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Arriving on the heels of big sister <a href="spotify:artist:05oH07COxkXKIMt6mIPRee">Brandy</a>, R&B vocalist and songwriter Ray J parlayed his success on television into a music career at the age of 14. With his smooth vocals and youthful take on R&B, he issued debut Everything You Want in 1997. As he grew, his production and lyrics also matured, following a stylistic trajectory similar to <a href="spotify:artist:23zg3TcAtWQy7J6upgbUnj">Usher</a>. In 2008, he hit a chart peak with fourth effort, All I Feel, which topped the Billboard Independent and R&B charts. After an extended decade-long hiatus, he returned with 2019's Raydemption.

Born William Ray Norwood, Jr. in McComb, Mississippi, he moved with his family to Carson, California when he was a toddler, landing him in the center of the entertainment industry. He started auditioning for commercials at age eight and had scored several gigs when he caught the eye of comedian <a href="spotify:artist:07AlCpoP1gGdhs1eQ9k17z">Sinbad</a>, who was casting children for The Sinbad Show. Ray J got the role of <a href="spotify:artist:07AlCpoP1gGdhs1eQ9k17z">Sinbad</a>'s foster son, but the show was canceled in 1993. From there, Ray J began acting in movies and appeared in the films Steel and Mars Attacks! with minor roles.

At the same time, he was also itching to try his hand in the music industry, inspired by <a href="spotify:artist:05oH07COxkXKIMt6mIPRee">Brandy</a>'s early success. He signed with <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Elektra%22">Elektra</a> in 1995, recording Everything You Want the following year with a set of superstar songwriters and producers behind him. In 1997, he performed in a television special with his sister, but despite the mainstream attention, he was dropped by <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Elektra%22">Elektra</a> soon afterward. His easygoing image and boyish looks appealed to the producers of <a href="spotify:artist:05oH07COxkXKIMt6mIPRee">Brandy</a>'s television show, Moesha, scoring him a role on the popular UPN series starting in 1999. He also started producing and put together the music for several commercials and demos for his second album.

When he stepped back into the studio he called on <a href="spotify:artist:0KuF7reCTOZwV7YJnHQqgr">the Neptunes</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:4Q9g9l3NqzvllaYFTmSYYv">Rodney Jerkins</a>, Brycyn "Juvie" Evans, and several other hitmaking producers to help him compile This Ain't a Game (2001), a pop-oriented album. The album dropped in 2001, but despite a strong promotional push from new label <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Atlantic%22">Atlantic</a>, it wasn't the breakthrough success it was designed to be. It would be four years before he returned to music, but despite the lengthy absence, his high profile still commanded an all-star guest list. With help from <a href="spotify:artist:5Y5TRrQiqgUO4S36tzjIRZ">Timbaland</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:2mxe0TnaNL039ysAj51xPQ">R. Kelly</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:6lHL3ubAMgSasKjNqKb8HF">Mya</a>, and <a href="spotify:artist:3ScY9CQxNLQei8Umvpx5g6">Fat Joe</a>, Ray J resurfaced with Raydiation (2005), released on <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Sanctuary%22">Sanctuary</a>. He changed labels again for All I Feel (2008), issued through <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Koch%22">Koch</a>. The album was a success thanks in no small part to the double-platinum single "Sexy Can I," topping the U.S. indie and R&B charts and rising into the Billboard top ten.

In the decade that followed, Ray J was known more for tabloid headlines and reality television. The singer landed his own dating series on VH1 titled For the Love of Ray J, which spawned a soundtrack album that same year (2009). A second VH1 series, Brandy & Ray J: A Family Business, lasted two seasons, and he went on to host Oxygen's Bad Girls All-Star Battle. He made moves toward a fifth proper solo album, including the pointed "I Hit It First" -- which peaked at number 11 on Billboard's R&B/Hip-Hop chart in 2013 -- and 2015's "Brown Sugar," which featured <a href="spotify:artist:55Aa2cqylxrFIXC767Z865">Lil Wayne</a>. However, that long-dormant album would not arrive until 2019, over a decade after All I Feel. After releasing a stream of singles in the late 2010s, his comeback efforts were ramped up with the release of "Rich N Whippin" with Soulja Boy and "Hallelujah" with cousin <a href="spotify:artist:7hJcb9fa4alzcOq3EaNPoG">Snoop Dogg</a>, which was featured on his visual project Raydemption. ~ Bradley Torreano, Rovi

Monthly Listeners

2.0 million

Followers

714,151

Total Streams

614.6 million

Top Cities

38,619 listeners
37,703 listeners
40,946 listeners
25,645 listeners
23,830 listeners

Popular Tracks

287 tracks
1
Sexy Can I

Sexy Can I

Jan 8, 2008

201.1 million

streams

2
One Wish

One Wish

Sep 5, 2005

189.6 million

streams

3
Tie Me Down (feat. Ray J)

Tie Me Down (feat. Ray J)

Aug 31, 2009

44.3 million

streams

4
Tie Me Down [feat. Ray J] - Squeaky Clean Version

Tie Me Down [feat. Ray J] - Squeaky Clean Version

Aug 31, 2009

44.3 million

streams

5
I Hit It First

I Hit It First

Apr 9, 2013

18.6 million

streams

6
Another Day in Paradise - R&B-Version

Another Day in Paradise - R&B-Version

Mar 5, 2002

13.6 million

streams

7
143

143

Jan 1, 2010

9.8 million

streams

8
Brown Sugar (feat. Lil Wayne)

Brown Sugar (feat. Lil Wayne)

May 19, 2015

8.6 million

streams

9
What I Need

What I Need

Sep 5, 2005

7.3 million

streams

10
Wait a Minute (feat. Lil' Kim)

Wait a Minute (feat. Lil' Kim)

Jun 19, 2001

5.3 million

streams