Jay-Z’s Former Partner Kareem ‘Biggs’ Burke Plots An Empire Of His Own
Kareem Burke is sitting in the sky lobby of the W Hotel in Times Square, and heβs not happy with his Diet Coke. βThis is disgusting,β he declares. βSuper-flat. Itβs β¦ syrupy.β
Taste has always been a calling card for Burke, better known as βBiggs.β Back in the mid-1990s, he cofounded Roc-A-Fella Records and the Rocawear clothing line with business partners Jay-Z and Damon Dash; Iconix eventually boughtΒ the latter brand for $204 million. Though Burke was known as the βsilent partnerβ of the trio, heβs now stepping out on his own after a series of twists and turns in his business career and personal life.
Last November, Burke collaborated with Nike to launch a limited-edition Roc-A-Fella Air Force 1 for the Nike sneakerβs 35th anniversary. Heβs also working on several clothing lines: denim brand Fourth of November, as well as ReDo96 (formerly Roc96) and Reasonable Doubt, the latter two inspired by Roc-A-Fella and Jay-Zβs debut album on the label. Heβs even involved in a caffeinated chocolate snack called BEON.
βEverybody signed off, and they were all cool with it,β Burke explains. βRoc-A-Fella as a label β¦ it’s really not anything thatβs active. So anything that’s being done outside that creates energy is beneficial for the label anyway.β
One of Burkeβs comrades in Best Out was Dash, then working as a manager for a handful of up-and-coming hip-hop acts. Brooklyn-based DJ Clark Kent suggested Dash link up with Jay-Z, whoβd given up rapping to focus on the more lucrative opportunities available in the drug trade at the time. After the introduction was made, Dash brought in Burke, figuring they could take the marketing savvy theyβd used with Best Out and apply it to music. The three agreed to launch Roc-A-Fella together.
As Jay-Zβs recording career took off with Reasonable Doubt in 1996, the Roc-A-Fella cofounders began to look beyond music, launching their Rocawear clothing line after they couldnβt get Iceberg, one of their favorite brands, to offer an endorsement deal. Rocawear gave Biggs his official introduction to the fashion industry, teaching him everything from how to build relationships with vendors to the impact of the Chinese New Year on production calendars.
βI would identify Biggs as a gentleman whose versatility extends from the gutter to the boardroom, with integrity and morals,β says Branson βBβ Belchie, a fellow Harlem entrepreneur, praising Burkeβs βpulse for sharing his success with the demographic from which he came.β
Indeed, while Jay-Z and Dash occupied most of the ever-growing spotlight on Roc-A-Fella, Burke mostly kept quietβand in tune with the world his business partners were quickly leaving behind. βI did the boardroom meetings with [Jay-Z],β explains entertainment attorney Bernie Resnick. βBut on the streets, it was Kareem who was an important liaison to the artists.β To some observers, heΒ put a little too much effort into telegraphing his underworld credentials. Says music lawyer Donald David: βHe tried to come across as someone who was dangerous.β
And yet, Burke also made a name for himself as a big-hearted and supportive executive. Resnick remembers that, when one of his clients had a run-in-with the lawβresulting in a crucial hearing taking place in PhiladelphiaβBurke came all the way down from New York to be there for the court date as an expression of solidarity (βThat was not necessary, but indicative of the kind of guy that he is,β says Resnick).
The Roc-A-Fella run came to an end in 2004, when Jay-Z accepted an offer to run Def Jam, a much larger label within the Universal family; in 2008, after Jay-Z bought out Burke and Dash’s Rocawear stakes, IconixΒ purchased the brand, by which point each member of the trio was pursing his own projects. After Burkeβs 2012 incarceration and subsequent release, the three were able to come to an understanding that allowed Burke to use theΒ names of companies and albums they’d launched together.
But what would motivate Jay-Z, who drives a notoriously hard bargain, to make such concessions? βMe and Jay have a great relationship,β says Burke, who adds that heβs on good terms with Dash as well. βWe’re all 40-plus. Everybody’s all living life and doing great. I know there’s not any problems.β
Itβs also worth noting that Jay-Z has lately been speaking out about the perils of mass incarceration in America. Heβs putting his resourcesΒ where his mouth is, from funding projects like the documentary Time: The Kalief Browder Story to supporting friends including Burke and fellow Roc-A-Fella alum Emory Jones in the wake of prison stints. With Jay-Z now worth $900 million by our last count, thereβs plenty to go around. Says Burke: βMore than enough.β
And so, Burke was able to use the Reasonable Doubt name to roll out his clothing brand for the albumβs 20th anniversary, straddling the line from music merch to something with a deeper fashion world footprint. Similarly, he had access to the Roc-A-Fella name when Nike came calling for last yearβs Air Force 1 collaboration. The white-on-white low-top was the bestseller of five limited edition versions created by Burke, rapper Travis Scott, Off-White founder Virgil Abloh and designer Don C, crashing Nikeβs app twice in one day.
Up next: BurkeΒ is planning to tell more of his storyβas well as the story of Roc-A-Fellaβin a documentary of his own. He says his cofounders will βplay a part.β
βAt the end of the day, everybodyβs brothers,β Burke explains. βWe built something that was huge, right? And that’s still living on today. And it’s probably going to live on forever.β
Source : Forbes