OneBeLo has performed around the world as a solo artist and a member of the… Read Full Bio ↴OneBeLo has performed around the world as a solo artist and a member of the legendary rap duo Binary Star, but his travels throughout different mindsets and communities have made even more of an impact. Throughout his life, Lo has also assumed the roles of star athlete, convicted felon, Christian, Muslim, and Egyptian resident—and all of these things are reflected in his music.
“When I talk about religion, sports, winning, losing, struggle, pain, prison, poverty, crime, women—these are the ingredients of OneBeLo, because those are my personalexperiences,” he explains. “I've been a straight-A student, I've been a knucklehead, I've been a heathen, I've been a Christian, I've been a Muslim, I've been a criminal, I've been in the belly of the beast, I've been to the Mecca, I've been to Europe. I've been to the top, I've been to the bottom. I'm talking about everything.”
Lo was adopted in Pontiac, Michigan, where his mother worked as a beautician and his stepfather worked at a plant. As a result, he developed appreciation for women, fashion, working with a variety of different people, discipline, and forgiveness. He busied himself with over a dozen different activities and attended church several times a week with his family. Life changed once his parents divorced when he was 14 years old. With lower supervision and more exposure to new things, he ran the streets with older kids until he went to prison days after his 18th birthday.
While in prison, OneBeLo read extensively and converted to Islam, after seeing it wasn't what he was told it was as a Christian child. He also formed the rap group Binary Star with his partner-in-crime Senim Silla. Despite domestic violence, murder and other drama out of his control happening back home, Lo handled his sentence without losing himself.
“When I went to prison, Allah gave me two and half years to get away from all that weed, all that pussy, and all those distractions,” Lo remembers. “I wasn't going to be like the cats in prison that come back when they're 35 years old. … I was behind bars, but I realized that the people in the streets were the ones locked up. My mind was free.”
Upon Lo’s release, Binary Star hit the ground running. On their self-released debut Waterworld, they teamed up with future staples like Elzhi, J.U.I.C.E., and Athletic Mic League to exercise creative concepts and deliver substantial messages. Lo formed a production team with Decompoze, who he had recorded with in high school. Binary Star quickly sold out of their initial 1,000 copies as the album was praised as an “instant classic.” Though Lo had intended to rhyme anonymously as a solo act to revert attention to the music, he was often addressed as OneManArmy because of a line he used in a song. He and Senim Silla would later go their separate ways, and Lo compiled his Subterraneous Records crew—which consisted of Malaki The Most High, Decompoze, Kodac, Magestik Legend, DJ Phrikshun and iLLite—in January 2000.
Lo added extra Senim Silla verses and new songs to a Waterworld re-release entitled Masters of the Universe, and continued to focus on touring with Subterraneous and recording several albums’ worth of new music. After showcasing his crew with Waterworld Too, he released Project F.E.T.U.S. as a planned prequel to his debut. The disc sold thousands of copies, and he would later complete his next project, S.O.N.O.G.R.A.M.. He approached Fat Beats Records to press a single to help promote the album, and they gave him a different offer.
“They asked me to send them the song I was thinking about using for the single, and I was like, 'If they're doing the 12-inch, I'll let them pick the song.' So I just sent them the whole album,” Lo remembers. “They hit me back like, 'We don't want to do a 12-inch. We want to do the whole album.”
Lo signed with Fat Beats for distribution in 2003, and the label asked him to change his name from OneManArmy to avoid legal troubles with a similarly-named punk band. He changed his name to OneBeLo, since he had used that with F.E.T.U.S. He would later go to Saudi Arabia on Mecca, an Islamic tradition to find one's self. Meanwhile, Fat Beats pushed back S.O.N.O.G.R.A.M. until 2005. The album was critically-acclaimed and sold about 12,000 copies within Lo's first few weeks on tour. Shortly afterward he would prepare S.T.I.L.L.B.O.R.N., a 27-track compilation of Lo's released and unreleased guest appearances over original new beats. With two projects in tow, Lo landed tours and major festivals, rocking 160 shows per year between 2005 and 2007.
