DJ Clark Kent, the rap producer and hip-hop elder statesman known as âGodâs Favorite DJ,â has died. According to a statement posted to his official Instagram account, Kent had âquietly and valiantly fought a three year battle with Colon Cancer,â before dying yesterday evening (October 24) âsurrounded by his devoted wife Kesha, daughter Kabriah and son Antonio.â He was 58 years old.
Born Rodolfo Franklin, in Panama, DJ Clark Kent first found notoriety in late 1980s New York as a DJ for the Brooklyn rapper Dana Dane. In 1989, he remixed âSpread My Wings,â by the new jack swing group Troop, but his big break would not come until six years later, when he produced âPlayerâs Anthem,â by Junior M.A.F.I.A., from their 1995 album Conspiracy. The track featured both the Notorious B.I.G. and, in her first ever appearance on record, Lilâ Kim, then a member of the group.
The following year, Kent produced three songs on Jay-Zâs landmark debut album, Reasonable Doubt: âCashmere Thoughts,â âComing of Age,â and âBrooklynâs Finest,â the latter featuring the Notorious B.I.G. (Itâs also said that it was Kent who introduced Jay-Z to Roc-A-Fella co-founder Dame Dash.) Kent continued his production work with the Notorious B.I.G.âs âSkyâs the Limit,â and he scored the biggest hit of his career with Mariah Careyâs âLoverboy,â which peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100. His most recent, as a producer, came in 2018, when he worked on Kanye West and Lil Pumpâs âI Love It.â
Kent is the subject of a forthcoming documentary directed by New York radio personality Angie Martinez. Following the news of his death, DJ Clark Kent has been memorialized by the likes of Tyler, the Creator, Raekwon, DJ Premier, Meek Mill, Swizz Beatz, and Questlove, who wrote, âClark will forever be the culture.â