
Lil Jojo continued to taunt 300 by making multiple diss tracks aimed at 300 members such as "I Got Dat Sack" dissing Chief Keef, Lil Reese, and Lil Durk and then "Tied Up" with a Chief Keef look-alike tied up to a chair in the music video. Rico, and more started claiming that they were BDK. Lil JoJo even said in the track "Durk say fuck Bricksquad so I can't wait to catch him, Squeeze this fuckin. After Bricksquad members " Lil Jojo" and "Swagg Dinero" both heard this line on the radio with JoJo saying, "He talking about fuck us on the radio?", "You heard that bro? Hell naw we gonna go crazy that's it".Īlmost a month later on April 27, Lil JoJo dropped a track responding to L's Anthem that would change the city titled "3hunnaK (BDK)" 3hunnaK meaning killing members from 300 and BDK with killing Black Disciple members in general. In the track, Lil Durk would even diss rivals such as Bricksquad and Wuga World saying, "Bricksquad I say fuck em, Wuga World with em so fuck em". On March 28, 2012, Lil Durk dropped a track that would bring him mainstream titled, "L's Anthem". In a 2012 interview a clip of Chief Keef being asked his age and responding with "300" became a meme where fans started saying they were 300 years old as a joke. The original video for "I don't like" was rumored to have 400 million views but was taken down. 2 months later, Chief Keef drops "I don't like" which went mainstream and even got a remix from Kanye West. Sets that make up 300 are Lamron, Taytown, and P-Street.Īfter Chief Keef drops his track "3hunna" on Janubeing only 16 years old, both the track and Chief Keef gained popularity due to his age having this much talent gaining 20 million views as of 2021. 300 is cliqued up with Doggpound, Dipset, Front$treet, and O'Block. Lamron was the first set to start claiming 300 with Lamron being located on Normal Avenue, which is why Lamron is spelled Normal backwards.
#Chief keef 3hunna shirt license#
User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License additional terms may apply.300 (3hunna, Lamron, Taytown, P-Street, OTF) is a Black Disciple street gang (or alliance) popularized by famous drill artists from the gang such as " Chief Keef", "Lil Reese", and "Lil Durk shouting out 300 in their songs. Critics have cited Chief Keef as a major influence on contemporary hip hop through his impact on artists such as Lil Uzi Vert, 21 Savage, and various collaborations. In the following years, Keef has served up a continuous stream of releases, such as Back From the Dead 2 (2014), Bang 3 (2015), and Thot Breaker (2017). On July 7, 2012, it was announced that Chief Keef would be performing at the 2012 Lollapalooza music festival. It also caught fellow Chicago rapper Kanye West’s attention, and West organized a remix of the song along with rappers Pusha T, Jadakiss and Big Sean. After two locally successful mixtapes, “I Don’t Like” became a local hit in Chicago. The attention he received grew in the short time between the release of several mixtapes and several of music videos, including “Bang”, “3Hunna” and “I Don’t Like”. While under house arrest, Cozart posted several videos to his YouTube account. In December 2011, he was arrested on a weapons charge (aggravated unlawful use of a weapon) and put under house arrest at his grandmother’s home. Keef’s debut album Finally Rich was released in December 2012.Ĭozart attended Dulles Elementary School and later Banner High School on Chicago’s South Side, which is where he got his career start. He released his debut mixtape The Glory Road on Jfollowed by Bang in October that year. Keef is also the CEO of his own label imprint Glory Boyz Entertainment, later renamed to Glo Gang. Known as one of the central pioneers and propagators of the prominent Chicago drill style, he was 16 upon signing a multi-million dollar record contract with Interscope Records. Keith Farrelle Cozart (born August 15, 1995), better known by his stage name Chief Keef, is an American rapper and producer from Chicago, Illinois.
