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Wyclef Jean

 
Artist: Wyclef Jean
 
  • Born: October 17, 1972, Croix-des-Bouquets, Haiti
  • Active: '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rap
  • Instrument: Producer, Vocals, Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "Greatest Hits," "Presents the Carnival Featuring the Refugee Allstars," "The Preacher's Son"
  • Representative Songs: "Gone Till November," "We Trying to Stay Alive," "Sweetest Girl (Dollar Bill)"

Biography

Lead Fugees rapper and sometime guitarist Wyclef Jean was the first member of his group to embark on a solo career, and he proved even more ambitious and eclectic on his own. As the Fugees hung in limbo, Wyclef also became hip-hop's unofficial multicultural conscience; a seemingly omnipresent activist, he assembled or participated in numerous high-profile charity benefit shows for a variety of causes, including aid for his native Haiti. The utopian one-world sensibility that fueled Wyclef's political consciousness also informed his recordings, which fused hip-hop with as many different styles of music as he could get his hands on (though, given his Caribbean roots, reggae was a particular favorite). In addition to his niche as hip-hop's foremost global citizen, Clef was also a noted producer and remixer who worked with an impressive array of pop, R&B, and hip-hop talent, including Whitney Houston, Santana, and Destiny's Child, among many others.

The son of a minister, Nelust Wyclef Jean was born in Croix-des-Bouquets, Haiti, on October 17, 1972. When he was nine, his family moved to the Marlborough projects in Brooklyn, NY; by his teenage years, Jean had moved to New Jersey, taken up the guitar, and begun studying jazz through his high school's music department. In 1987, he also joined a rap group with his cousin Prakazrel Michel (aka Pras) and Michel's high-school classmate Lauryn Hill. Initially calling themselves the Tranzlator Crew, they evolved into the Fugees, a name taken from slang for Haitian refugees. The trio signed with Ruffhouse Records in 1993 and released their debut album, Blunted on Reality, the following year; it attracted little notice, thanks to an inappropriate hardcore stance that the group wore like an ill-fitting suit. But the Fugees hit their stride on the follow-up, The Score, ignoring popular trends and crafting an eclectic, bohemian masterpiece that sounded like nothing else on the hip-hop landscape in 1996. Thanks to hit singles like "Fu-Gee-La" and "Killing Me Softly," The Score became a chart-topping phenomenon; in fact, with sales of over six million copies, it still ranks as one of the biggest-selling rap albums of all time.

Wyclef Jean was the first Fugee to declare plans for a solo project, setting to work soon after the group completed its supporting tours. Released in the summer of 1997, The Carnival (full title: Wyclef Jean Presents the Carnival Featuring the Refugee All-Stars) was even more musically ambitious than The Score. Its roster of guests included not only the remainder of the Fugees, but also Jean's siblings (who performed together in the duo Melky Sedeck), Cuban legend Celia Cruz, New Orleans funk mainstays the Neville Brothers, and Bob Marley's female backing vocalists the I Threes. The breadth of his ambition was further in evidence on the album's two hit singles; "We Trying to Stay Alive" recast the Bee Gees' signature disco tune as a ghetto empowerment anthem, and the Grammy-nominated "Gone Till November" was recorded with part of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. Those two songs helped push The Carnival into a Top 20, triple-platinum showing, and most reviews were naturally quite positive.

In the wake of The Carnival, Wyclef stepped up his outside work for other artists; over the next few years, he collaborated as a producer, songwriter, and/or remixer with a typically diverse list of artists: Destiny's Child ("No No No"), Sublime, Simply Red, Whitney Houston (the title track of her My Love Is Your Love album), dancehall reggae star Bounty Killer, Cypress Hill, Michael Jackson, Eric Benet, Mya, Santana ("Maria Maria"), Tevin Campbell, the Black Eyed Peas, Kimberly Scott, Sinéad O'Connor, Mick Jagger, and Canibus. Clef also served as Canibus' manager for a short time in 1998; prior to their split, a report surfaced that Wyclef had pulled a gun on Blaze editor Jesse Washington over a negative Canibus review the magazine was slated to run (Wyclef vehemently denied the accusation, and no charges were filed).

