Younglord

  • R&B
  • hip hop
Occupation(s)
  • Record producer
  • singer
Years active1996–presentLabels
  • Belltree Hitz
  • Bad Boy
  • Young World Industries
Member ofThe Hitmen
Musical artist

Richard Frierson (born July 9, 1978), known professionally as Younglord, is an American record producer. He was an early member of The Hitmen, the in-house production team for Puff Daddy's Bad Boy Records. He has contributed to the 1997 albums No Way Out by Puff Daddy and Harlem World by Mase, both of which debuted atop the Billboard 200. During his work with the group, he was solely credited on Big Pun's 2000 posthumous single "It's So Hard".[1] In 2014, Frierson founded The Truth Licensing, a commercial music provider for various media.

Career

A native of New York City, he was signed in November 1994, at the age of sixteen, to Puff Daddy's Hitmen Production Team [1] producing for the label's roster including Mase, The Lox, Faith Evans and 112. He has since produced for outside acts such as Virtue, DMX, Lloyd Banks, Veronica, New Edition and Consequence. Most recently his success was with the Diddy comeback single "Come to Me", which reached Number 9 on The U.S. Billboard Hot 100 Singles Sales co-produced by Yakubu "Jai" Izuagbe also known as Rebel.

Frierson: The Talent Scout

Frierson was also partly responsible for the now infamous producer Ryan Leslie's meeting with P. Diddy after Leslie was given a 30-day contract as a music production intern for Frierson. When the two producers created the Beyoncé Knowles song "Keep Giving Your Love To Me" for the Bad Boys 2 soundtrack, Ryan was asked to meet P. Diddy.[2]

Frierson conceptualized an incubator system for artists, allowing creative space for growth for up and coming artists and producers. Finding such talent such as Terry "MaddScientist" Thomas (a pseudonym inspired by Nicole Scherzinger's single "Supervillain [pl]") and Atozzio, he helped guide and prepare them up to the point where they would be able to sign a publishing deal with EMI Music Publishing.

Identifying and supporting burgeoning artists has been a crucial factor for Frierson. After speaking at lectures at Berklee College of Music, Frierson met Keith Harris, guiding him to LA, where he eventually became Production Partner for Black Eyed Peas' Will I Am, working on two of the last Black Eyed Peas albums, and also working on Estelle's hit single, "American Boy". Chris Henderson, another talent under Frierson's wings, went on to write the hit record "Blame It" by Jamie Foxx, and has written for R&B hit man R. Kelly.

License To Rock

In 2014, Frierson founded The Truth Music Licensing [2]. The Truth controls a catalog of over 5,000 songs and has licensed music to major movie studios, networks, and high-profile brands.

License To Rock is the rebranding of The Truth Music Library. This rebranding consists of a major expansion and a partnership with a high profile music label. These changes put LTR in position to build a massive catalog and become a dominant force in the licensing space. Some of License To Rock's placements have been with Mona Scott's "Love & Hip Hop" franchises, Lee Daniels' "STAR" & "EMPIRE" and commercials for brands including Gatorade, Pepsi, and AT&T. [3]

Discography

1990s

2000s

2010s

  • 2010: Big Tunes: Destination Dance

References

  1. ^ "Bad Boy's Hitmen Justify Taking Hits From The '80s & Making 'Em Feel So Good (Audio)". October 12, 2016.
  2. ^ "Ryan Leslie website".
  3. ^ "About – LICENSE 2 ROCK". License To Rock. Retrieved January 1, 2018.
  4. ^ Birchmeier, Jason. "Loon – Loon | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved September 28, 2014.
  5. ^ "Nothing But the Hits – Virtue | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved September 28, 2014.
  6. ^ "Notorious [Original Soundtrack] – Various Artists | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved September 28, 2014.

External links

Authority control databases: Artists Edit this at Wikidata
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