Christopher Chijioke [1] "Chi" Modu (c. 1967–2021) [2] was a Nigerian-born American photographer [3] known for his photos of various pioneering hip-hop music entertainers which "helped set the visual template for dozens of hip-hop stars." [2] Hypebeast, which interviewed him in 2017, [1] covered his 2021 death. [4]
His career as a documentarian [2] included producing photos for The Source magazine [5] in the 1990s, covering "the entirety of hip hop's golden age." [3] Those whose photo he took include Tupac Shakur, Mobb Deep, Eazy-E, The Notorious B.I.G. and many others. [2] Although much of his American life was based in New Jersey, [2] the majority of his photographs were taken in New York City. [5] Some of these images have been released for sale in the form of sweatshirts, hoodies and other garments. [6] One particularly troublesome of these arrangements was with a Swiss company that "along with" Modu was utilizing "an iconic photo" snapped by him years before. [7] [8]
His 2019 response to how would he like to be remembered was "as someone that can look at something and bring the truth out without injecting their point of view into it." [9]
Born in Arondizuogu, [10] Nigeria, Modu was a child-immigrant [11] raised in New Jersey. After graduating from the Lawrenceville School in Lawrenceville, NJ [11] he attended Rutgers University, [12] majoring in economics [4] (Baccalaureate 1989). [11] The careers of both his parents, who by then were no longer in the United States, were unrelated: statistics (his father) and accounting (his mother). [2]
The woman who would later become his wife bought him a camera as a birthday present, which Modu did not use initially as a professional photographer. This led to his taking formal training (at the International Center of Photography in New York). [13] [14] [15] It was in 1991, while employed by the Harlem-based [16] New York Amsterdam News , and looking for freelance work that he began his three-decade association with The Source magazine. [6]
He registered domain name ChiModu.com in 1999. [17]
Modu introduced his use of the word uncategorized in 2013 via "enlarged photographs .. splashed across the facades of buildings in New York." [13] Other locations included "Oslo, Lagos, Bangkok, Sao Paulo, Berlin, Barcelona and Dubai" and he described these [18] as "Like graffiti, but legal."
When The New York Times reported in 2020 that eight of his photos had months before been auctioned by Sotheby's, they described it as reaping "the benefits of his work from the 90s." [6] It was also noted that, for those who collect, buy or sell music albums, the covers of some of these were photographed by Modu. [6] One subject, looking back, was quoted as saying that "with Chi ... he cared." NPR called him gifted. [12] A 2019 [19] review of Tupac Shakur: Uncategorized, [20] a 2016-published "coffee table photobook" [21] containing some of Modu's work described its contents as "contemporary moments that later became historical." [19] Some images he recorded in 1994 were used in 2012 by Rolling Stone magazine. [16]
Modu had valued his 1990s work, and even partnered with a billboard company to display some of these. One such international project reached Finland. [2] Yet, although he "retained the rights to his photographs" [2] and was receiving $3,000 per year in licensing, [22] legal cases existed, including:
It was claimed in one of the estate-vs-estate cases that in 2018 Modu had tried to increase his $3,000 per year licensing fee, [27] but Modu's counterclaim, as stated in a legal filing, was that "the right of publicity has been abused." [24]
Modu's legacy provides encouragement to other hypenated-Americans: [28] his dual-success in photojournalism and documenting the birth and growth of hip-hop while staying "rooted and accessible to" those from whose midst he came. One family-oriented accomplishment is that, as a result of his activities, "Brooklyn-born Biggie, also known as Christopher Wallace" [8] met his then-future wife and subsequent widow, Faith Evans. [28]
His 1996 image of a hip-hop star "with the World Trade Center behind him" [13] photographed across a body of water [28] was noted for its iconic value [11] once the bay between them was the only one of these four still in existence. Regarding Modu's "I'm not from the hood, but they’re my people" a university Africana Studies co-director said that his works "provided a much-needed counternarrative" to the idea that "rappers were to be feared." [6] The Guardian quoted Modu in 2017, regarding how so many African-American performers [29] "live a very short life" that "it's about what you do with the time that you have." [30]
A legacy by Modu to intellectual property owners is the added caselaw by which they are entitled to license their holdings. [25] [31] Two attempts by Modu regarding protecting what he considered his were not successful. [32] [ better source needed ] He's done mentoring. [9]
His parents, Christopher and Clarice Modu, who brought their family to the United States due to war conditions in Biafra, returned to Nigeria over a decade later. Modu stayed in America and later married his wife, Sophia, who told The New York Times that cause of death was cancer. [2] [12] Modu had five siblings. [11] and two children. [2]
A resident of Jersey City, New Jersey, Modu died May 19, 2021, in Summit, New Jersey, at age 54. [2]
Tupac Amaru Shakur, also known by his stage name 2Pac and briefly Makaveli, was an American rapper. He is widely considered one of the most influential and successful rappers of all time. Shakur is among the best-selling music artists, having sold more than 75 million records worldwide. Much of Shakur's music has been noted for addressing contemporary social issues that plagued inner cities, and he is considered a symbol of activism against inequality.