By the time Wyclef began work on his second solo album, rumors were flying about tension between individual Fugees, and despite their denials, the fact that no follow-up to The Score was in sight seemed to lend credence to all the speculation. Although Wyclef had previously announced he would put off his sophomore effort until after the next Fugees album, he was well into the project by early 2000, giving an early release the antipolice brutality track "Diallo" (with guest vocals from Senegalese superstar Youssou N'Dour) via the Internet. The full album, titled The Ecleftic: 2 Sides II a Book, was released toward the end of the summer and entered the charts at number nine. Besides N'Dour, guests this time around included Mary J. Blige (on the Grammy-nominated duet "911"), Earth, Wind & Fire, Kenny Rogers, and even wrestling star the Rock ("It Doesn't Matter"); Clef also threw in a left-field cover of Pink Floyd's "Wish You Were Here." This time around, some critics suggested that Wyclef's sprawling ambitions were growing messy, but the record went platinum nonetheless. Shortly after its release, he also started up his own record label, Yclef.

With no Fugees reunion in sight, Wyclef began preparing his third solo album, Masquerade, in 2001; he also appeared in the Jamaican gangster flick Shottas, and, sadly, suffered the death of his father in a home accident. Masquerade was released in the summer of 2002, and in addition to the usual worldbeat fusions, it found Wyclef reworking songs by Bob Dylan and Frankie Valli, and featured guest shots from Tom Jones and Israeli violinist Miri Ben-Ari. Masquerade entered the charts at number six, proving that Wyclef's freewheeling approach still held quite a bit of appeal. One year later, he returned with The Preacher's Son, and also released an album of traditional Haitian Creole music, Welcome to Haiti: Creole 101. His debut solo album got its sequel in 2007 when Carnival, Vol. 2: Memoirs of an Immigrant hit the shelves. The album had a diverse and lengthy guest list, with Akon, Mary J. Blige, Norah Jones, Shakira, Paul Simon, and Sizzla being just some of the names involved. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
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Discography: Wyclef Jean
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Carnival/The Ecleftic: 2 Sides II a Book

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Sweetest Girl [Ringle]

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Pussycat

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Ecleftic: 2 Sides II a Book [Canada Bonus CD]

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Preacher's Son

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Greatest Hits

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Welcome to Haiti: Creole 101

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Preacher's Son [Bonus DVD]

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New Day, Pt. 1 [UK CD]

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New Day, Pt. 1 [UK CD]

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Black Biography: Wyclef Jean
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rap musician; guitarist

Personal Information

Born Nel Wyclef Jean around 1970 in Haiti, son of a Nazarene preacher, Gesner Jean. Family moved to Brooklyn, New York, when Wyclef was nine years old; moved to Newark, New Jersey, early 1980s. Married Claudenette.
Education: Vailsburg High School, Newark.
Religion: Raised Nazarene.

Career

Rapper, guitarist, successful recording artist, producer, 1993-. With Prakazrel "Pras" Michel and Lauryn Hill, formed group Tranzlator Crew, early 1990s; group changed name to Fugees, 1993; with the Fugees recorded Blunted on Reality, 1993 and multiplatinum The Score, 1996; released solo album The Carnival, 1997; achieved multiplatinum sales levels.

Life's Work

Rapper, producer, and guitarist Wyclef Jean, after ascending to hip-hop stardom as one third of the wildly successful and artistically ambitious group the Fugees, emerged as a major solo artist with his 1997 debut release entitled The Carnival. Tapping into rap music's deep traditions of omnivorous musical mixture and of Caribbean American fusion, Jean carried them forward in new and exciting ways. Critically well received and a hero on the streets both in the United States and in his native Haiti, he was one of hip-hop music's brightest lights at the end of the 1990s. In the words of Time magazine critic Christopher John Farley, "The Carnival puts Wyclef up there with Billy Corgan, Trent Reznor, and Tricky as one of the most creative people working in pop music."

Jean was born Nel Wyclef Jean (his songwriting credits still list him as "N. Jean") in Haiti around 1970. In any event, when Jean was nine, his family left Haiti for the United States, landing in Brooklyn's tough Marlboro housing project, not far from Coney Island. "When I got to America," Jean told Ebony, "I was expecting to see money falling from the sky." Brooklyn fell short of these expectations, but offered the Jean family opportunities that were nearly unthinkable in their poverty-stricken homeland. Wyclef, who spoke the Haitian Creole dialect of French, knew no English at all, but learned quickly from the rap music that was beginning to flourish on New York's radio stations.

