
The hip-hop world has lost another legend.
On Thursday night, several outlets reported the death of 57-year-old Digital Underground memberĀ Shock G, birth nameĀ Gregory Jacobs. The details of his death have not been revealed; however, Digital Underground co-founderĀ Chopmaster J confirmed the tragedy in an Instagram post.
ā34 years ago almost to the day we had a wild idea: We can be a hip hop band and take on the world,ā he captioned an old photo of Shock G.Ā āThrough it all the dream became a reality and the reality became a nightmare for some. And now heās awaken from the fame. Long live Shock G, aka Humpty Hump.Ā And Rest In Peace my Brotha, Greg Jacobs!!!ā
Shock Gās father,Ā Edward Racker, also confirmed his sonās death to TMZ, stating the cause of death remains unclear.
After moving to the Bay Area in the 1980s, Shock G and Chopmaster J formed Digital Underground with Kenny-K. The group dropped their debut studio album,Ā Sex Packets, in 1990, and would go on to drop five more albums over the following 18 years, the most recent of which was 2008āsĀ ...Cuz a D.U. Party Donāt Stop!
Although Digital Underground had a number of hits throughout their decades-long run, their most commercially successful record was āThe Humpty Dance,ā which debuted in summer 1989. Shock G lead the single as his alter-ego āHumpty Hump,ā whoĀ was introduced in āDoowutchyalike.ā
In addition to providing vocals for Digital Underground, Shock G was also a prolific producer who worked with some of the biggest names in music: Dr. Dre, KRS-One, Bobby Brown, Money-B, and 2Pac. The latter artist appeared on Digital Undergroundās 1990 track āSame Song,ā which reportedly marked his first-ever verse on a major-label release.
You can read a few tribute messages for the artist below.