Nice & Smooth
Nice & Smooth was an American hip-hop duo from the Bronx, New York City, consisting of rappers Greg Nice (born Greg Mays) and Smooth B (born Darryl Barnes), who formed in the late 1980s and gained recognition for their laid-back, humorous lyricism blending party anthems with witty social commentary.[1][2] Active primarily during the golden age of hip-hop through the 1990s, the group signed initially with Fresh Records before moving to Def Jam's Rush Associated Labels imprint following its acquisition, releasing four studio albums that showcased their contrasting vocal styles—Greg Nice's high-pitched, playful non-sequiturs and Smooth B's smoother, more debonair delivery—often backed by funky, sample-heavy production.[2][3] Their debut self-titled album arrived in 1989, followed by the critically acclaimed Ain't a Damn Thing Changed in 1991, Jewel of the Nile in 1994, and Blazing Hot in 1997, with the latter marking their final full-length release as a duo.[1] The duo's breakthrough came with infectious singles like "Hip Hop Junkies" from their 1991 album, which sampled The Partridge Family and became a crossover hit emphasizing their fun-loving approach to rap, and "Sometimes I Rhyme Slow," a 1992 track that interpolated Tracy Chapman's "Fast Car" to deliver a poignant anti-violence message amid their signature party vibe.[2] Other notable collaborations included "DWYCK" with Gang Starr in 1992, a raw posse cut highlighting East Coast lyricism, and features on tracks like New Kids on the Block's "Dirty Dawg" in 1993, broadening their appeal beyond underground circles.[1][4] Though often underrated in mainstream narratives, Nice & Smooth embodied the essence of East Coast hip-hop's golden era with their emphasis on personality-driven emceeing, clever hooks, and Bronx-rooted authenticity, influencing subsequent acts with their balance of entertainment and substance while maintaining a cult following for their discography's replay value.[3][2] Post-duo, both members pursued solo careers and production work; as of November 2025, the duo continues to perform occasionally.[1][5]Members
Greg Nice
Gregory O. Mays, known professionally as Greg Nice, was born on May 30, 1967, in the Bronx, New York City.[6] As a native of the borough, he has remained actively involved in community hip hop events, contributing to the preservation and celebration of the genre's roots in the area.[7] Greg Nice began his music career in the mid-1980s as a human beatboxer, notably providing beatboxing for T La Rock's 1987 album Lyrical King (From The Boogie Down Bronx), including the track "Three Minutes of Beat Box."[8] In the late 1980s, he formed the hip hop duo Nice & Smooth alongside Smooth B, with their first single released in 1988, transitioning into a primary rapper role.[9] Within Nice & Smooth, Greg Nice was recognized for his energetic, high-pitched delivery, humorous rhymes, and signature ad-libs, which contributed significantly to the duo's charismatic stage presence and entertaining performances.[10] His lively style complemented the group's overall appeal, emphasizing fun and crowd engagement in their live shows.[2] Following the duo's activities, Greg Nice pursued a solo career in the late 1990s. His abbreviated solo efforts included the 2000 single "Show Me the Money" and the memorable track "Set It Off" produced by Salaam Remi, marking his continued presence in hip hop through guest appearances and independent releases.[11] As of 2025, Greg Nice continues to engage in hip-hop media, co-hosting the 'Salute the Sample' podcast with LL Cool J and Z-Trip, and participating in events like Hip-Hop Week MKE.[12]Smooth B
Darryl O. Barnes, professionally known as Smooth B, was born on August 3, 1965, in the Bronx, New York City.[13] Barnes entered the music industry in the late 1980s through connections in the R&B scene, initially working as a background rapper, dancer, and writer for Bobby Brown; he contributed rhymes to Brown's debut album King of Stage (1986) and follow-up Don't Be Cruel (1988), while also joining Brown's touring entourage.[14][15] In Nice & Smooth, formed with Greg Nice through a mutual friend in the late 1980s, Barnes served as the primary producer, DJ, and secondary rapper, shaping the duo's sound with sample-heavy beats that drew heavily from jazz, soul, and funk records to create a smooth, laid-back funk-infused hip-hop style.[3] Following the duo's active years, Barnes shifted toward behind-the-scenes production and development work, mentoring emerging artists on their music and sound to build sustainable careers, while maintaining a relatively low public profile compared to his partner.[16] He has occasionally reunited with Greg Nice for live performances, including at events like the Yo! MTV Raps 30th anniversary celebration.[17]History
Formation and early career
