Not that he'd wish it on anyone, but it was during his ten-year sentence in prison that
. It was an arson charge that put the Toledo, Ohio, native in prison. His musical aspirations started in the church choir and grew in the Dotsons, a teenaged group that
formed with his brother and a couple cousins. Prison made his music deeper, according to
's Baduizm ended up in his cell in 1997, he was inspired and had the feeling that this introspective edge to his music was worth developing.
Two days after his December 2002 release from prison, he was recording a four-song demo CD. The day after that, he was performing live in a club. He only had a month of freedom before he was on-stage at the famous Apollo. He was booed when he walked on-stage with an acoustic guitar, but when the Apollo audience heard his gritty falsetto and lyrical songwriting, they were swayed -- swayed to the tune of five amateur-night victories in a row.
Lyfe figures he sold a thousand copies of his four-song demo CD during his Apollo "residency." That, along with a ton of calls from promoters and record label execs on his answering machine back in Ohio, influenced
Lyfe to move to New York City and pursue a major-label deal. Columbia had the right offer and released his debut,
Lyfe 268-192 (his inmate number), in August of 2004. A year after its original release, the album was reissued with a new version of "Hypothetically" featuring
American Idol winner
Fantasia added as a bonus track.
The more hip-hop-oriented follow-up,
The Phoenix, arrived in 2006, with
Three 6 Mafia and
Young Buck making guest appearances.
Lyfe Change, released two years later, featured a handful of new production associates, as well as a verse from
T.I. Jennings began working on another album, tentatively titled Sooner or Later, which he stated would be his last. It finally appeared in 2010 as I Still Believe and featured guest spots from Bryan-Michael Cox, Warryn Campbell, Fabolous, Bobby Valentino, Ludacris, Anthony Hamilton and Jazmine Sullivan.
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David Jeffries, Rovi