Wyclef's father was a Nazarene preacher, and several years after coming to Brooklyn the family moved to Newark, New Jersey so that Gesner Jean could assume a post at the city's Good Shepherd Church of the Nazarene. Wyclef's mother, noting her son's refusal to follow in his father's footsteps, had already given him a guitar with the intention of diverting his interest from their neighborhood's rampant gang activity. The first song he learned to play, he told Guitar Player, was Steve Martin's "King Tut." At Newark's Vailsburg High School, Jean flourished, majoring in jazz, learning to play more than 15 instruments, and gaining a grounding in the fundamentals of the music business. Hungry for expensive studio time, he earned money by working at McDonald's. Some rappers would hesitate to admit to such employment, preferring to project a gangster image, but as Jean put it to Ebony's Melissa Ewey, "Anybody that did that [deal drugs], I don't know if they're still around. I had a vision, and nobody was going to mess that up."

Jean hooked up with his cousin Prakazrel "Pras" Michel--who also lived in northern New Jersey--and with their friend Lauryn Hill, they began to create and perform hip-hop music. Jean, who had already been honored for his compositional skills at a national choir festival, encountered opposition from his father--"as far as he was concerned, if it didn't talk about God, it was devil music," Jean told Ebony--but the trio made distinctive music and was noticed in Newark almost from the start. They formed a group called the Tranzlator Crew (an earlier incarnation had been notable for its collective ability to rap in six different languages), and by 1993 had been signed to the Ruff House/Columbia label and began bringing together music for an album.

After encountering legal trouble from an alternative-rock group called Translator, Jean, Michel, and Hill changed the name of their group to the Fugees, a shortened version of the word "refugees." Their debut album, 1993's Blunted on Reality, enjoyed mixed critical reviews and moderate sales, but it was the Fugees second release, The Score, that catapulted them to the top ranks of popular music in 1996. The album sold over four million copies in the United States and at least 15 million worldwide; it sold well in Jean's native Haiti, in France, where Jean's French-language skills have made him extraordinarily popular, and in Caribbean and African countries where rap had earlier made few inroads. Jean and his fellow Fugees also did a benefit concerts in Haiti and Miami to help Haitian refugees. Musically, the album was stamped by Jean's adventuresome and eclectic tastes: it featured samples of Caribbean music, rock, and black pop, among other styles, and became best known for its hip-hop remake of Roberta Flack's 1970s hit "Killing Me Softly."

The Fugees remained together and planned future releases as a group as of the end of 1998, but each member also embarked on individual projects. Jean planned a modest album of music in the Creole language to capitalize on his popularity in Francophone countries, but his creativity stretched the boundaries of the project, and the album, The Carnival (full title Wyclef Jean presents The Carnival featuring Refugee Allstars), ended up as a full-fledged solo release. Several of the Creole tracks survived and appeared on the album, which featured a spectacular mixture of styles and elements. Although he was joined by his Fugees bandmates, Jean was the primary creative force behind The Carnival, producing the album and composing most of its tracks.

The sampling and incorporation of other styles of music is integral to hip-hop, but The Carnival used such techniques with unusual imagination and variety. Guest artists on the album included Puerto Rican salsa queen Celia Cruz (on a humorous, subtle recasting of the 1960s hit "Guantanamera"), New Orleans soul stars, the Neville Brothers, the reggae group I Threes, and members of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra. One of the album's hit singles, "We Trying To Stay Alive," took the Bee Gees' disco hit "Staying Alive" as a point of departure, taking it through a complex yet infectious series of musical and poetic twists and turns. The recording harked back to rap music's earliest days, when DJs would improvise rhymes over disco records in New York nightclubs. Yet it also showcased the music's new virtuosity. Jean's creativity was rewarded with two Grammy award nominations in 1998, and the album took only a few months to reach the one-million sales mark.

Many of the album's sales were made to fans of rock music attracted by the sound of Jean's guitar playing. The guitar has been an uncommon instrument in hip-hop music, and its incorporation into a raw hip-hop sound is one mark of Jean's uncommon mastery of stylistic mixture. "Wyclef's strengths like in his ability not just to deftly cop the feels of calypso, reggae and rock, but to layer those styles and tones in the studio," Guitar Player noted admiringly. On several of The Carnival's songs, complex raps surround a quoted melody in long notes, with Jean adding a rhythmic groove or humorous percussive notes on guitar.