Nice & Smooth formed in the late 1980s when Greg Nice and Smooth B met in the Bronx through mutual connections in the local hip-hop scene, including an introduction via Lance Romance during Smooth B's time touring with Bobby Brown.[18] The duo bonded during a freestyle cypher where Greg Nice provided beatboxing and Smooth B delivered rhymes, leading them to collaborate as a way to honor Greg Nice's late creative partner, June Love, who had been killed.[18] Their shared interest in infusing humor and storytelling into production helped solidify their partnership amid the vibrant New York underground scene.[18] The pair released their debut single, "Dope on a Rope"/"Skill Trade," in 1988 on the independent Strange Family Records, which gained traction as an underground hit for its raw energy and clever wordplay.[19][20] This release marked their entry into recording, built on grassroots promotion like store-to-store visits to build buzz in the competitive New York market.[18] Early opportunities arose through collaborations, including a guest appearance on Big Daddy Kane's track "Pimpin' Ain't Easy" from his 1989 album It's a Big Daddy Thing, which highlighted their emerging presence in East Coast hip-hop circles.[21] The success of their initial single helped secure these connections, positioning them within the broader scene alongside established artists.[20] In 1989, Nice & Smooth issued their self-titled debut album on Fresh/Sleeping Bag Records, featuring tracks like "Funky for You" that showcased their playful, sample-driven sound rooted in old-school influences.[20][22] The album captured their Bronx origins and lighthearted approach but faced hurdles from the independent label's limited resources and the intense competition in New York's hip-hop landscape.[20] Despite modest promotion, it laid the groundwork for their distinctive East Coast identity.[23]Breakthrough and commercial success
In 1990, Nice & Smooth signed with Rush Associated Labels, a Def Jam subsidiary, gaining wider distribution through Columbia Records and marking a shift from their independent debut to major-label support.[2] This move positioned the duo for greater visibility during hip-hop's golden age, building on the underground buzz from their early single "Dope on a Rope." Their breakthrough came with the 1991 album Ain't a Damn Thing Changed, which showcased their signature blend of introspective lyrics and funky, self-produced beats, earning praise for tracks that balanced conscious themes with playful energy. The album's lead single, "Sometimes I Rhyme Slow," peaked at number 44 on the Billboard Hot 100, number 17 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, and number 1 on the Hot Rap Songs chart, using a slowed interpolation of Tracy Chapman's "Fast Car" to deliver an anti-drug message through contrasting rhyme speeds by Greg Nice and Smooth B.[24][25] Follow-up "Hip Hop Junkies" reached number 5 on the Hot Rap Songs chart, further highlighting their infectious hooks and East Coast flair amid the rise of gangsta rap. These hits propelled the duo's commercial rise, with the album itself charting at number 141 on the Billboard 200 and number 29 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart. Touring amplified their momentum, as they opened for major acts like Public Enemy on multi-artist bills in 1991, sharing stages with MC Lyte, Leaders of the New School, and Cypress Hill.[26] Media exposure followed, including live performances of "Hip Hop Junkies" on Yo! MTV Raps, which boosted their profile among national audiences. A key collaboration, their feature and production on Gang Starr's "DWYCK" from the 1992 album Daily Operation, underscored their growing influence within the Native Tongues-adjacent East Coast scene, blending fun, conscious rap with jazz-infused production.[27] By the early 1990s, Nice & Smooth had established themselves as innovators, earning recognition through rap award nominations and solidifying their role in a vibrant, lyric-driven hip-hop landscape.[28]Later years and solo pursuits
Nice & Smooth released their third album, Jewel of the Nile, on June 28, 1994, through Rush Associated Labels/Columbia Records. The album peaked at number 13 on the Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.[29] Its lead single, "Old to the New," reached number 6 on the Hot Rap Songs chart and incorporated smoother, more radio-friendly production elements compared to the duo's earlier raw hip-hop style. The duo's fourth and final studio album, IV: Blazing Hot, arrived on October 28, 1997, via Street Life Records/Scotti Bros. Records. It charted at number 75 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums, reflecting diminished commercial momentum amid evolving industry trends toward gangsta rap dominance.[30] Following this release, Nice & Smooth entered an indefinite hiatus after 1997, attributed to creative differences between members and challenges with label support during a shifting hip-hop landscape.[31] The group has since reunited sporadically for live appearances, including festival performances in the 2010s.[32] In their solo endeavors, Greg Nice pursued individual tracks and maintained ties to the Boot Camp Clik collective, collaborating frequently with Black Moon's Buckshot on projects like the 1990s East Coast rap scene.[33] Smooth B shifted focus to production, contributing beats for R&B artists including Bobby Brown.[34] The pair also appeared together on guest spots, such as the hip-hop remix of C+C Music Factory's "Do You Wanna Get Funky" in 1994, where Greg Nice provided verses.[35] As of 2025, Nice & Smooth continue sporadic live performances, including shows in New York City venues like the Apollo Theater in 2025 and Brooklyn events in 2022–2024, often revisiting their 1990s hits.[36] Their legacy endures in hip-hop retrospectives, highlighting their contributions to East Coast rap.Artistry
