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CedricCed-GeeMiller (born 1963) is an American hip hop producer and rapper from the Bronx, New York. He is best known as a member of Ultramagnetic MCs.[1] He received special thanks for his production on Boogie Down ProductionsCriminal Minded, and he produced Tim Dog‘s “Fuck Compton“.[2] He has also worked alongside Antoinette, Bill Cosby, Blak Prophetz, Doug E. Fresh, Jeff Redd, Paperboy, Spaceman Patterson, Sybil, and Treacherous Three.

Ced-Gee has held positions as an A&R man and staff producer, a producer for Next Plateau Records, Wild Pitch Records, Mercury Records, Ruffhouse Records, Roadrunner Records, and Uptown Records.

Discography

Solo

Studio albums

  • 2004 – The Underground Show EP (CD) (The Factshen)

Singles

  • 1998 – “Long Gev/The Impossible” (12″) (3-2-1 Records)

With Ultramagnetic MCs

Notable production credits and guest appearances

Albums

Songs

  • 1986 – “Ego Trippin” by Ultramagnetic MCs.
  • 1988 – “Soft But Deadly” by Finesse & Synquis
  • 1989 – “Bad Beats Suite” by Sybil
  • 1989 – “Girls” by Funkmaster Wizard Wiz
  • 1989 – “You Need Stitches/Creston Avenue” by Grandmaster Caz
  • 1991 – “The 900 Number (Remix 1/2/3)” by The 45 King
  • 1991 – “Larry, That’s What They Call Me (Hip Hop Remix)”[3] by Larry the MC
  • 1991 – “Fuck Compton“, “You Ain’t Shit”, “Can’t Fuck Around”, “Goin’ Wild in the Penile” and “Patriotic Pimp” by Tim Dog
  • 1992 – “Chorus Line Pt. 2”, “Poppa Large”, “I Like Your Style”, “Make It Happen”, “Message From the Boss”, “Go for Yours”, “MC Champion” by Ultramagnetic MCs
  • 1994 – “Ain’t Nothing Changed” by Treacherous Three
  • 1994 – “I’m Fuckin Flippin/New York What Is Funky” by Ultramagnetic MCs
  • 1996 – “P’s Cure (Real G Remix)” by Paperboy
  • 2005 – “Intro” and “The Illest” by Blak Prophetz
  • 2009 – “Magnetic Junkadelic” by Kool Keith

References

  1. ^ Cooper, Sean. “Biography: Ultramagnetic MC’s”. Allmusic. Retrieved 26 May 2010.
  2. ^ Barber, Andrew; Tharpe, Frazier (2018-10-31). “The 50 Best Hip-Hop Diss Songs”. Complex. Archived from the original on 2021-11-28. Retrieved 2019-11-27.
  3. ^ “spotify”.

“Ced Gee”. Discogs.