At the end of the 1990s Jean seemed to have the talent, training, and imagination to become a major lasting force in hip-hop music. "The only artists who are going to last the next five to 10 years are those people doing original music," he told Billboard. "I've got a 50-year plan for this business." Already much in demand as a producer from high-profile artists such as Tevin Campbell, Gloria Estefan, and rapper Canibu, Jean was slated to star as the son of reggae legend Jimmy Cliff in a sequel to the 1970s film The Harder They Come. Fans of many musical stripes await future releases of his own.

Awards

Nominated for two Grammy awards, including Best Rap Album, for The Carnival, 1998.

Works

Selective Discography

  • Blunted on Reality, (with the Fugees), Ruff House/Columbia, 1993.
  • The Score (with the Fugees), Ruff House/ Columbia, 1996.
  • The Carnival, Ruff House/Columbia, 1997.

Further Reading

  • Billboard, June 14, 1997, p. 1; March 21, 1998, p. 35.
  • Ebony, May 1998, p. 120.
  • Entertainment Weekly, December 26, 1997, p. 61; June 26, 1998, p. 56.
  • Guitar Player, January 1998, p. 35.
  • New York Times, October 27, 1997, p. B5.
  • People, July 7, 1997, p. 26.
  • Time, July 28, 1997, p. 74; August 24, 1998, p. 91.
  • Vibe, August 1998.
  • Washington Post, September 30, 1998, p. D5.

— James M. Manheim

 
Wikipedia: Wyclef Jean
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Wyclef Jean

Wyclef Jean performing at a UNAIDS concert.
Background information
Birth name Wyclef Neluset Jean
Also known as Wyclef
Born October 17, 1972 (1972-10-17) (age 36)
Croix-des-Bouquets, Haiti
Origin Newark, New Jersey, United States
Genre(s) Hip hop, reggae, compas, R&B, folk
Occupation(s) Musician, singer-songwriter, producer, actor
Instrument(s) Vocals, guitar, piano, drums
Years active 1987–present
Label(s) Ruffhouse, Columbia, J, Koch
Associated acts Fugees, Akon, Shakira, Flo Rida
Website www.wyclef.com

Wyclef Neluset Jean (born October 17, 1972) is a multi-platinum Haitian-American musician, actor, producer and former-member of the hip hop trio The Fugees. Wyclef has sold more than 31 million albums[1] throughout his career together with his album sales with The Fugees.

Contents

Biography

A native of Haiti,[2] Wyclef Jean became a sworn Rasta at a young age as he often mentions in various tracks.[citation needed]

The son of a Nazarene pastor,[3] Wyclef briefly attended Eastern Nazarene College, where his younger brother Sam graduated with a degree in history.[4]

Wyclef moved with his family to Brooklyn, New York, when he was nine before they moved again to northern New Jersey. Jean has been a resident of Saddle River, New Jersey and South Orange, New Jersey.[5]

Personal Life & Marriage and children

In 1994, he married Haitian-American fashion designer Marie Claudinette Pierre-Jean.

The couple has one daughter, Angelina Claudelle, whom they adopted in the United States in March 2005 when the girl was three days old.[6] She is half Haitian and half Guyanese.

Yéle Haiti

In 2005, Jean established the Yéle Haiti Foundation. In its first year of operation, the foundation, with funding by Comcel, provided scholarships to 3,600 children in Gonaives, Haiti, after the devastation by Hurricane Jeanne[citation needed]. In its second year of operation, it is almost doubling the amount of the scholarships and spreading them throughout Haiti, providing tuition in 5 regions[citation needed]. The foundation aims to provide 6,800 scholarships to children in Port-au-Prince, Gonaives, Les Cayes, Port-de-Paix, and Cap-Haitien.

