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Born Joseph Wayne McVey, Z-Ro -- who moved from his birthplace of Houston to nearby Missouri City as a youngster -- grew up with equal parts inspiration from hardcore rappers like <a href="spotify:artist:3f5fB1YUbkUnW7cf7I0R48">the Geto Boys</a> and <a href="spotify:artist:1ZwdS5xdxEREPySFridCfh">2Pac</a> and soulful crooners like <a href="spotify:artist:6hnWRPzGGKiapVX1UCdEAC">Sam Cooke</a> and <a href="spotify:artist:3aVoqlJOYx31lH1gibGDt3">Babyface</a>. Z-Ro got his start with <a href="spotify:artist:2AAz6qvs77EPQh8pFoaj54">the Screwed Up Click</a>, a crew of Houston rappers led by the late <a href="spotify:artist:6TC6ZeVdvCuBSn32h5Msul">DJ Screw</a>. He made his solo debut in 1998 with Look What You Did to Me, following it with an album release almost every year for nearly two decades. He signed with <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22Rap-A-Lot%22">Rap-A-Lot</a> during this period and made his label debut in 2004 with his eighth LP, The Life of Joseph W. McVey. The following year, he issued Let the Truth Be Told, which featured <a href="spotify:artist:0rG0AZBscc8S8q1ahIsasI">Juvenile</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:5rkVyNGXEgeUqKkB5ccK83">Ashanti</a>, and frequent guest <a href="spotify:artist:0k7Xl1pqI3tu8sSEjo5oEg">Paul Wall</a>. The album peaked on the Billboard 200 at number 69. His "drug series" -- Crack, Cocaine, Heroin, Meth, and Angel Dust -- spanned the 2008 to 2012 period. Crack was his highest-charting album to date -- it reached number 48 -- and contained the number 62 R&B/hip-hop single "Top Notch," a collaboration with <a href="spotify:artist:7v9bFXCdSMA2o3gS4nvp0F">Pimp C</a>.
Z-Ro went independent after the 2014 release of The Crown. Drankin' & Drivin', issued two years later on his <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%221+Deep+Entertainment%22">1 Deep Entertainment</a> label, peaked in the Top Ten of the R&B/hip-hop chart and cracked the upper half of the Billboard 200. Legendary followed before the end of the year. In 2017, after the release of his 21st album, No Love Boulevard, he announced his retirement. That didn't last long, however, as he quickly followed with album 22, Codeine. The return proved to be neither tentative nor short-lived, as his rate of output remained high with albums such as Sadism, Rohammad Ali, and Pressure all issued within a few years. In 2024, he reaffirmed his role as a preacher for the streets with The Ghetto Gospel, one of his smoothest works, featuring appearances from longtime peer Mike D, <a href="spotify:artist:0k7Xl1pqI3tu8sSEjo5oEg">Paul Wall</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:1grI9x4Uzos1Asx8JmRW6T">Lil' Keke</a>, and <a href="spotify:artist:6lHL3ubAMgSasKjNqKb8HF">Mýa</a>. ~ TiVo Staff, Rovi
Monthly Listeners
589,084
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Followers
709,649
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Total Streams
722.3 million
Total Streams History
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