Heavy D
Jamaican-born Heavy D (b. Dwight Myers) sports a 260-pound frame but can move and dance with
agility and verve. He wisely chose sensitivity, rather than obesity or verbosity, as his
framework, and many of his lyrics emphasize his search for a mate of similar qualities. He's
also done good cover songs and penned cultural awareness tunes and tributes to black women.Heavy
D. has managed perhaps the ultimate balancing act. He's remained a positive figure with close
ties to his mother and is arguably the most admired male rap figure among African-American
feminists. At the same time he's been willing to take chances musically, never embracing hardcore
gangsta-rap, but yet able to include snatches of pop, R&B, reggae and funk into his music without
being assaulted with cries of sellout. He's even survived the tragic death of longtime friend and
original Boyz member Troy Dixon aka T-Roy in 1990. During the early '90s, Heavy D began to expand
his business opportunities, launching not only an acting career, but also beginning to develop his
skills as a music industry mogul; by 1996, he had become one of the presidents of Uptown Records.
He didn't abandon his recording career, even though his albums weren't quite as popular as they
were in the late '80s. Both 1992's Blues Funk and 1994's Nuttin' But Love were moderate hits,
with both albums reaching gold status. Even though his success was consistent, it wasn't splashy,
so it came as a bit of a surprise that his sixth album Waterbed Hev debuted in the Top 10 upon
its spring 1997 release. Such a placing confirmed that Heavy D was one of the few hip-hop stars
from the late '80s that neither burned out or faded away -- he has become one of the few rap artists
able to carve out a lasting career. His seventh album Heavy was released in 1999.
~ Ron Wynn, All Music Guide