Musical style
Nice & Smooth's lyrical style featured witty, conversational rhymes that blended humor with sharp social commentary, setting them apart in the East Coast hip hop landscape.[2] Greg Nice delivered fast-paced, playful flows with a boisterous, unorthodox voice that added energy and quirkiness to their tracks, while Smooth B provided a contrasting laid-back, smooth delivery that grounded the duo's sound.[15] This dynamic interplay created a conversational rapport in their verses, often emphasizing clever wordplay over confrontational aggression.[3] Their themes drew heavily from everyday life in the Bronx, capturing urban struggles while promoting positivity and resilience.[2] Tracks like "Hip Hop Junkies" critiqued the addictive grip of hip hop culture itself, portraying it as an inescapable obsession amid broader social observations.[2] Similarly, "Sometimes I Rhyme Slow" exemplified their approach by mixing lighthearted introspection with warnings about street life's dangers.[2] Overall, their content highlighted charm and a feel-good vibe, reflecting Bronx hip hop's playful undercurrents without delving into overt grit.[37] In live performances, the duo incorporated beatboxing—rooted in Greg Nice's early career as a human beatbox for artists like T La Rock—to enhance their energetic sets, fostering an emphasis on fun and audience engagement over intensity.[14] Their shows often built on this foundation with interactive elements that encouraged crowd participation, aligning with their humorous, uplifting ethos.[2] Stylistically, Nice & Smooth evolved from the raw, playful energy of their 1989 debut to more polished introspection by 1991's Ain't a Damn Thing Changed, before achieving greater commercial refinement in releases from 1994 to 1997.[2] This progression maintained their core positivity while adapting to shifting hip hop trends.[37]Production and songwriting
Nice & Smooth operated as a primarily self-contained production unit on their early albums, handling much of the beat-making, sampling, and arrangement, though later works incorporated external producers. Both members contributed to constructing the instrumentals, drawing from funk and soul records to create looping grooves that evoked a live band energy despite being sample-based. This DIY approach emphasized rhythmic drive and melodic accessibility, as seen in tracks like "Funky for You," which samples Parliament's "Do That Stuff" for its infectious bassline and drum breaks to craft a party-ready hip-hop sound.[38] Their songwriting process was inherently collaborative, typically starting with a foundational beat to establish the groove, followed by the duo layering rhymes together in the studio. They focused on crafting hooks optimized for radio appeal and live energy, prioritizing rhythmic flow and humorous wordplay over dense lyrical complexity, which allowed their verses to complement the underlying beats seamlessly. Representative of this method, "How to Flow" builds on loops from the Dee Felice Trio's jazz-funk recordings, enabling playful, dexterous exchanges between Greg Nice's energetic delivery and Smooth B's smoother cadence.[39] Through their sampling choices—often pulling from recognizable soul and pop sources like Tracy Chapman's "Fast Car" for "Sometimes I Rhyme Slow"—Nice & Smooth innovated a "smooth" hip-hop subgenre that fused New York's gritty boom-bap with pop-inflected hooks and funky arrangements, creating an underground-to-mainstream bridge. This self-produced style, marked by clean drum programming and melodic samples, faced early challenges from limited resources that reinforced their resourceful ethos but evolved in later projects to incorporate guest elements for fuller textures. Their techniques left a lasting mark on 1990s production, influencing the hip-hop-soul wave and collaborators like DJ Premier via shared tracks such as Gang Starr's "DWYCK."[39][40]Discography
Studio albums