Continuing his journey to chase the greater good, Lo moved his family to Egypt to expose them to a non-American perspective. Once he saw personnel changes at Fat Beats when he arrived back years later, he worked his way out of his deal and self-released The R.E.B.I.R.T.H.. Eager to collaborate with producers and use a different sound, Lo collaborated with beatmakers like Lab Techs, Jake One, Memo of the Molemen, and others. The album performed well, but Lo again wanted to change his approach. Rather than use his previous method of recording as many songs as possible and compiling what he thought were the best songs, he decided to sit down and focus on one piece of work.
That piece was entitled B.A.B.Y. (Being A Black Youth). Much of the album, which features the likes of Freeway, Phonte Coleman, Devin the Dude and others, was lost when thieves broke in and stole studio equipment. Additionally, the label he had signed with, MYX Music Label, dissolved before the record could drop. Lo stashed his latest sessions and began to work on his upcoming album, L.A.B.O.R. from scratch. The new project takes metaphorical inspiration from animals and occupations, jumpstarts a new Waterworld movement with the LABORhood, and lays the foundation to a crop of other conceptual records.
“With this project, I’m staying busy and developing my ideas. I’m going through the pains of L.A.B.O.R. before delivering this B.A.B.Y.,” Lo says. “Don’t let anyone stop you from creating your art.”
Despite L.A.B.O.R. being his fifth solo release, Lo is just getting started. With a continuous repertoire of new travels, new experiences and world events, OneBeLo will always have the music to reflect it.
“When I talk about religion, sports, winning, losing, struggle, pain, prison, poverty, crime, women—these are the ingredients of OneBeLo, because those are my personalexperiences,” he explains. “I've been a straight-A student, I've been a knucklehead, I've been a heathen, I've been a Christian, I've been a Muslim, I've been a criminal, I've been in the belly of the beast, I've been to the Mecca, I've been to Europe. I've been to the top, I've been to the bottom. I'm talking about everything.”
Lo was adopted in Pontiac, Michigan, where his mother worked as a beautician and his stepfather worked at a plant. As a result, he developed appreciation for women, fashion, working with a variety of different people, discipline, and forgiveness. He busied himself with over a dozen different activities and attended church several times a week with his family. Life changed once his parents divorced when he was 14 years old. With lower supervision and more exposure to new things, he ran the streets with older kids until he went to prison days after his 18th birthday.
While in prison, OneBeLo read extensively and converted to Islam, after seeing it wasn't what he was told it was as a Christian child. He also formed the rap group Binary Star with his partner-in-crime Senim Silla. Despite domestic violence, murder and other drama out of his control happening back home, Lo handled his sentence without losing himself.
“When I went to prison, Allah gave me two and half years to get away from all that weed, all that pussy, and all those distractions,” Lo remembers. “I wasn't going to be like the cats in prison that come back when they're 35 years old. … I was behind bars, but I realized that the people in the streets were the ones locked up. My mind was free.”
Upon Lo’s release, Binary Star hit the ground running. On their self-released debut Waterworld, they teamed up with future staples like Elzhi, J.U.I.C.E., and Athletic Mic League to exercise creative concepts and deliver substantial messages. Lo formed a production team with Decompoze, who he had recorded with in high school. Binary Star quickly sold out of their initial 1,000 copies as the album was praised as an “instant classic.” Though Lo had intended to rhyme anonymously as a solo act to revert attention to the music, he was often addressed as OneManArmy because of a line he used in a song. He and Senim Silla would later go their separate ways, and Lo compiled his Subterraneous Records crew—which consisted of Malaki The Most High, Decompoze, Kodac, Magestik Legend, DJ Phrikshun and iLLite—in January 2000.
Lo added extra Senim Silla verses and new songs to a Waterworld re-release entitled Masters of the Universe, and continued to focus on touring with Subterraneous and recording several albums’ worth of new music. After showcasing his crew with Waterworld Too, he released Project F.E.T.U.S. as a planned prequel to his debut. The disc sold thousands of copies, and he would later complete his next project, S.O.N.O.G.R.A.M.. He approached Fat Beats Records to press a single to help promote the album, and they gave him a different offer.
