1993–1997: Children of the Corn and Bad Boy record deal After Betha returned to
Harlem, he and his childhood friend
Cam'ron began rapping as a hobby under the names
Murda Mase and Killa Cam, briefly forming a group known as the
Children of the Corn ("corn" short for "corner") with fellow Harlem rappers
Big L,
Herb McGruff, Six Figga Digga and Bloodshed.
Damon Dash, a fellow Manhattan Center student, was the group's manager for a while. In 1996, Mase's sister Stason introduced him to Cudda Love, a road manager for
the Notorious B.I.G. Cudda took then 20-year-old Mase to
Atlanta, Georgia, where
Jermaine Dupri and
Sean Combs were attending a rap convention. Shortly after meeting and rapping for Puff Daddy at the Hard Rock Café, Mase signed a $250,000 deal with
Bad Boy Records. Within a week of signing to the label, Betha had his stage name shortened from Murda Mase to simply Mase to make him more marketable and was featured on and in the video for
112's "
Only You" with the Notorious B.I.G. He also appeared on numerous hit songs with other Bad Boy artists, including Puff Daddy's "
Can't Nobody Hold Me Down" and "
Been Around the World" and the Notorious B.I.G.'s "
Mo' Money, Mo' Problems", which reached No. 1 on the
Billboard Hot 100.
1997–1998: Harlem World Mase's first studio album,
Harlem World, debuted at No. 1 on the
Billboard Pop and R&B LP charts, selling over 270,000 copies in the U.S. during its first week of release. It has since achieved 4× Platinum status in the United States. The album spawned hit singles such as "
Feel So Good" and "
Lookin' at Me", which both reached No. 1 on the Rap Billboard charts, as well as "
What You Want", which peaked at No. 3 on both the Rap and R&B Billboard charts. On April 20, 1999, during an interview with
Funkmaster Flex on New York radio station
Hot 97, Mase announced his retirement from music to pursue a "calling from God". He claimed he was "leading people, friends, kids and others down a path to hell", stating that he left to find God in his heart and follow him. He said it was time for him to serve God in "his" way, saying rap was not real, and that he wanted to deal with reality and had become unhappy with what he did, no matter how much money it had made him. The same year, Mase enrolled as a freshman at
Clark Atlanta University, a historically black college, and began taking classes on August 19. Unlike other freshmen, Mase was permitted to live off campus and commute, but he is said to have downplayed his past as a rapper and stayed fairly low-key while on campus.
2004: Return to music After a five-year hiatus from music, during which he became an
ordained minister, Mase made his return to music with
Welcome Back It was later revealed the forms did not end Mase's contractual obligations to the record label, but rather allowed him to appear on songs with artists from different labels. He told MTV the only two labels he would consider signing with were Kanye West's
GOOD Music or
Drake's
OVO Sound. On October 18, 2013, Mase announced his next album would be titled
Now We Even. He also said his wish list for guest appearances would include
Jay-Z,
Sean Combs,
Beyoncé,
Drake,
2 Chainz,
Lauryn Hill,
Meek Mill,
Fabolous,
Ariana Grande,
Dipset,
Eric Bellinger,
Seal and
CeeLo Green. On November 24, 2017, Mase released "The Oracle", a diss track at friend-turned-rival
Cam'ron in response to the lyrical jabs Cam'ron aimed at him on his mixtape
The Program. Cam'ron and Mase started their sports talk show,
It Is What It Is, on February 27, 2023. The show premiered as an online-only production on Cam'ron's YouTube channel, "Come And Talk 2 Me". ==Legacy and influence==