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Young Bleed

American rapper (1974–2025) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Young Bleed
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Glenn Clifton Jr. (June 6, 1974 – November 1, 2025), also known as Young Bleed, was an American rapper from Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

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Background

Young Bleed started rhyming at the age of 9 at home in his native Baton Rouge, Louisiana. He was influenced by his mother, who read poetry to him from a young age, as well as by the music of Run-DMC.[1] By his teenage years, Bleed had begun recording his rhymes, selling hip-hop tapes independently to friends on the streets of his neighborhood. He was eventually signed to a local record label.[2] In 1995, he joined with four of his fellow Baton Rouge-based hip-hop artists – C-Loc, Max Minelli, J-Von, and J-Von's younger brother Chris Hamilton – to form the group Concentration Camp,[3] with which he was still affiliated as of 2022.[citation needed]

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Career

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Young Bleed's first glimpse of national fame was when his song with C-Loc, “How You Do That”, was remixed by Master P of No Limit Records. It was released on the 1997 soundtrack to Master P's film I'm Bout It which peaked at number one on Billboard’s R&B/Hip Hop album charts in mid-1998.[4] Then, with the help of Master P, he signed a deal with Priority Records to release his major label debut album My Balls & My Word in 1998.[5] The album peaked in at number ten on the Billboard 200 and number one on the Top R&B/Hip Hop album charts and also reached gold & later platinum status in the U.S. The follow-up My Own was released independently of No Limit on Priority, and although it charted on both the Billboard 200 and the Top R&B & Hip-Hop albums charts, it failed to make similar waves as its predecessor.[6]

While in the process of recording his third solo album with Priority, Vintage, Young Bleed was released from his contract and forced to go independent. He joined C-Bo's West Coast Mafia Records and released Rise Thru da Ranks from Earner Tugh Capo in 2005 and Once Upon a Time in Amedica[7] in 2007.

On September 23, 2008, Young Bleed released his fifth album, Off Tha Curb. It is a collaborative album with the up-and-coming rapper Freize.

Young Bleed was signed to a Strange Music[8] subsidiary called Strange Lane Records in 2011, and his first album with the label, Preserved, was released on October 11, 2011. On April 24, 2012, it was announced that Young Bleed had been dropped from Strange Music and signed to another label. In late 2012, he announced his newest album, All Amedican, and revealed a release date for October or November 2012. However, the album was pushed back several times. It was due to be released in 2013, but as of 2021, it has not been.

In 2016, Young Bleed announced that he was working on a new studio album. The album, Livin', was released on January 20, 2017.[9]

On March 26, 2018, Young Bleed made an announcement that he would be releasing a new album entitled Wut' Uh' Life. It was the second project to be released under his Trap Door Entertainment aegis.[10]

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Death

On October 25, 2025, Clifton Jr. appeared at the No Limit Records vs. Cash Money Records Verzuz battle in Las Vegas, Nevada, where he performed "How Ya Do Dat." Following the event, he attended an after-party, where he suffered a sudden brain aneurysm and collapsed. He was rushed to the hospital in critical condition and later died on November 1, 2025, at the age of 51.[11][12]

Discography

Studio albums

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Collaboration albums

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Mixtapes

  • Signs N' Wonders (Chopped Not Slopped) (Hosted by OG Ron C) - 2015[17]
  • Signs N' Wonders (Slowed & Reverb) (Hosted by DJ Michael Douglas) - 2015[18]
  • No Guidelines (Hosted by DJ Choice) - 2015[19]
  • Country Boy Livin' (Blendtape) (Hosted by DJ Choice) - 2015[20]

Singles

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References

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