Christopher George Latore Wallace, better known by his stage names the Notorious B.I.G., Biggie Smalls, or simply Biggie, was an American rapper. Rooted in East Coast hip hop and particularly gangsta rap, he is cited in various media lists as one of the greatest rappers of all time. Wallace became known for his distinctive laid-back lyrical delivery, offsetting the lyrics' often grim content. His music was often semi-autobiographical, telling of hardship and criminality, but also of debauchery and celebration.
Marion Hugh "Suge" Knight Jr. is an American former record executive, convicted felon, and the co-founder and former CEO of Death Row Records. Knight was a central figure in gangsta rap's commercial success in the 1990s. This feat is attributed to the record label's first two album releases: Dr. Dre's The Chronic in 1992 and Snoop Dogg's Doggystyle in 1993.
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The East Coast–West Coast hip hop rivalry was a dispute between artists and fans of the East Coast hip hop and West Coast hip hop scenes in the United States, especially from the mid-1990s. Focal points of the feud were East Coast–based rapper The Notorious B.I.G. with Puff Daddy and their New York City–based label, Bad Boy Records, and West Coast–based rapper Tupac Shakur with Suge Knight and their Los Angeles–based label, Death Row Records. The feud culminated in the murders of both rappers in drive-by shootings. Although several suspects have been identified, both murders remain unsolved.
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Randy Walker, better known by his stage name Stretch, was an American rapper and record producer, working in Live Squad. In the early 1990s, he joined 2Pac's rap group Thug Life. The November 30, 1994, shooting of Shakur led to their split. On November 30, 1995, Walker was shot and killed at the age of 27.
"Who Shot Ya?" is a song by Brooklyn, New York, rapper the Notorious B.I.G., also called Biggie Smalls, backed by Sean Combs as the "hype man". Puffy's emerging record label, Bad Boy Entertainment, released it on February 21, 1995, on an alternate reissue of Biggie's single "Big Poppa/Warning," out since December 5, 1994. While this 1994 release climbed the Billboard Hot 100, its new B side "Who Shot Ya"—now Biggie's "most infamous classic," with an instrumental now iconic—revised some vocals of a "Who Shot Ya" track, rapped by Biggie and Keith Murray, already issued on a mixtape from a Harlem DJ earlier in 1995. Recalled as "menacing magic" that helps "define New York rap," "Who Shot Ya" was "controversial and hugely influential." Widely interpreted as a taunt at 2Pac, the single provoked a "rap battle" between the two rappers, formerly friends.
The Killing of Tupac Shakur is a biographical, true crime account by American journalist and author Cathy Scott of the 1996 murder of rapper Tupac Shakur. The book made news upon its September 1997 release, on the first anniversary of Shakur's death, because of an autopsy photo included in its pages. It was the first book to be released covering the rapper's death. The book was reprinted in the UK by Plexus Publishing and in Poland by Kagra. Coverage of the autopsy photo, taken of Shakur's body on a gurney in the coroner's examining room, catapulted the book onto the Los Angeles Times bestseller list. New editions of the book were released in 2002 and 2014.
The Murder of Biggie Smalls is a non-fiction true crime book by author and journalist Cathy Scott. Published in October 2000 by St. Martin's Press, it covers the March 9, 1997 murder of the Notorious B.I.G. in a drive-by shooting. A second updated edition of the book was released in September 2021.
Charles Alan Philips is an American writer and journalist. He is best known for his investigative reporting in the Los Angeles Times on the culture, corruption, and crime in the music industry during the 1990s and 2000s, which garnered both awards and controversy. In 1999, Philips won a Pulitzer Prize, with Michael A. Hiltzik, for their co-authored series exposing corruption in the entertainment industry.
Tupac Shakur, an American rapper, was fatally shot on September 7, 1996, in a drive-by shooting in Las Vegas, Nevada. He was 25 years old. The shooting occurred at 11:15 p.m. (PDT), when the car carrying Shakur was stopped at a red light at East Flamingo Road and Koval Lane.
Christopher Wallace, an American rapper known professionally as the Notorious B.I.G., was murdered in a drive-by shooting in the early hours of March 9, 1997, in Los Angeles, California. He was 24 years old.
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All Eyez on Me is a 2017 American biographical drama film directed by Benny Boom and written by Jeremy Haft, Eddie Gonzalez, and Steven Bagatourian. Titled after the 1996 studio album, as well as the song of the same name, it is based on the life and death of the titular African-American rapper Tupac Shakur. The film stars Demetrius Shipp Jr. as Shakur, with Kat Graham, Lauren Cohan, Hill Harper, and Danai Gurira. Jamal Woolard reprises his role as Christopher "Biggie Smalls" Wallace / The Notorious B.I.G. from Notorious (2009).
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Contact High: A Visual History of Hip-Hop is a 2018 photography book created and written by Vikki Tobak and ongoing exhibition series. The volume features contact prints from analog photography sessions of hip hop artists during roughly forty-years, from the beginnings of the genre in the late 1970s until the late 2000s.
Barron Claiborne is an American photographer and cinematographer who grew up in Boston, Massachusetts. He began taking photographs at the age of ten. After moving to New York in 1989 he began assisting established photographers such as; Richard Avedon, Irving Penn, Saint Claire Born, and Richard Numeroff. His photographic mentor, was Gordon Parks.
studied photojournalism at the International Center of Photography in New York.
certificate in photojournalism .. 1992
claiming it violates their rights to publicity.
Nigerian-American
greats for photos .. Chi Modu