Redhead Kingpin

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Do the Right Thing 04:02 Tools
We Rock the Mic Right 04:19 Tools
Pump It Hottie 05:53 Tools
3-2-1 Pump 04:15 Tools
We Don't Have A Plan B 00:00 Tools
Get It Together 00:00 Tools
All About Red 00:00 Tools
Harlem Brown 00:00 Tools
It's A Love Thang (Word) 00:00 Tools
Nice & Slow 00:00 Tools
What Do You Hate 00:00 Tools
Do The Right Thing (US Street Mix) 00:00 Tools
Do the Right Thing [Explicit] 00:00 Tools
Soap 00:00 Tools
3-2-1 Pump! 00:00 Tools
Do the Right Thing (Rmx) 00:00 Tools
Got 2 Go 00:00 Tools
A Shade of Red 00:00 Tools
Kilimanjaro Style 00:00 Tools
Dave & Kwame (Gimme Dat Girl) 00:00 Tools
No Reason 00:00 Tools
The Redhead One 00:00 Tools
We Rock The Mic Right (teddy Riley Extended Mix) 04:19 Tools
Do The Right Thing (DJ Inko Remix) 00:00 Tools
Do that Dance 00:00 Tools
We Rock The Mic 00:00 Tools
Shade Of Red 00:00 Tools
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Redhead Kingpin & the FBI was an American hip hop/new jack swing group best known for its debut single and highest-charting song, "Do the Right Thing" from its album A Shade of Red, which peaked at #13 on the UK Singles Chart in 1989. The song was featured on the soundtrack of Wes Craven's horror film The People Under the Stairs. The group was led by emcee David "Redhead" Guppy (an actual redhead), who also played keyboards. The F.B.I. consisted of Joseph "D.J. Wildstyle" Mann, Bo Roc, Lt. Squeak, Buzz, and Poochie. A Shade of Red contained two other singles, "Pump It, Hottie", which reached #2 on the US Hot Rap Singles Chart in 1990, and "We Rock the Mic Right". The album was produced by Redhead and Teddy Riley's little brother Markell Riley of the duo Wreckx-N-Effect and was heavily influenced by the new jack swing trend at the time. In 1991, the group released its second and final album, The Album with No Name. Recorded at Hillside Studios, Englewood, New Jersey, and Soundtracks Studios, New York, The Album with No Name peaked at 182 on the Billboard 200, while the song "3-2-1 Pump" reached #52 on the Billboard Hot 100. The group also appeared on a track of the soundtrack of the 1991 film New Jack City. That same year, Guppy made his acting debut in the film Strictly Business, which also starred Halle Berry. In 1992, Guppy co-wrote the song "Two Can Play That Game", which was recorded by Bobby Brown on his album, Bobby. In 1993, Redhead Kingpin returned with Gicci Brown, D.J. Wildstyle, and Knowledge to form a new group called Private Investigators. Private Investigators had a harder-edged hip hop sound, and released one album titled React Like Ya Knew on Virgin/EMI.[6] Guppy changed his name to Dawüd Nurrid-Diyn. In 2000, Redhead Kingpin produced a track on the Nutty Professor II: The Klumps soundtrack entitled "No (You Didn't Say)" by Kandice Love. In 2006, Redhead Kingpin was featured on the Nas single "Where Are They Now." Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.