Before long, Boosie himself reached out and signed Bleu to his Columbia Records-supported imprint, Badazz Music Syndicate. Inspired equally by Luther Vandross and Boosie Badazz, Bleu’s first mixtape, Hello World (2012), properly introduced his style of half-sung Southern gangsta rap. While working at a pipe mill in his native Mobile as a teen, he’d use his $600 paychecks to buy blank CDs so he could share his early songs, which he’d record into his cell phone. Bleu (born Jeremy Biddle in 1994) is an open book, and he’s been hustling to share his story since he started making music at age 11. Hard work and persistence are the foundation of a sound that pairs emotion-stoking melodic beats with heart-on-sleeve vocals and lyrics that talk as plainly about street struggles as the complexities of love. If Yung Bleu sounds appreciative to be one of the rare Alabama rappers who’s made it, that’s probably because he is.
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