“They asked me to send them the song I was thinking about using for the single, and I was like, 'If they're doing the 12-inch, I'll let them pick the song.' So I just sent them the whole album,” Lo remembers. “They hit me back like, 'We don't want to do a 12-inch. We want to do the whole album.”
Lo signed with Fat Beats for distribution in 2003, and the label asked him to change his name from OneManArmy to avoid legal troubles with a similarly-named punk band. He changed his name to OneBeLo, since he had used that with F.E.T.U.S. He would later go to Saudi Arabia on Mecca, an Islamic tradition to find one's self. Meanwhile, Fat Beats pushed back S.O.N.O.G.R.A.M. until 2005. The album was critically-acclaimed and sold about 12,000 copies within Lo's first few weeks on tour. Shortly afterward he would prepare S.T.I.L.L.B.O.R.N., a 27-track compilation of Lo's released and unreleased guest appearances over original new beats. With two projects in tow, Lo landed tours and major festivals, rocking 160 shows per year between 2005 and 2007.
Continuing his journey to chase the greater good, Lo moved his family to Egypt to expose them to a non-American perspective. Once he saw personnel changes at Fat Beats when he arrived back years later, he worked his way out of his deal and self-released The R.E.B.I.R.T.H.. Eager to collaborate with producers and use a different sound, Lo collaborated with beatmakers like Lab Techs, Jake One, Memo of the Molemen, and others. The album performed well, but Lo again wanted to change his approach. Rather than use his previous method of recording as many songs as possible and compiling what he thought were the best songs, he decided to sit down and focus on one piece of work.
That piece was entitled B.A.B.Y. (Being A Black Youth). Much of the album, which features the likes of Freeway, Phonte Coleman, Devin the Dude and others, was lost when thieves broke in and stole studio equipment. Additionally, the label he had signed with, MYX Music Label, dissolved before the record could drop. Lo stashed his latest sessions and began to work on his upcoming album, L.A.B.O.R. from scratch. The new project takes metaphorical inspiration from animals and occupations, jumpstarts a new Waterworld movement with the LABORhood, and lays the foundation to a crop of other conceptual records.
“With this project, I’m staying busy and developing my ideas. I’m going through the pains of L.A.B.O.R. before delivering this B.A.B.Y.,” Lo says. “Don’t let anyone stop you from creating your art.”
Despite L.A.B.O.R. being his fifth solo release, Lo is just getting started. With a continuous repertoire of new travels, new experiences and world events, OneBeLo will always have the music to reflect it.
Gray
One Be Lo Lyrics
We have lyrics for 'Gray' by these artists:
9-Ball Gee, how I miss Your tender kiss, And the wonderful things w…
Alexa Cirri Take me in your hands Don′t break me in your plans I…
Ambroz Please don't leave me here, Please let me tell you…
Amie Miriello Hey Ey Mmm Mmm Mmm Hey you You're the singer Why don't you …
B.I 내 하늘은 비 온 뒤 흐림 애꿎은 먹구름에 심술을 부림…
bazı bazı It's turning gray as I'm watching the sky All the thoughts…
Burning Heads Woke up this morning and I saw something strange I thought…
Charon Frail as ice I shall rise for the repent you've…
Christon Gray Your eyes are windows I see everything I remember God gave…
D.L. Jones I'm really glad that every one of you are here But…
Da' T.R.U.T.H. Bring it Back to me I wanna bring it back to you…
dai/M.Graveyard Tracing back the lines to find where you end I'm left…
Dave Matthews Band Oh, just sitting while she listens She says I don't need…
Frank Sinatra and Orchestra Devenir gris Devenir gris One man on a lonely platform One …
Fuel Gray, gray, gray... She watched her father topple Moth…
Ghost Georgie Yesterday I woke To a gray world How do you make a…
Gia Gallagher Cold and wet foreboding Dark November is unfolding Fire ca…
