Coolio, Rapper behind Hit 'Gangsta's Paradise,' Dies at 59

Coolio, shown here in 2015, has died age 59 Brad Barket GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File
Coolio, shown here in 2015, has died age 59 Brad Barket GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File
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Coolio, Rapper behind Hit 'Gangsta's Paradise,' Dies at 59

Coolio, shown here in 2015, has died age 59 Brad Barket GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File
Coolio, shown here in 2015, has died age 59 Brad Barket GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP/File

Coolio, the US rapper best known for the chart-topping 1995 song "Gangsta's Paradise," has died, his manager said Wednesday. He was 59 years old.

The Grammy-winning musician passed away in Los Angeles. No cause of death was immediately provided.

Coolio's friend and long-standing manager Jarez Posey confirmed the news to AFP without providing additional details.

Posey told celebrity news website TMZ that Coolio was found unresponsive in the bathroom of a friend's house on Wednesday afternoon.

Born Artis Leon Ivey Jr on August 1, 1963 in Pennsylvania, the artist spent most of his life in Compton, California, attending community college and working jobs including airport security before finding success in rap.

Coolio began his music career in California in the late 1980s, digging roots in the Los Angeles scene by 1994 when he signed to Tommy Boy Records.

His single "Fantastic Voyage" off his debut studio album "It Takes a Thief" charted as high as three on the Billboard Hot 100.

But it was "Gangsta's Paradise" the following year that would make Coolio a household name.

The rapper soared to global fame in 1995 when he released the song for the soundtrack of the film "Dangerous Minds" that starred Michelle Pfeiffer.

It was the year's top single, and scored Coolio a Grammy for best rap solo performance for the track at the subsequent awards gala.

With a hook lifted from Stevie Wonder's 1976 track "Pastime Paradise" off of that artist's seminal "Songs In The Key of Life," the hit sold millions of copies worldwide, topping pop charts in 16 countries.

"Heartbroken to hear of the passing of the gifted artist @coolio," wrote Pfeiffer on social media. "A life cut entirely too short."

"30 years later I still get chills when I hear the song."

- 'It wrote me' -
In an interview more than a decade later with Britain's "The Voice," Coolio said he had "no clue" that the song would go on to endure for so many years.

"I didn't write Gangsta's Paradise -- it wrote me," he said. "It was its own entity, out there in the spirit world, trying to find its way to the world, and it chose me as the vessel to come through."

"I thought it was going to be a hood record; I never thought it would cross over the way that it did -- to all ages, races, genres, countries and generations."

He never recreated the success of his signature track but later put out hits including "1, 2, 3, 4 (Sumpin' New)" and "Too Hot."

An enduring star of gangsta rap, Coolio's high-spirited music videos brought him an increased following. He later pursued an acting career, including nabbing a part in 1997's "Batman and Robin" and making a number of television cameos including on the hit 1990s show "The Nanny."

The social media reaction to the rapper's death was one of shock, with 1990s rapper Vanilla Ice tweeting: "I'm freaking out I just heard my good friend Coolio passed away."

"Peaceful Journey Brother. #Coolio," wrote Questlove.



24-Hour Live Coverage of Sweden´s Epic Moose Migration Draws to a Close

This undated photo, issued by SVT, shows Moose in Junsele, Sweden during preparations for the livestream ‘The Great Moose Migration’ to document the annual Moose migration near Kullberg in northern Sweden. (SVT via AP)
This undated photo, issued by SVT, shows Moose in Junsele, Sweden during preparations for the livestream ‘The Great Moose Migration’ to document the annual Moose migration near Kullberg in northern Sweden. (SVT via AP)
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24-Hour Live Coverage of Sweden´s Epic Moose Migration Draws to a Close

This undated photo, issued by SVT, shows Moose in Junsele, Sweden during preparations for the livestream ‘The Great Moose Migration’ to document the annual Moose migration near Kullberg in northern Sweden. (SVT via AP)
This undated photo, issued by SVT, shows Moose in Junsele, Sweden during preparations for the livestream ‘The Great Moose Migration’ to document the annual Moose migration near Kullberg in northern Sweden. (SVT via AP)

The seventh season of Swedish slow TV hit "The Great Moose Migration" will end Sunday night after 20 days of 24-hour live coverage.
The show, called " Den stora älgvandringen " in Swedish, began in 2019 with nearly a million people watching. In 2024, the production hit 9 million viewers on SVT Play, the streaming platform for national broadcaster SVT.

By midmorning Sunday, the livestream´s remote cameras captured 70 moose swimming across the Ångerman River, some 300 kilometers (187 miles) northwest of Stockholm, in the annual spring migration toward summer grazing pastures.
The livestream will end at 10 p.m. local time (2000 GMT) Sunday. It kicked off April 15, a week ahead of schedule due to warm weather and early moose movement.
Johan Erhag, SVT´s project manager for "The Great Moose Migration," said this year's crew will have produced 478 hours of footage - "which we are very satisfied with," he wrote in an email to The Associated Press Saturday evening.
Figures for this year's audience were not immediately available.
"The Great Moose Migration" is part of a trend that began in 2009 with Norwegian public broadcaster NRK´s minute-by-minute airing of a seven-hour train trip across the southern part of the country.
The slow TV style of programing has spread, with productions in the United Kingdom, China and elsewhere. The central Dutch city of Utrecht, for example, installed a " fish doorbell " on a river lock that lets livestream viewers alert authorities to fish being held up as they migrate to spawning grounds.