Dawaun Parker
Dawaun Parker | |
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Birth name | Dawaun Parker |
Also known as | D.Parker, D-Park, The One & Only, MostArt |
Born |
Providence, Rhode Island, United States | May 9, 1984
Origin |
Boston, Massachusetts Los Angeles, California |
Genres | Hip hop |
Occupation(s) | Producer, Songwriter, Rapper |
Instruments | Keyboards, Drums, Guitar |
Labels | Aftermath, High Renaissance |
Associated acts | Dr. Dre, Busta Rhymes, Jay-Z, 50 Cent, Eminem |
Dawaun Parker (born May 9, 1984) is an American record producer and rapper. After graduating from Berklee College of Music in 2005, he became a producer for Dr. Dre’s record label Aftermath Entertainment.[1] He received his first formal credit on 50 Cent’s Get Rich or Die Tryin' soundtrack, and contributed to several songs on Busta Rhymes' number 1 album, The Big Bang, as well as Jay-Z's return record, Kingdom Come. Parker co-wrote the number 1 single, "Crack a Bottle", by Eminem, Dr. Dre and 50 Cent, and co-produced nearly every track on Relapse.
On October 20, 2010, Parker released his first single, Lost, co-produced by Dr. Dre[2] and featuring Phil Beaudreau. Since he left Aftermath sometime in 2014, he has been working on several projects, including production on Phil Beaudreau's album Ether.
Production
- Cory Gunz – Go Slow
- 50 Cent – Come & Go
- 50 Cent – feat. Nicole Scherzinger & Young Buck - Fire
- 50 Cent – I Get It In
- 50 Cent – Talk About Me
- 50 Cent – Death To My Enemies
- 50 Cent - feat. Eminem – Psycho
- 50 Cent – Straight to the Bank
- Bishop Lamont – No Stoppin' Carson
- Bishop Lamont – Grow Up
- Bobby Digital - Up Again
- Busta Rhymes – Get You Some
- Busta Rhymes – How We Do It Over Here
- Busta Rhymes feat. Nas – Don't Get Carried Away
- Busta Rhymes feat. Q-Tip – You Can't Hold The Torch
- Busta Rhymes - Legend Of The Fall Off's
- Busta Rhymes feat. Raekwon – Goldmine
- Busta Rhymes feat. Rick James – In The Ghetto
- Busta Rhymes feat. Stevie Wonder – Been Through The Storm
- Dawaun Parker - Lost (Co-Produced By Dr. Dre)
- Dawaun Parker - Schemin'
- Eminem feat. Dr. Dre and 50 Cent – Crack A Bottle
- Eminem - Hello
- Eminem - Medicine Ball
- Eminem - Same Song & Dance
- Eminem feat. Dr. Dre - Old Time's Sake
- Eminem - Must Be the Ganja
- Eminem - 3 A.M.
- Eminem - My Mom
- Eminem - Insane
- Eminem - Bagpipes From Baghdad
- Eminem - We Made You
- Eminem - Stay Wide Awake
- Eminem - Déjà Vu
- Eminem - Underground
- Eminem - Im Having A Relapse
- Eminem feat. Dr. Dre – Hell Breaks Loose
- Eminem - Taking My Ball
- Eminem - Music Box
- Eminem - Drop The Bomb On 'Em
- Eminem - So Bad
- G.A.G.E. feat. Raekwon & Jabar - Goin Leave You
- Game - Blood of Christ
- Game - Dead People
- The GodBody – Beef
- The GodBody – The Fly Butter (Holy Smokes)
- The GodBody - Just Another Day
- The GodBody - Fell Off
- Jay Z – 30 Something
- Jay-Z – Lost One
- Jay-Z – Trouble
- Jay-Z feat. Ne-Yo – Minority Report
- Joe Budden - Hate Me
- Kendrick Lamar - Black Boy Fly
- Raekwon - Catalina
- Raekwon - About Me
- Snoop Dogg - Round Here
- Snoop Dogg feat. Dr. Dre and D'Angelo – Imagine
- Snoop Dogg feat. Nate Dogg and - Boss' Life
- Stat Quo – Get Low
- T.I. - Why You Wanna
- Travis Barker feat. The Clipse & Kobe - City Of Dreams
- Travis Barker and Yelawolf - Director's Cut
- Young Buck – Hold On
- Young Buck – U Ain't Goin' Nowhere
Awards and nominations
Year | Award | Album | 2009 | Grammy Award Best Rap Album | Relapse | 2009 | Grammy Award Best Rap Performance By A Duo Or Group | Crack A Bottle | 2010 | Grammy Award Best Rap Album | Recovery |
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References
- ↑ "'Relapse' producer Dawaun Parker talks Eminem and album. - Rolling Stone". Rolling Stone. 28 May 2009. Retrieved 30 August 2015.
- ↑ "Pop & Hiss". Los Angeles Times music blog. 20 October 2010. Retrieved 30 August 2015.