prodigy in the head. Bottles were thrown before Saigon and his bodyguard escaped from the club.[6]
The Moral of the Story is Saigon's street album[7], which consists of new original material and songs that were cut from The Greatest Story Never Told. This album was released to create hype for his debut album and to hold fans over until his major label debut was released. Despite the mixtape not having his best material, Saigon says that it's better than most rappers studio albums. The album was released on November 13, 2007. On the album, Saigon criticizes the many ringtone rappers. The mixtape is the first release on Fort Knocks Entertainment.
On November 17, 2007 Saigon and fellow New York rapper Tru-Life. Announced they would be recording a collaborative album.[8] Speaking on the album Saigon stated:
We’re using what got us here, and that’s our talent. Our talent put us in this situation to get our music out there. At times we get sidetracked by the bullshit, but we have to bring it back to what made me love hip-hop and that’s the genuine shit, not the gimmicky shit. The radio is pretty much destroying hip-hop. The bullshit music is fucking it up because now everybody feels like they can do it. When everybody can do something, it gets so diluted and the music won’t be as potent. We’re not even going to call this a mixtape. We’re doing an album together.
Saigon and Tru-Life have reportedly recorded about six songs for the album. Tru-Life stated the album will not be affected by Saigon's rumored retirement.[9]
The Greatest Story Never Told is Saigon's highly anticipated debut album set to be released on Just Blaze's Fort Knocks Entertainment. Originally scheduled for a 2005 release but was constantly delayed. On June 1, 2007, Saigon posted a blog on his Myspace stating that he felt Atlantic Records didn't to have the desire to release his album because he is a real artist, not a "jingle writer", and they only care about the money, not the music. He stated that the album will be released independently if Atlantic will not release it.[10] Saigon later took down that blog because he thought it offended Just Blaze. On June 14, 2007, Just Blaze responded to Saigon's comments on his own blog, themegatrondon.com. He stated that he was not offended by the blog but just didn't understand why Saigon would post it now when the only thing holding up the album release is a sample clearance for the single "C'mon Baby" which Craig Kallman—president of Atlantic—was personally handling.[11]. Saigon then posted an apology and announced he signed a deal with Violator Management.[12] Just Blaze later posted that all samples had been cleared.[13]The Greatest Story Never Told is now set to be released early 2008.[7]
On August 22, Saigon was arrested in Manhattan on felony knife-possession charges. According to the New York Post, a "gravity knife" was found by authorities is Saigon's car after he was pulled over on 11th Avenue and West 29th street for a traffic infraction. Saigon was released on $1500 bail, and is set to appear in court on December 5, 2007.[14]
On November 19, 2007 Saigon posted a blog on his myspace entitled "I QUIT"[15] stating he was quiting the music industry because of how the media spins what he says in interviews and how they don't care about his real message. Saigon said in his blog:
Fuck this bum ass rap game anyway, its full of fake ass niggaz who pump poison to the kids, make a few dollars and act like theyre larger then life when they know their music is detrimental to their fucking communities, If it aint about sex, its about drugs or violence, where are the songs about getting an eduacation, or being responsible parents and shit, or stopping the Gang Violence...This shit is sickening...........SAIGON IS DEAD...Should I say Ill slap a rapper so they run and put it in all their news section and gossip columns..Okay Ill slap the shit outta EVERY Rapper hows that....I QUIT, Now I have time to focus on my non profit organazation, In Arms Reach/Abandoned Nation, Please if you get the chance, check out Inarmsreach.org and lend your support to the work we do for the children in NYC whose parent(s) are incarcerated, Thank You now I gotta figure out how Im gonna break this to Just Blaze......THE GREATEST STORY NEVER TOLD....hahahahahahaha PROPHECY
Later in the day Saigon gave a statement to HipHopGame.com confirming what he said in his myspace blog.[16] He told HHG that he was going to focus more on his nonprofit organization In Arms Reach and Abandoned Nation. An organization that helps New York City kids whose parents are incarcerated. So far neither Atlantic Records or Fort Knocks Entertainment have confirmed the retirement rumors.[17]
- 2007: The Moral of the Story
- 2008: The Greatest Story Never Told
- TBA: Untitled album with Tru-Life
- Da Yard Father 1 - The Best of Saigon
- The Abandoned Tracks Volume 1
- The Abandoned Tracks Volume 2
- Warning Shots
- Abandoned Nation
- Da Yard Father 2 - On the Go Back
- Welcome to Saigon
- The Return Of The Yardfather
- Belly of The Beast (The Scram Jones Files)
| Year | Title | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2005-2006 | Entourage | Himself | 4 episodes |
| 2006 | Rap Sheet: Hip-Hop and the Cops | Himself | |
| 2006 | Bring That Year Back 2006: Laugh Now, Cry Later | Himself | TV |
- ^ a b c d Cyril Cordor. Saigon Biography All Music Guide. Accessed November 21, 2007.
- ^ a b Anslem Samuel (October 8, 2007). Next Up: Saigon XXL. Accessed November 21, 2007.
- ^ Leah Rose & Anslem Samuel (July 27, 2006) Hustler Musik XXL. Accessed November 22, 2007.
- ^ Shaheem Reid (January 19, 2006).Saigon Assaulted Outside Diner In New York MTV. Accessed November 4, 2006.
- ^ Saigon Punches Prodigy of Mobb Deep HipHopDX.com (September 20, 2007). Accessed November 21, 2007.
- ^ Saigon, Mobb Deep Get Into Physical Altercation During Music Showcase In New York BallerStatus.com (September 20, 2007).
- ^ a b Shaheem Reid and Jayson Rodriguez, with additional reporting by Rahman Dukes and Liz Hernandez. Mixtape Monday: Jay-Z Borrows The-Dream's 'Hook'; Young Buck Says His Album 'Is Better Than Kanye's And 50's' MTV. Accessed November 19, 2007.
- ^ Saigon and Tru Life recording album together; HipHopGame bringing continuous, exclusive coverage on the album HipHopGame.com (November 17, 2007). Accessed November 19, 2007.
- ^ Saigon and Tru Life still recording album together HipHopGame.com (December 3, 2007). Accessed December 3, 2007.
- ^ Saigon vs AtlanticHipHopDX.com
- ^ Just Blaze (June 14, 2007). Strictly Business The Megatron Don. Accessed November 21, 2007
- ^ Shake (June 16, 2007). Saigon Apologizes and Signs With Violator ManagementHipHopDX.com. Accessed November 21, 2007.
- ^ Just Blaze (June 20, 2007).Word!. The Megatron Don
- ^ Slava Kuperstein (August 24, 2007). Saigon Arrested for Weapons Possession HipHopDX.com. Accessed November 21, 2007.
- ^ LINK: Saigon Announces He’s Quitting Rap XXL (November 19, 2007). Accessed November 19, 2007
- ^ Saigon releases exclusive statement on HipHopGame HipHopGame.com (November 19, 2007). Accessed November 19, 2007.
- ^ Allen Jacobs (November 19, 2007). Saigon Says He's Done With Rap HipHopDx.com. Accessed November 29, 2007.
- Official website run by Atlantic Records
- Official website run by Saigon
- Saigon at Myspace
- Saigon at the Internet Movie Database
- In Arms Reach charity organization
- New York State Prison record
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| Albums | The Moral of the Story · The Greatest Story Never Told |
| Singles | "C'mon Baby" |
| Related articles | Atlantic Records · Fort Knocks Entertainment |