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"Big Pimpin'" is a song by American rapper Jay-Z. It was released on April 11, 2000 as the third and final single from his fourth studio album Vol. 3... Life and Times of S. Carter (1999). It features a guest appearance from Southern hip hop duo UGK and production from Timbaland.
The Big Issue in Jay-Z's 'Big Pimpin' Lawsuit. Jay Z and Timbaland have claimed victory in one of the longest active lawsuits in the U.S.On Wednesday, a judge dismissed the copyright-infringement ...
UGK (short for Underground Kingz) was an American rap duo from Port Arthur, Texas, formed in 1987, by Mitchell “Big Mitch” Queen who would eventually leave the group to pursue a football career [1] and Chad "Pimp C" Butler with Bernard “Bun B” Freeman replacing Big Mitch who would still make guest appearances on UGK songs.
One Gud Cide feat. UGK: Contradictions "Big Pimpin'" Jay-Z feat. UGK: Vol. 3… Life and Times of S. Carter "Who's Snitching" Lil' O feat. UGK: Blood Money: 2000 "Murder Man Dance" Spice 1 feat. UGK: The Last Dance "Tough Guy" Outkast feat. UGK: Shaft "Stick 'Em Up" Ludacris feat. UGK: Back for the First Time "Sippin' On Some Syrup" Three 6 ...
"Big Chips" with R. Kelly (Unfinished Business, 2004) "Big Pimpin'" Featuring UGK (Vol. 3... Life and Times of S. Carter, 1999) "Big Pimpin'" Featuring Jaguar Wright (Jay-Z: Unplugged, 2001) "Big Pimpin'/Papercut" with Linkin Park (Collision Course, 2004) "Bitches & Sisters" (The Blueprint 2: The Gift & The Curse, 2002) "BK Anthem" Featuring MC ...
Before Black Panther, Bad Boys II, or 8 Mile released original soundtracks of classic hip-hop, there was Above the Rim. The influential basketball film, released in March 1994 and starring the ...
On August 7, 2007, UGK reunited to release their eponymous fifth studio album, debuting at #1 on both the Billboard 200 and Hot R&B/Hip-Hop charts. The album was the last UGK album released during Pimp C's lifetime, and spawned the hit single "International Players Anthem (I Choose You)", and received universal acclaim from critics.
Memphis Bleek later recorded verses for the song, and it was released as the second single from Bleek's The Understanding. In the alternate version the chorus is changed from "Cause that's Jay and them..." to "Cause that's Bleek and them...". The song is also noted to be Bleek's last song to chart officially on Billboard Hot 100.