Together for Haiti

Created in response to the current food shortages and rioting in Haiti, Together for Haiti is a partnership between Yéle Haiti, the United Nations World Food Programme, and the Pan American Development Foundation (PADF). Both a fundraising and awareness campaign, its mission is to provide much needed resources for three crucial programs in Haiti:

  • Targeted Food Distribution - Expand WFP's existing food assistance program for children under five and pregnant women, continue existing school meal programs through summer vacation, and organize voucher-based food distribution of dry food to the neediest families.
  • Immediate Employment Creation - Create Labor-intensive employment opportunities that will support of expanding agricultural production, with wages in cash and food.
  • Micro-enterprise Grants - Small grants and training for small-scale egg production, vegetable gardens, grain milling, bread production and other related activities.

The partnership was publicly launched on May 20, 2008 at a press event hosted by Wyclef Jean in New York City.

Musical career

Jean had previously been singing with a friend of his named Paulette Maurice, while in high school. The Fugees signed to Ruffhouse Records, which released the group's debut album, Blunted on Reality. It sold poorly, but follow-up album The Score sold over 18 million copies worldwide. Jean announced plans to begin a solo career with 1997's Wyclef Jean Presents the Carnival Featuring the Refugee All-Stars (generally called The Carnival). The album's guests included Hill and Pras along with Jean's siblings Melky Sedeck and Farel Sedeck Guerschom Jean, the I Threes (back-up vocals for Bob Marley), The Neville Brothers and Celia Cruz. The album was a hit, as were two singles: "We Trying to Stay Alive" (adapted from The Bee Gees' "Stayin' Alive") and "Gone Till November" (recorded with the New York Philharmonic Orchestra).

The Fugees remained in limbo during this time, with the follow-up to The Score being continually postponed as all three members cultivated solo careers.

At the concert Woodstock 1999, Jean paid homage to 1969 Woodstock performer Jimi Hendrix by setting fire to his guitar after playing "The Star Spangled Banner", and burnt his fingers while doing so.[7]

Jean's second solo album, released in 2000, was The Ecleftic: 2 Sides II a Book. This was recorded with guests including Youssou N'Dour, Earth, Wind & Fire, Kenny Rogers, The Rock and Mary J. Blige. With Blige he released "911" as a single. He was nominated for Best Hip-Hop Act at the 2000 MTV Europe Music Awards.[8]

Jean's third album, Masquerade, was released in 2002. His fourth album, The Preacher's Son, was released in November 2003 as the follow-up to his first solo album, the Carnival

In 2004, he released his fifth album, entitled Sak Pasé Presents: Welcome to Haïti (Creole 101) (released in the United States by Koch Records). Most of its songs are in his native language of Haitian Creole like "Fanm Kreyol" with the French Caribbean Admiral T. He also covered Creedence Clearwater Revival's song "Fortunate Son" for the soundtrack of the 2004 film remake of The Manchurian Candidate and wrote the song Million Voices for the film Hotel Rwanda.

Jean also produced and wrote songs for the soundtrack to Jonathan Demme's 2003 documentary The Agronomist, about the Haitian activist and radio personality Jean Dominique. With Jerry 'Wonder' Duplessis, Jean also composed the score of the documentary Ghosts of Cité Soleil,[9] in which he appears onscreen speaking by telephone in 2004 to a "chimere" gang-leader and aspiring rapper, Winston "2Pac" Jean.[10]

During a period between 2004 and 2006 and fueled by a reunion performance in Dave Chappelle's Block Party, it appeared that the Fugees were on track to record a new album, however Fugees member Pras claims to Billboard "To put it nicely, it's dead." He says the root of this animosity is the third member of the group, Lauryn Hill, saying to Billboard, "Me and Clef, we on the same page, but Lauryn Hill is in her zone, and I'm fed up with that shit. Here she is, blessed with a gift, with the opportunity to rock and give and she's running on some bulls**t? I'm a fan of Lauryn's but I can't respect that."[1]

Jean released an album in September 2007 that he recorded in Atlanta, Georgia with the help of T.I.. Recently, Wyclef released a new song called Sweetest Girl (Dollar Bill) featuring Lil' Wayne, Niia and Akon, which references the song C.R.E.A.M. by the Wu-Tang Clan. The album also features a single, "Fast Car" whose video was made with the assistance of video game Burnout Paradise.

Jean's next studio album is expected to be released by the end of 2009. Although originally titled "To Sir, With Love", Wyclef posted on his official blog that this was no longer the name of the album and invited fans to guess the new title. Rumored collaborations include Shakira, Timbaland, and Pharell. On May 9, 2009, a demo entitled "The Border" was leaked onto music blogs. This demo was credited as Wyclef Jean featuring Shakira, although the opposite may actually be true.

