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Big Smo

Big Smo
Birth name John Lee Smith
Also known as Big Smo
Born (1976-02-14) February 14, 1976 (age 41)
San Diego, California, U.S.
Origin Shelbyville, Tennessee, U.S.
Genres Country rap
Occupation(s) Singer, rapper, songwriter, producer, film director
Instruments Vocals
Years active 1999–present
Labels Yayoda, Smo & Money, Elektra Nashville, Warner Bros.
Website www.therealbigsmo.com

John Lee Smith (born February 14, 1976), known by his stage name Big Smo, is an American country rap musician, songwriter, producer, and film director. After several independent and minor label releases, Smo's major label debut studio album, Kuntry Livin', was released in 2014 and charted on three Billboard charts. He is the subject of an eponymous reality television series on A&E that began in 2014.

John Lee Smith was born in San Diego, California, to mother Mary Jane Smith (née Barber) and father Carl Avery Smith. His father, who was a veteran of the U.S. Navy, died in 2007. His mother is his business manager.

Smith started his musical endeavors in 1999, but did not release an album for three years. He released Kuntry Kitchen with Yayoda Records in 2002. His next two releases were released on Smo & Money Records, 2003's The Audio Biography and 2004's Monument Society. Then, he released another album with Yayoda in 2007 entitled The True South. His last self-released album was entitled American Made, released in 2010. Also in 2010, his homemade music video "Kickin' It in Tennessee" went viral, garnering over five million views on YouTube. He released two EPs with Warner Bros. Records that were 2012's Grass Roots and 2013's Backwoods Whiskey. Smith's major-label debut came out in 2014, entitled Kuntry Livin'.

According to Matt Bjorke of Roughstock, Big Smo is one of the foremost grassroots artists in a style known as rural rap or hick-hop, "which blends rural, Country themes and melodies with some rap elements (production and vocal delivery)".AllMusic's Steve Legget commented that Big Smo "combines country themes and attitudes with rap and hip-hop in a style that prompted one reviewer to note 'If Kid Rock and Run–D.M.C. had a love child, he would be named Big Smo,' although combining Hank Williams, Jr. with Nappy Roots might strike a bit closer."Rolling Stone described Big Smo as sounding like "If Run–D.M.C.'s 'Walk This Way' stomped out of Queens and ended up in the rural south." The music on Kuntry Livin' was described as spinning "rap rhymes about working-class values over hard-rock riffs."


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