The cheers grew louder as it all kept hitting. Then the industry that scooped him up dropped him as soon as his brand of lyrically-driven gangster rap failed to adapt to the changing pop-rap landscape – or proved to not fit within it.īetting on himself, Gibbs rolled the dice on a string of self-released mixtapes. By the time he got his first major label deal from Interscope in the middle of the 00s, he’d already survived the streets of Gary, left his football scholarship at Ball State, and endured a mandated military boot camp. Will Hagle knows that Hot Girl Summer may be over, but he’s looking forward to the start of ugly grown man who cares too much about college football season.īefore he ever made it to the table, Freddie Gibbs’s story had more ups and downs than a game of craps. Support real, independent music journalism by subscribing to Passion of the Weiss on Patreon.
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