Red Spyda
Andy "Red Spyda" Thelusma is an American hip hop producer who has worked on many songs for artists including 50 Cent, D-Block, Mobb Deep, Amerie,[1] D12, and G-Unit. Other notable works by Red Spyda have included his contributions to the in-game soundtrack of Grand Theft Auto III. He produced background music for the game's fictional radio station Game FM (the name is derived from Game Recordings; several of the hip-hop label's artists such as Royce da 5'9" appeared on the radio station). He also has production credits in the game for two freestyles and previously released songs featured in the game under his less commonly used alias, Rush.
Red Spyda | |
---|---|
Birth name | Andy Thelusma |
Also known as | Rush |
Born | December 5, 1975 |
Origin | Miami, Florida, United States |
Genres | R&B, hip hop |
Occupation(s) | Producer, musician, rapper, singer |
Years active | 1998–present |
Labels | Red Beam Entertainment |
Associated acts | 50 Cent, G-Unit |
Website | myspace |
Production credits
Year | Artist | Single | Album |
---|---|---|---|
1996 | Whodini feat. Lord Tariq and Peter Gunz | "Can't Get Enough" | Six |
Whodini feat. Trina Broussard | "If You Want It" | ||
Whodini | "Still Want More" | ||
1998 | Lord Tariq and Peter Gunz | "A Night in the Bronx With Lord and Gunz" | Make It Reign |
2000 | Trina feat. Pamela Long | "Take Me" | Da Baddest Bitch |
50 Cent feat. Bun B | "As the World Turns" | Power of the Dollar | |
2001 | Layzie Bone | "Thug by Nature" | Thug by Nature |
2002 | 50 Cent | "U Not Like Me" | Guess Who's Back? |
Cage | "(Down) The Left Hand Path" | Movies for the Blind | |
Trick Daddy | "Ain't No Santa" | Thug Holiday | |
Obie Trice | "Adrenaline Rush" | 8 Mile (soundtrack) | |
Royce da 5'9" | "Rock City" | Rock City | |
Royce da 5'9" feat. Pretty Ugly | "Spit Game" | Grand Theft Auto III | |
2003 | Tre Little | "Let's Go" | Midnight Club II |
50 Cent feat. Lloyd Banks & Tony Yayo | "True Loyalty" | The New Breed | |
The Notorious B.I.G. feat. 50 Cent | "Realest Niggas" | Bad Boys II (soundtrack) | |
2Pac feat. 50 Cent | "Realest Killas"[2] | Tupac: Resurrection (soundtrack) | |
G-Unit feat. Joe | "I Wanna Get To Know You" | Beg For Mercy | |
2004 | Twista | "Sunshine" | Kamikaze |
D12 | "Leave Dat Boy Alone" | D12 World | |
Lil Flip | "Check (Let's Ride)" | U Gotta Feel Me | |
Lil Flip feat. Grafh, Gravy & Will-Lean | "Where I'm From" | ||
8Ball & MJG | "Memphis City Blues" | Living Legends | |
Jadakiss feat. Styles P | "Kiss of Death" | Kiss of Death | |
Mobb Deep | "Real Niggaz" | Amerikaz Nightmare | |
Young Buck feat. David Banner & Lil' Flip | "Welcome to the South" | Straight Outta Ca$hville | |
Guerilla Black | "Guerilla City" | Guerilla City | |
I-20 feat. Butch Cassidy | "OG Anthem" | Self Explanatory | |
Jacki-O | "Sugar Walls" | Poe Little Rich Girl | |
2Pac feat. Sleepy Brown & EDI | "Hennessy" (Red Spyda Remix)[3] | Loyal to the Game | |
2005 | Amerie | "Falling" | Touch |
Sheek Louch | "Maybe If I Sing" | After Taxes | |
Sheek Louch feat. Styles P | "Kiss Your Ass Goodbye" | ||
Sheek Louch feat. Fabolous, Beanie Sigel & T.I. | "Kiss Your Ass Goodbye" (Remix) | ||
Lil' Kim | "Spell Check" | The Naked Truth | |
Eazy-E & The Game | "Still Cruisin'" | N.W.A. Vol. 1 (Unreleased) | |
2007 | Lumidee feat. Snoop Dogg | "In It for the Money" | Unexpected |
Ky-Mani Marley | "Breakdown" | Radio | |
2008 | Sheek Louch | "Good Love" | Silverback Gorilla |
"2 Turntables & a Mic" | |||
2009 | Slaughterhouse | "Wack MCs" | Slaughterhouse – The Mixtape |
Bobby Ray | "Fly Like Me" | B.o.B Vs. Bobby Ray (Mixtape) | |
2010 | Sheek Louch feat. Fabolous | "Make Some Noise" | Donnie G: Don Gorilla |
2011 | Saigon feat. Devin The Dude | "What The Lovers Do" | The Greatest Story Never Told |
2012 | Ghostface Killah & Sheek Louch feat. Jadakiss | "Stick Up Kids" | Wu Block |
References
- Mitchell, Gail (May 7, 2005). "Amerie reaches with 'Touch'". Billboard. pp. 41–42. Retrieved November 25, 2010.
- Caramanica, Jon (November 2003). "Kick it a cappella". Vibe. pp. 55–56. Retrieved November 25, 2010.
- Strong, Martin Charles (2006). The Essential Rock Discography. Open City Books. p. 1128. ISBN 978-1-84195-860-6. Retrieved November 25, 2010.
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