Marvin “Young MC” Young (1967- )

December 18, 2013 
/ Contributed By: Daudi Abe

Young MC at the 1990 Grammys||Young MC

Young MC at the 1990 Grammys

Photo by Alan Light (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Young MC, rapper, songwriter, producer, and actor was born Marvin Young to Cleveland and Lucille Young on May 10, 1967, in London, England. His parents were both Jamaican immigrants; Cleveland worked for a telephone company, and Lucille was a nurse. The family came to the United States in 1970 and settled near Hollis, Queens, in New York City, New York. Young began honing his rap skills at age 10, and after graduating from Hunter College High School on Manhattanโ€™s Upper East Side, Young moved to Los Angeles in 1984 to attend the University of Southern California.

Young was signed by a fledgling rap label, Delicious Vinyl Records, in 1987 while still completing his Bachelorโ€™s degree in Economics at USC. He began his career by co-writing the smash hits โ€œWild Thingโ€ (1988) and โ€œFunky Cold Medinaโ€ (1989) for his label mate, Tone-Loc. โ€œWild Thingโ€ reached number two on the Billboard chart and sold over four million copies. The follow-up, โ€œFunky Cold Medina,โ€ peaked at number three on the Billboard chart and sold over two million copies.

Young made his debut on Delicious Vinyl as an artist with the album Stone Cold Rhyminโ€™ (1989). The first single, โ€œBust A Move,โ€ sold over a million copies and reached number seven on the Billboard chart. The follow-up single โ€œPrincipalโ€™s Officeโ€ (1989) reached number 33 on the Billboard chart. The success of these singles Cold Rhyminโ€™ to number nine on the Billboard album chart with over a million in sales.

In 1990, Young MC won the American Music Award for Best Rap Artist, the Billboard Award for Best New Pop Artist, and the Grammy Award for Best Solo Rap Performance for โ€œBust A Move.โ€

In the long shadow cast by gangsta rap on the West Coast during the late 1980s and early 1990s, Young MC stood out with family-friendly subject matter, rhymes, and overall style. Following the success of Stone Cold Rhyminโ€™, Young left Delicious Vinyl and signed with Capitol Records. He released his second album, Brainstorm, on the Capitol label in 1991. The album had disappointing sales and reached only number 66 on the Billboard chart.

Despite the modest success of Brainstorm, Young MC continued to produce albums, including Whatโ€™s the Flavor? (1993), Return of the 1 Hit Wonder (1997), Ainโ€™t Goinโ€™ Out Like That (2000), Engage the Enzyme (2002), Adrenaline Flow (2007), and Relentless (2009). In addition, he produces music for commercials and television shows.

Young has also appeared in several reality television shows, as well as films such as The Zero Sum (2005) and Up In the Air (2009) with George Clooney. The song โ€œBust A Moveโ€ has been featured in numerous movies, television shows, and commercials.

About the Author

Author Profile
Abe Daudi Contributor to BlackPast.org

Daudi Abe is a professor, writer, and historian who has delivered curriculum covering topics such as culture, race, gender, education, hip-hop, and sports spanning four decades. He has taught all levels from kindergarten to graduate school, serving the last twenty years as an instructor and course developer at Seattle Central College.

Dr. Abe is Faculty Coordinator for the Academy for Rising Educators at SCC as well as History of Race & Policing curriculum consultant at the Washington State Criminal Justice Training Commission. His latest book, Emerald Street: A History of Hip-Hop in Seattle, was published in 2020 by University of Washington Press.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Abe, D. (2013, December 18). Marvin “Young MC” Young (1967- ). BlackPast.org. https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/young-mc-young-marvin-1967/

Source of the Author's Information:

Daudi
Abe, 6 รขย€ย˜N the Morning: West Coast Hip-Hop Music 1987-1992 & the Transformation of Mainstream Culture, (Los Angeles: Over The Edge Books,
2013); http://www.youngmc.com/about.html

Further Reading