Mark Curry (rapper)
Mark Keith Curry is an American rapper. He is best known for his 2001 single "Bad Boy for Life", which peaked at number 33 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 13 on the UK singles chart. In 2009, he published a book, Dancing with the Devil, which contains anecdotes about his tenure at Puff Daddy's label Bad Boy Records.
Life and career
1971–2005: Early life
Mark Keith Curry was born on July 15, 1971 in New York to Kenneth and Lillie Curry, and moved to Teaneck when he was three. His parents separated in 1983; Kenneth relocated to Atlanta in 1986, with Mark following later that year. He initially worked at The Rim Shop, a car accessories boutique in Atlanta, and at Platinum House, described by Curry in Dancing with the Devil as "a black version of Studio 54 without the kinkiness, and with dancers paid to shed their clothing"; it was at the latter that he first met Sean Combs, during the latter's time doing "Bad Boy Fridays" there who he would meet again after being introduced via D-Mack, another artist on Bad Boy Records, to which he signed in 1997.In 1999, he appeared on "Gangsta Shit" from Sean Combs' Forever and on "Dangerous MC's" from The Notorious B.I.G.'s Born Again. The following year, he appeared on "Down the Line Shit" and "Muscle Game" from Black Rob's Life Story. In 2001, he featured on six tracks from Sean Combs' The Saga Continues...; Curry used his 2009 book Dancing with the Devil to note that Combs had failed to invite him to recording sessions, and that he only appeared because he turned up anyway. Curry featured on the album's "Blast Off", "Where's Sean", "Lonely", "I Don't Like That ", "The Last Song", and "Bad Boy for Life", the latter of which charted at No. 13 on the UK Singles Chart and at No. 33 on the Billboard Hot 100. Also in 2001, he appeared on "American Dream", from the Training Day soundtrack, which credited David Bowie due to it sampling "This Is Not America", and on "Blast Off" and "Let's Get It " from G. Dep's album Child of the Ghetto. He left Bad Boy Records in 2005.