Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Chris Lighty

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Website
  
Home - Violator

Siblings
  
David Lighty

Movies
  
Get Rich or Die Tryin'

Role
  
Music executive

Name
  
Chris Lighty




Born
  
May 8, 1968 (
1968-05-08
)
The Bronx, New York City, New York, U.S.

Occupation
  
Music industry executive

Died
  
August 30, 2012, Riverdale, New York City, New York, United States

Spouse
  
Veronica Lighty (m. 2003–2012)

Children
  
Tiffany Lighty, Deja Lighty

Similar People
  
Lyor Cohen, 50 Cent, Q‑Tip, Shakir Stewart, Phife Dawg

Intro chris lighty documentary


Darrel Steven "Chris" Lighty (May 8, 1968 – August 30, 2012) was an American music industry executive. He co-founded Violator, a record label, management and marketing company, which represented hip hop artists such as Nas, Ja Rule, Mobb Deep, Missy Elliott, L.L. Cool J, Uncle Murda, and 50 Cent as well as Mariah Carey. He served as Sean "Diddy" Combs' manager. The New York Times called him "one of the most powerful figures in the hip-hop business."

Contents

Chris Lighty Chris Lighty

Chris lighty dead at 44 possible suicide


Early life

Chris Lighty A Look Back On The Life Of Chris Lighty The Source

Darrel Steven Lighty was born in the Bronx, New York City, New York and raised in the Bronx River Housing Projects. His mother was single. He had five siblings, including a brother, Dave.

Chris Lighty The Podcast Mogul Tells the Story of Music Exec Chris Lighty

Chris Lighty did not attend college, and he stated that he "got [his] MBA in hell," in reference to growing up on the streets of a dangerous neighborhood.

Career

Chris Lighty The Mysterious Death of HipHop Manager Power Broker Chris Lighty

Lighty began working in the music industry by carrying vinyl record crates for DJ Red Alert. Later, Russell Simmons' company, Rush Artist Management, hired him. Lighty founded a management company in the early 1990s called Violator; the company is named after the gang he belonged to in the Bronx. Violator was responsible for getting L.L. Cool J his first Gap commercial in 1997. Lighty developed endorsements for Sprite with A Tribe Called Quest, AT&T with Diggy Simmons, and for Mountain Dew with Busta Rhymes.

Chris Lighty RIP Chris Lighty

In 2002, Lighty and a DJ from Chicago, DJ Scrap Dirty, created The Violator Allstar DJs. "We wanted to build a situation for the DJ’s who might need more muscle," Lighty remarked. The same year he appeared in the Electronic Arts video game "Def Jam: Fight For NY as the character Baby Chris.

Chris Lighty He Was an Executive at Def Jam 15 Ways Chris Lighty Changed Hip

Lighty worked for Def Jam, Jive and Loud. He was chief executive of the Brand Asset Group. In 2004, Lighty brokered the largest brand endorsement deal in hip hop to date. He was the architect of what turned out to be one of the most lucrative deals in hip hop history: rapper 50 Cent’s Vitamin Water pact. When Coca-Cola paid $4.1 billion for Vitamin Water's company Glaceau three years later, 50 Cent received $100 million, and Lighty received an undisclosed sum.

Chris Lighty Chris Lighty helped build hip hop industry into billiondollar

In 2011, Lighty launched the website pleaselistentomydemo.com, which allowed new artists to submit their music online and have top music executives listen to it for a US$10 fee. (The site is no longer active.)

Chris Lighty RIP HipHop Executive Chris Lighty Pitchfork

In 2011, Violator merged with another company, Primary Wave; the two companies merged to form Primary Violator.

Personal life

Lighty was married, although he and his wife Veronica were in divorce proceedings. At the time of his death, he had a daughter (age 17) and son (age 5).

He had reportedly been under scrutiny for income tax issues for amounts up to US$5 million, but this was resolved with the sale of a Manhattan property of his; other sums were also owed.

Death

On August 30, 2012, Lighty was found dead on the patio of his South Riverdale, Bronx apartment from an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head. The New York Daily News reported that "a gun shot was heard and Lighty was found lying face-up with a 9mm pistol next to his body". Forbes magazine reported that he had been involved in an argument with his wife Veronica not too long before his body was discovered.

Lighty's brother stated that he did not believe that the death was a suicide and that the family would be staging its own private independent investigation and would share any solid findings with the public. Rapper 50 Cent, a client and close friend of Chris, also questioned the suicide claim; he hired a team to investigate the details of the incident, at the request of Lighty's mother. Friend and rapper Papoose questions Lighty's death as suicide in the song "Obituary 2012".

References

Chris Lighty Wikipedia