Concert in your area for Folk & Blues, Hip-Hop, Electronic, and Pop.
Find out more about Hip-Hop, Electronic, and Pop.
Born on 9 November 1984 in Rabat, Morocco he immigrated with his family to the United States at the age of 13. Settling into the Bronx in New York, and helped to support his family. In 2002 he teamed up with his friend Cokeboy Los to make a mixtape “Cocaine City” which he used to showcase his talent in the underground hip hop world. Continuing to build a large following, Montana signed a deal with Akon’s Konvict Muzik record label in 2009, but shortly left due to delays in making an album happen by 2011.
Later that year he was able to sign a deal with P. Diddy’s label, Bad Boy Records and consequently was able to make and release his album “Excuse My French” by May 2013, but not before releasing his mixtape “Mac & Cheese 3” in 2012. The “Excuse My French” record featured a collaboration with Nicki Minaj, and sold over 50,000 copies.
In 2014 Montana made the announcement that his upcoming album “Mac And Cheese 4” would be a mixtape/studio album done through his own label/ group, Cocaine City Records. The album is slated to also include collaborations with Chinx Drugz, Flip, Cheeze and Lil Durk.
French Montana - born Karim Kharbouch - was born in Rabat, Morocco, but just in case you’re thinking that might mean that he’s a different breed of rapper to the lavish-living materialists that have dominated the scene for the past decade or so, it’s probably worth pointing out that he has his own record label, and it’s called Cocaine City Records. Indeed, Montana was raised in South Bronx, New York from the age of thirteen, and there became ingratiated into a society that was ripe for hip hop; taking all his cues from the legendary East Coast likes of Nas, The Notorious B.I.G. and Wu-Tang Clan, Montana began to produce mixtapes in 2002, a series that would eventually see him sign with Rick Ross’ Maybach Music Group and P. Diddy’s Bad Boy Records in a joint venture deal. Since then, he’s enjoyed commercial success, with his debut album, Excuse My French, going in at number four on the U.S. charts last year. It was, however, widely savaged by critics, who saw Montana’s aggressive, repetitive sound and shallow lyricism to be counter-productive in the current hip hop scene. That hasn’t stopped him from packing out rooms when he goes on tour, though, with a three-date UK tour sparking chaotic scenes in London, Manchester and Birmingham last year; if nothing else, Montana is a born performer.