Nice & Smooth released four studio albums between 1989 and 1997, all primarily self-produced by the duo of Greg Nice and Smooth B, with increasing external collaborations on later efforts. The transition from independent label Fresh Records to major distributor Rush/Columbia allowed for greater production polish and commercial push, though the final shift to Street Life/Scotti Bros. coincided with a more experimental sound that limited mainstream exposure. While exact sales figures are scarce, the albums collectively sold modestly, with the second achieving the highest visibility through radio play from hits like "Hip Hop Junkies." Their debut album, Nice & Smooth (1989, Fresh Records), consisted of 12 tracks and peaked at #52 on the US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart. This raw effort was praised for its energetic delivery and humorous rhymes but critiqued for uneven production that occasionally undermined the duo's charismatic interplay.[41][22][20][42] The follow-up, Ain't a Damn Thing Changed (1991, Rush/Columbia), expanded to 12 tracks and marked their commercial breakthrough, reaching #141 on the Billboard 200 and #29 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart. Lauded for its mature songwriting and seamless blend of humor with introspective themes, the album showcased refined self-production that elevated tracks like "Sometimes I Rhyme Slow."[43][44][2] Jewel of the Nile (1994, Rush/Columbia) featured 11 tracks and climbed to #66 on the Billboard 200 and #13 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart. More polished than prior releases, it received mixed reviews for leaning into pop-infused hooks and guest features, though praised for its vibrant energy on cuts like "Let the Rhythm Flow." The label's major backing influenced a smoother, radio-friendly aesthetic compared to the indie grit of their debut.[45][46][47] The final album, IV: Blazing Hot (1997, Street Life/Scotti Bros.), included 12 tracks and peaked at #75 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart. Noted for its experimental fusion of jazz samples and live instrumentation alongside producers like DJ Premier, it was overlooked commercially but appreciated for pushing the duo's creative boundaries beyond earlier formulaic approaches. Hit singles such as "Blazing Hot" highlighted their enduring chemistry.[48][49]Singles
Nice & Smooth released several singles as lead artists across their career, primarily on 12-inch vinyl formats through labels like Fresh Records and Rush Associated Labels, often featuring extended versions, remixes, and B-sides to support radio and club play. These releases highlighted the duo's blend of humorous lyricism and production, with many achieving notable positions on Billboard's Hot Rap Singles and Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs charts during the early 1990s golden age of hip-hop.[50] Their debut single, "Funky for You," issued in 1990 on Fresh Records, appeared as a 12-inch vinyl release with a remix vocal version and dub mix, backed by tracks like "No Delayin'," and served as the lead promotion for their self-titled album without charting on major Billboard lists but gaining traction in underground hip-hop circles.[51][52] The duo's breakthrough came with singles from their 1991 album Ain't a Damn Thing Changed. "Sometimes I Rhyme Slow" reached number 44 on the Billboard Hot 100, number 17 on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, and number 1 on Hot Rap Singles, released as a 12-inch vinyl single featuring the Stay Faithful Remix and instrumental versions.[53][54] "Hip Hop Junkies," featuring Pure Blend, peaked at number 38 on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and number 5 on Hot Rap Singles, available on 12-inch vinyl with extended mixes.[55][56] "How to Flow" followed, charting at number 23 on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and number 5 on Hot Rap Singles, also issued as a 12-inch promotional single tied to the Strictly Business soundtrack.[55][57] Later singles included "Old to the New" from 1994's Jewel of the Nile, which hit number 59 on the Billboard Hot 100, number 43 on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, and number 6 on Hot Rap Singles, released on 12-inch vinyl with remixes produced by the duo.[58][59] "Blazing Hot," a 1997 limited-release single from their final album IV: Blazing Hot on Street Life Records, appeared on 12-inch vinyl paired with "Boogie Down Bronx/BK Connection" and reached number 76 on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and number 21 on Hot Rap Singles, reflecting a more restrained commercial push in their later years.[30]| Single Title | Year | Album | Hot 100 Peak | R&B Peak | Rap Peak | Format Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| "Funky for You" | 1990 | Nice & Smooth | — | — | — | 12-inch vinyl; includes remix vocal and dub versions, B-side "No Delayin'"[51] |
| "Sometimes I Rhyme Slow" | 1991 | Ain't a Damn Thing Changed | 44 | 17 | 1 | 12-inch vinyl; Stay Faithful Remix and instrumental[53][54] |
| "Hip Hop Junkies" | 1991 | Ain't a Damn Thing Changed | — | 38 | 5 | 12-inch vinyl; extended mix featuring Pure Blend[55] |
| "How to Flow" | 1991 | Ain't a Damn Thing Changed | — | 23 | 5 | 12-inch promotional vinyl; soundtrack tie-in[55] |
| "Old to the New" | 1994 | Jewel of the Nile | 59 | 43 | 6 | 12-inch vinyl; self-produced remixes[58][59] |
| "Blazing Hot" | 1997 | IV: Blazing Hot | — | 76 | 21 | 12-inch vinyl; limited release, paired with album track |