As the Hip Hop and R&B community is well aware, Uptown Records founder Andre Harrell died on Thursday (May 7). According to The New York Times, his ex-wife Wendy Credle said he passed away from heart failure at his home in Hollywood Hills, California.
The 59-year-old is survived by his son Gianni Credle-Harrell, his brother Greg and his father.
DJ D-Nice first mentioned the news during an Instagram Live session on Friday night (May 8), which started to spread like wild fire across social media. After all, Harrell was a legend in the music business.
After getting his label start with Russell Simmons at both Rush Management and Def Jam Recordings, Harrell founded Uptown Records in 1986 with the intent to bridge the gap between Hip Hop and R&B. For nearly a decade, the label thrived and helped launch the careers of Mary J. Blige, Jodeci, Al B. Sure! Guy and more.
“I was all over the country, all over the world,” Harrell told Vanity Fair of that time. “I was 28 years old. The dough was flowing. I bought a house. Bought a BMW. Two. Was happy. It was the beginning of the game. I was crazy happy.”
Without Harrell, Sean “Diddy” Combs never would have become the successful Hip Hop mogul he is today. The music executive gave Diddy his first big break when he hired him as an intern at Uptown in the early ’90s. After quickly rising in the ranks, Diddy started doing A&R, working with Blige and Jodeci to lend them some “Hip Hop credibility.”
But in 1993, Harrell fired him and although Diddy attempted to get his job back, Harrell refused. Diddy later speculated he “didn’t want two kings in the castle.” Armed with the knowledge he’d gained working for Harrell, Diddy founded Bad Boy Records and the rest is history. But the two remained friends — in fact, he was at Diddy’s 50th birthday party last December.
Naturally, the Hip Hop and R&B community and many other celebrities came out in droves to mourn the monumental loss, including Simmons, Mariah Carey, 50 Cent, Quincy Jones, Ice Cube, Cool Kids’ Chuck Inglish, Viola Davis and John Legend.
Check out some of the reactions below.
We all could have done without him bringing us that treacherous snake Diddy tho but nevertheless, R.I.P Andre Harrell… You we’re a Legend.
Legend gone way too soon. RIP Dre
Sidenote: We have to address heart disease in a meaningful way in the black community
I love Soul For Real man
I would have sworn he was older. Not a fan of most of his artists, but you can’t deny his impact on the 90s black music game
He gave us Diddy so that’s a big Negative in my book
That whole UPTOWN click was TIGHT. Yes, I am OLD enough to remember. That sound will never be duplicated again and it was a special time for black music indeed. Sad day for the culture really…in the end we all going to be gone but the legacy lives on.
His legacy was slightly tainted by having Diddy as his apprentice though. That was an L in the books
Puff is a controversial figure in Hip Hop yes but also was vital…
No he wasn’t vital, there were plenty of other more capable,honest, actually, talented executive producer/actual producers around that time who was still popping around that time so it’s not like anyone would miss him. He’s left more victims than associates.
Southwest T, gets released from jail, talk of puffy starting bad boy with drug money surface. Days later puff’s former employer drops dead. What am I missing?
He now back with heavy d and t roy rest easy to all of them uptown uptown kickin it
Alot of people die, it hurt me when EAZY-E DIED. I was 13 at the time. 2pac died next year. Biggie after that. 1 year apart. 95,96,97. Damn….. Now I’m 38 and I look back at life and miss Pimp-C, Soulja slim, Big Moe, dj screw, mobb deep nigga…. ( Egg came first) Life a trip. RIP JAMES BROWN N RICK JAMES
Take dat…. Take dat….. Take dat….. Bad Boy 4 Life. I make moves…lol
Fuck Diddy…He only makes moves on man butt…pause
holy shit. r.i.p.……………………………………………………..
God HIT’EM UP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Let’s blame it on the Rona .. Bill Gates will thank you!
R.I.P Andre Harrell….But still he screwed up the industry and the culture by giving us Diddy but at least the gay community still appreciate him.