In 2009, he featured in a song called "Spanish Fly" with Ludacris and Bachata group Aventura in Aventura's upcoming album "The Last" which will come out in June.

On June 17th, 2009, Wyclef announced via Twitter that his new album will be called wyclefjean to be released sometime in February 2010.

Humanitarian efforts

Jean has been active in his support of his native country and created the foundation Yéle Haiti [11] to provide humanitarian aid and assistance to Haiti. He describes Yéle as a non-political organization intended to empower the people of Haiti and the Haitian diaspora to rebuild their nation, saying, "The objective of Yéle Haiti is to restore pride and a reason to hope, and for the whole country to regain the deep spirit and strength that is part of our heritage".[citation needed]. Yele Haiti was created in October 2004 with Wyclef's cousin Jerry 'Wonder' Duplessis and humanitarian experts Sanjay Rawal and Natabara Rollosson. Projects were launched in January 2005. Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt were present for the first anniversary of the launch in 2006.

In January 2007, Jean became a roving ambassador for Haiti, to help improve its image abroad.[12]

May 20, 2008 - Yéle Haiti partners with WFP (World Food Programme) the United Nations to launch www.togetherforhaiti.org

September, 2008 Wyclef in conjunction with Yele Haiti Charity delivered food to Hurricane Ike victims in Haiti. Matt Damon provided assistance in the food lines serving food.

Oct 23, 2008 Wyclef Jean performed on stage with Carlos Santana in San Francisco on behalf of Yéle Haiti, OneXOne, and WaterPartners International to raise funds for clean water, education, health, environment, and community development in the USA and in the developing world.

June, 2009 - Wyclef sung another verison of "Gun Powder" and "No Woman, No Cry" to Support The Killed People of Iran, The Demonstrations, The Shooting of The 27 Year-old woman Neda and The Struggles there. The Video Can Be Seen on YouTube

House foreclosure

Wyclef's waterfront mansion that was purchased through his corporation on Pine Tree Drive in Miami Beach, Florida is now owned by a bank as of November, 2008. Maria Shriver's brother, Anthony, lives next door. The property is valued at $1.4M.[13] He took out a 2 million dollar mortgage to purchase and renovate the property but fell behind in payments. There is more than $100,000+ in construction and architectural liens associated with the property. The house was reported to be auctioned at the Miami-Dade Courthouse on December 12, 2008. Wyclef Jean’s corporation that he and a few friends setup several years ago then owed the bank $2.4 million.[14]
In January 2009 Wyclef mentioned in walk-by interview that the problems with their Miami-Dade property were due to a contractor sitting on the job for two years and that the court ordered sale did not take place and that he plans to sell the property later.[15][16][17]

