"Why would you do that to a child?" he said in an emotional interview on rapper Talib Kweli's weekly podcast in late 2020. He was vocal about his commitment to Christianity, even expressing hopes of becoming a pastor.ĭMX suffered from addiction to drugs including crack, which he said a mentor tricked him into trying at age 14 by lacing a blunt, exposure that led to a life of torment. The record debuted at number one on Billboard's top album chart and boasted another hit single, "Ruff Ryders' Anthem," ushering in commercial success that would last for years.ĭefying his ferocious, testosterone-addled image, DMX also charmed with his goofier side, notably in an impromptu remix of the holiday classic "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" that went viral in 2012. He released his debut major-label single "Get At Me Dog" in 1998 with Def Jam, which came off his first studio album "It's Dark and Hell Is Hot." Humans are not really capable of unconditional love." "That's how dogs get down, unconditional love. "Your dog will die for you," he told the Los Angeles Times in 1999. "But to hear him rhyme live, I was like, 'This dude is really ill'."ĭMX's love of dogs was such that he integrated barks and growls into his teeth-baring brand of rap. I didn't know who this kid was," the producer Ski Beatz, who was in attendance, told the site HipHopDX. DMX, at the time, I had never really heard of DMX. In the mid-1990s, he famously battled with Brooklyn's up-and-coming star Jay-Z, who was then primarily an emcee, for hours in a smoky pool hall in the Bronx. It was late in that decade that he grew into the blazing, urgent style of performance that would become his calling card, emanating a singular presence at once hypermasculine and sincere.
The charismatic artist spent most of the 1990s making a name for himself in New York's underground scene, especially in rap battle rings. He began beatboxing in the mid-1980s, writing lyrics and peddling mixtapes. His message of triumph over struggle, his search for the light out of darkness, his pursuit of truth and grace brought us closer to our own humanity," said Def Jam Recordings, the label with which DMX released some of his most iconic albums, in a statement following his death. "DMX was a brilliant artist and an inspiration to millions around the world. Simmons was burdened with a reputation as a problem child, and shuffled in and out of homes for troubled boys for much of his youth.Īt 14, he began struggling with addiction and entered a cycle of incarceration, both of which would persist throughout his life.Įven after achieving international celebrity for his artistry, DMX continued to have run-ins with the penal system, with charges including drug possession, animal cruelty, reckless driving, failure to pay child support and tax evasion.īut while his criminal record made headlines, it was his blunt, confessional raps delivered in his powerful, gravelly voice that would cement the artist's legacy, leaving an indelible mark on hip-hop and gaining him legions of fans. Raised in the New York suburb of Yonkers, the artist endured a grim childhood, growing up in housing projects with his mother and siblings where he suffered abuse. He laid out his inner demons for the masses in gritty, hard-driving anthems, with a distinctive poetic vulnerability that gained him commercial and critical acclaim. The rapper - who reigned over the late 1990s and early 2000s with hits including "X Gon' Give It To Ya" and "Party Up" - was among hip-hop's darkest yet most endearing stars. "He loved his family with all of his heart and we cherish the times we spent with him," the statement read.