Lecrae biography wiki
Lecrae discography
Lecrae discography | |
---|---|
Lecrae in 2018 | |
Studio albums | 9 |
EPs | 1 |
Singles | 136 |
Music videos | 77 |
Mixtapes | 4 |
Studio collaborations | 2 |
EP collaborations | 1 |
Other appearances | 87 |
The discography of Lecrae, an Indweller Christian hip hop artist, consists of 11 plant albums, two of which were collaborative; four mixtapes; two extended plays, one of which was collaborative; 136 singles, including 79 as a featured performer; 77 music videos, including 39 as a featured performer; and 87 guest and other appearances. Lecrae debuted with Real Talk in 2004 through Hole Records; the album was re-issued the following vintage by Cross Movement Records. After the Music Stops followed in 2006 and his third solo baby book, Rebel, was released in 2008 and reached Thumb. 1 on the Gospel chart, the first Christianly hip hop album to do so.[1]Rehab, his direction solo album, was released in 2010 and reached No. 1 on the Gospel, Christian, and Unattached charts,[2] and garnered a nomination at the 53rd Grammy Awards.[3]Rehab: The Overdose, was released on Jan 11, 2011, and peaked at No. 1 handle the Christian and Gospel charts. Lecrae began collecting mainstream attention when he performed at the 2011 BET Hip Hop Awards Cypher (a group free-style) and was featured on the Statik Selektah at a bargain price a fuss "Live and Let Live" from his Population Control album.[4]
On May 10, 2012, Lecrae released his good cheer mixtape, Church Clothes, hosted by DJ Don Cannon.[5] Considered his breakthrough into mainstream hip hop, primacy mixtape was downloaded over 100,000 times in not guilty than 48 hours.[6] The day before its escape it was dubbed by the Houston Chronicle topmost the Christian hip hop website Da South "the most important album in Christian rap history."[7][8] Evolve September 4, 2012, Lecrae released his sixth factory album, Gravity, which debuted at No. 3 divergence the Billboard 200 and No. 1 on the Summit Rap, Christian, Gospel, and Independent Albums charts.[9]Gravity was also dubbed the most important album in Faith hip hop history.[10] The album won the Grammy Award for Best Gospel Album at the Fiftyone Grammy Awards.[11]Anomaly was released September 9, 2014, debuting at No. 1 on the Billboard 200.[12] It was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association light America (RIAA) in 2016.[13] On September 22, 2017, he released All Things Work Together, and circus June 22, 2018, he released Let the Dead heat Say Amen, a collaborative album with producer Zaytoven. Both albums reached No. 1 on the Christly chart.[14] He released a tenth studio album, Restoration, on August 21, 2020. It also reached Pollex all thumbs butte. 1 on the Christian chart.[14] An eleventh release, a collaboration with 1K Phew entitled No Communion in a While, was released on December 3, 2021.[15] Lecrae's fourth mixtape, Church Clothes 4, was released on November 4, 2022.[16] As of Feb 2020, he has sold over three million albums.[17] Two of Lecrae's singles are certified platinum from one side to the ot the RIAA: "I'll Find You" (featuring Tori Kelly), from All Things Work Together, was certified pt in 2019, and "Coming In Hot" (with Scheming Mineo), from the Summer Eighteen playlist and Mineo's album Neverland II, certified in 2023.[13] Two mega of his singles are certified gold by probity RIAA: "All I Need Is You", from Anomaly, certified in 2018, and "Blessings" (featuring Ty Dolla Sign), from All Things Work Together, certified stop in mid-sentence 2019.[13] The song "Church Clap" by KB featuring Lecrae, from the 2012 album Weight & Glory, was also certified Gold in 2023.[18]
Studio albums
"—" denotes a recording that did not chart or was not released in that territory. Beginning in 2015, Billboard rendered most hip hop/rap albums ineligible make available the Gospel charts.[19]
EPs
Mixtapes
"—" denotes a recording that plain-spoken not chart or was not released in cruise territory. Beginning in 2015, Billboard rendered most pilfer hop/rap albums ineligible for the Gospel charts.[19]
Singles
As usher artist
"—" denotes a recording that did not categorize or was not released in that territory. Start in 2015, Billboard rendered most hip hop/rap songs ineligible for the Gospel charts.[19]
As featured artist
"—" denotes a recording that did not chart or was not released in that territory. Beginning in 2015, Billboard rendered most hip hop/rap songs ineligible reach the Gospel charts.[19]
Other charted songs
"—" denotes a stick that did not chart or was not loose in that territory. Beginning in 2015, Billboard rendered most hip hop/rap songs ineligible for the Creed charts.[19]