Television and film

  • Was a musical guest star on Nickelodeon sketch comedy show All That during the 1990s.
  • In 1997, toured "Carnival" album on MTV's "Live from the 10 Spot" at the Hammerstein Ballroom in Manhattan.
  • Performed "Sweetest Girl" on Jimmy Kimmel Live.
  • Performed "President" on the second season of Chappelle's Show.
  • In 2001, he appeared in the made-for-television movie Carmen: A Hip Hopera alongside Beyonce and Mos Def, as a fortune teller.
  • Performed on the 2003 Source Awards with DJ Khaled.
  • Appeared for a second time on Chappelle's Show in a parody of Making the Band.
  • Appeared on the The Apprentice (US Season 4) in 2005. Did a rap, "Rubble man", with the winning team, Excel, as their reward for winning task five.
  • Also in 2005, he played gang leader Marcel Hollis who leads his group on an assault on the station house in the NBC television drama Third Watch.
  • In 2004, Jean, Pras and Hill reunited as The Fugees for an event filmed and released in 2006 as Dave Chappelle's Block Party.
  • He also starred in Virgin Mobile commercials as himself.[18] In one commercial, a woman approaches him and tricks him into signing a contract which legally binds them in marriage. She drags him back to her trailer-park home where he is mistreated, forced to work and pleasure his wife. Eventually, he runs away and seeks police assistance, but is instead arrested for violating his contract and ultimately winds up in jail.
  • Appeared in 2002 Jamaican gangster film Shottas, released in 2006.
  • In 2005, he played the role of a Jamaican drug dealer in the movie Dirty.
  • He narrated the movie Full Clip, starring Busta Rhymes, Xzibit, Prodigy of Mobb Deep, Spliff Star, and others.
  • He has appeared and performed on the Source Awards with DJ Khaled, with Wyclef and his band and Khaled doing turntables.
  • He appears in the documentary film Ghosts of Cité Soleil, released in limited theaters on June 27, 2007.
  • In 2005, he appeared in the film One Last Thing.... His character is a cab driver named Emmett Ducasse. It is implied he is an angel due to being in the main character's "Heaven". Wyclef also has an original track that is the closing credits first song. The song is "Heaven's in New York".
  • In December 2007, starred in the four-part MTV exclusive online short-film Americlef[19]
  • On April 26, 2008 he hosted the MTV Australia Awards
  • He appeared on a remix of his own track "Bubblegoose" for Chef Aid: The South Park Album, where he sings alongside the main characters of the show.
  • Created a music video at the University of San Francisco for the song "President" in February 2008.
  • May 20, 2008: At the Gansevoort Hotel Wyclef Jean in partnership with the WFP and PADF launched TOGETHER FOR HAITI to address the hunger crisis in HAITI www.togetherforhaiti.org http://think.mtv.com/044FDFFFF009898BA00170098F67D/ members of the American and international television and print media were invited to cover the news UN envoy Jeffrey Sachs introduced Jean. Supermodel Petra Nemcova was on hand to support. A surprise appearance was made by Paul Simon.
  • August 25, 2008: Wyclef Jean goes "On The Record" with Greta Van Susteren of FOX News discussing his life and career, political coverage, Obama, McCain, Bush and 9-11.
  • January 11, 2009: Wyclef Jean is featured on 60 Minutes
  • January 30, 2009: Wyclef Jean is featured on The Musical Brain on CTV.
  • TV appearance on 30 Rock.

Discography

References

  1. ^ http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/01/08/60minutes/main4707723.shtml
  2. ^ Yéle.org: About us
  3. ^ Rolling Stone interview: "Wyclef Jean Q&A: How the Ex-Fugee Got His Groove Back"
  4. ^ "The James R. Cameron Center for History, Law, & Government at Eastern Nazarene College: Our Graduates". http://www.enc.edu/history/alumni.html. Retrieved on December 17, 2008. 
  5. ^ Century, Douglas. "Alpine, N.J., Home of Hip-Hop Royalty", The New York Times, February 11, 2007. Accessed February 16, 2008.
  6. ^ Wycliffe Jean - Wycliffe Adopts Haitian Baby
  7. ^ Peisner, David (February 2007). "Rock Stars Who've Caught Fire Onstage!" (in English). Blender Magazine Online. http://www.blender.com/guide/articles.aspx?ID=2531&src=blender_ed. Retrieved on 2007-03-02. 
  8. ^ BBC News (October 2, 2000): "MTV Europe Music Awards: The nominations"
  9. ^ Ghosts Of Cité Soleil - Casting Info (2005)
  10. ^ Film Journal International (June 27, 2007): Ghosts of Cité Soleil (review by Frank Lovece)
  11. ^ Yele.org
  12. ^ BBC News (4 January 2007): "Wyclef becomes Haiti 'ambassador'"
  13. ^ http://www.page2live.com/2008/11/20/foreclosure-hits-music-star-wyclef-jean/
  14. ^ http://blogs.miaminewtimes.com/riptide/2008/11/wyclef_jeans_foreclosed_mansio.php
  15. ^ http://www.tmz.com/2009/01/26/wyclef-home-a-loan/
  16. ^ http://www.miami-dadeclerk.com/civil/docketinfo.asp?pCase_Year=2008&pCase_Seq=3018&pCase_Code=CA&pCase_Loc=01&id=AAAHgHAAOAAAaZ/AAv
  17. ^ http://www.miami-dadeclerk.com/civil/docketinfo.asp?pCase_Year=2008&pCase_Seq=16954&pCase_Code=CA&pCase_Loc=01&id=AAAHgHAAOAAAa5VAAK
  18. ^ Partizan - Commercials - Doug Nichol
  19. ^ MTV Online

External links


 
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