Comprised of friends Lil’ Fame (Jamal Grinnage) and Billy Danze (Eric Murray), Mash Out Posse started as a Brownsville, Brooklyn gang, however soon changed when the pair learnt to express themselves through rap. The duo’s first release came with a contribution to the 1992 rap compilation “The Hill That’s Real” where the M.O.P. debuted the single “How About Some Hardcore?”. The song later appeared on the soundtrack for the film “House Party 3” and became popular in the underground scene for their abrasive lyrical delivery and hardcore subject matter.
The single’s success led to M.O.P. debut album “To the Death” being released in 1994 on Select Records with a low-budget video directed by the then-unheard-of Hype Williams. With a lack of commercial or critical success the pair changed labels moving to Relativity Records for their sophomore full-length “Firing Squad” released in 1996. The album was produced by DJ Premier and Lil’ Fame and earned slightly more popular appeal than the old material. M.O.P. subsequently released the EP “Handle Ur Bizness” and the album “First Family 4 Life” with notable guest appearances from Guru of Gang Starr and Jay-Z.
In 2000 the rap duo earned their first taste of mainstream success with the release of their fourth studio album “Warriorz” on Loud Records. The album’s lead single “Ante Up” received regular radio airplay in the U.S., peaked at No. 7 in the UK chart and helped catapult the album to No. 25 on the Billboard 200. The year after in 2011 a remix of “Ante Up” was made featuring Busta Rhymes and Remy Ma and M.O.P. collaborated with the pop group LFO on a song titled “Life is Good”, cementing the duo’s mainstream stay.
Following the collapse of their label Loud Records in 2002, M.O.P. moved to Roc-A-Fella after some time adrift and appeared on Jay-Z’s “The Blueprint 2: The Gift & the Curse”. The pair’s planned album release on the label was shelved and M.O.P. parted ways with Roc-A-Fella and took up tenure with G-Unit Records in 2005. Lil’ Fame and Billy Danze then appeared on the 50 Cent film soundtrack “Get Rich or Die Tryin’”, released a compilation entitled “M.O.P. Salutes the St. Marxmen”, and in 2006 released their long-awaited full-length “Ghetto Warfare”
In 2008 the group left G-Unit Records and released their fifth studio album “Foundation” on E1 Records featuring the singles “Blow the Horns” feat Busta Rhymes and “Street Life”. Subsequently M.O.P. have released the album “Sparta” alongside production team Snowgoons and the EP “Street Certified”.
Pretty much anybody who knows their hip hop will know the Brooklyn duo Mash Out Posse, even if it’s true that they know them better by the acronym that’s popularly appeared on the cover of their records, M.O.P.; over the course of a career that’s now lasted more than two decades, Lil’ Fame and Billy Danze have become synonymous with a kind of aggressive delivery and hard style of beats that has had them a staple of hip hop club nights the world over, especially when it comes to their 2000 smash single ‘Ante Up’, which was a hit both in its own right and in terms of its remixed version, which saw a guest spot from none other than Busta Rhymes. They’ve also worked with the likes of the legendary DJ Premier, Wu-Tang Clan, Fat Joe and Jay Z across their career, and remain a going concern today, retaining a sizable cult fanbase and playing intimate club shows in both the U.S. and Europe. In recent years, they’ve remained in the spotlight, with Lil’ Fame continuing to work with Wu-Tang and having also been involved in a high-profile lawsuit with WWE. They’ve promised a follow-up to 2011’s Sparta soon, so look out for new tour dates when it drops.