Gooding The storm is now upon you, the blade is at…
Gray I'm really glad that every one of you are here But…
Heartless Bastards Sometimes I feel a little bit gray in the autumn Gray…
Jean-Michel Basquiat Big Jimmy Baker and Marty Gray met at a teenage…
Jesse Daniel Track-marks on your arms, old tattoos and scars, when you…
Justin Nozuka Stars of gray Come take my soul away I lost my way Come…
Kristof well Ι'm not sure If I were sure From the very…
Large Print Gray skyline in the rear view mirror Gets dustier this time…
M.I.R.A. Drunk at Cannon Falls. I never made the call I had your…
m/n/m/l 每個孩子生來本善良 卻天生會說謊 每個殺手應該都心狠 卻有人不太冷 玫瑰雖然漂亮 也會把人刺傷 誰為了幾口飯 生了非分之…
Maxuu Since the circus came back to town, You were drunk, swimming…
Mesh StL Every time that you call my name It's a shame And every…
Mia Carruthers and the Retros I just want to know what's right, But all my…
Michael Asnot I came across your things In the drawer next to my…
Mob Psycho 100 Season 2 - ED / Ending Full (Ep. 1 7) Got tunnel vision Though I've been sippin this is hittin kin…
N.U.K. In the dark In my head Intuition's almost dead Led by images…
Neil Michael Hagerty There was a time when I could see The world through…
Neon Arcadia Tracing back the lines to find where you end I'm left…
P.E.M. 每個孩子生來本善良 卻天生會說謊 每個殺手應該都心狠 卻有人不太冷 玫瑰雖然漂亮 也會把人刺傷 誰為了幾口飯 生了非分之…
Pancho And The Wizards Why two eyes Is frontal or on the side Like the Sky…
Project 13-5 Screaming, calling, bleeding Anything to feed the fire And y…
Risking It All I′m back again at the start of it all. I can't…
Ron Thal I never thought that I would belong And I would get…
si-sounds On this perfect day As the sun goes down And the sky…
Siren Songs You changed the color of my world Those were the brightest…
slenderbodies Lately I've been feeling gray A little less human A little l…
The Dions The one who was more in love with me, than…
The Natural I remember the first time we held hands I think we…
Verbal Assault Not everything in life will be so easily divided Into black…
You Am I Drunk at Cannon Falls. I never made the call I had your…
meg I'm here to make you smile and make you stay. I sing…
We have lyrics for these tracks by One Be Lo:
Anybody [Intro One.Be.Lo] {*Beatboxing*} Aight, I'm ready How y'al…
Axis {*"Man it's a trip"*} {*"Man it's a trip"*} (turn) {*"Man it…
Can't Get Enough feat. Magestik Legend Beny Ahhhh spbshiiiiah Nino Brown ahh ha benny look at ya…
Deceptacons [Chorus] Some things change, some things stay the same Feeli…
Hip Hop Heaven Yo, yo, last night it was dead I feel asleep early,…
Oggie [OneBeLo] This is dedicated to the third George, aiyyo I mi…
Pigs When the Street Lights come on And the Darkness sets in…
Propaganda [Chorus] Who got the props? Who got the props? Magazines a…
The Future [Female] What are you thinkin about right now? [Verse 1 -…
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
More Genres
No Artists Found
More Artists
Load All
No Albums Found
More Albums
Load All
No Tracks Found
Genre not found
Artist not found
Album not found
Search results not found
Song not found
AJ
One of the best songs ever made!!!
D R
No doubt !
Erica N
The sample at the end is from the movie "A Bronx Tale". All around excellent song 🎷
Gabriel Esparza
Timeless music you can relate and relax too..
Patrick
I saw One Be Lo perform in San Jose in 2016. He did this joint and I flipped out. I was not expecting that at all. This is my favorite song by him.
Prometheus Peanut
the greatest fucking hip hop artist in the fucking universe.
telepathy90
Absolute fire
Steven Larkin
The second verse ends with "God and mistakes? Never!" Great upload, I love this song..one of my faves from Lo
lanny gang
Why can't this type of rap be on the radio.
Steven Larkin
That's awesome, I thought I analyzed Lo's samples/songs a lot but you definitely do your research. I'll have to check out that movie, judging by the sample it sounds pretty sweet! Thanks brother