G-Unit After his release from prison on drug charges, the trio formed the group,
G-Unit, and began working on music together. The first underground mixtape featuring Bernard (who now went under the stage name Tony Yayo), was
134 All Starz, released in late 2000, referencing the street he grew up on. However, G-Unit went on a hiatus after 50 Cent was shot nine times and released from
Columbia Records. Two years later, G-Unit released a number of mixtapes, including 2002's
50 Cent Is the Future,
No Mercy, No Fear, and ''
God's Plan''. While Yayo was incarcerated in 2003, his comrade 50 Cent was granted his own record label,
G-Unit Records after the success of his debut studio album ''
Get Rich or Die Tryin''', which was released that February; Yayo appears on the album's track, "Like My Style". 50 immediately signed G-Unit members Yayo and Lloyd Banks to the label, and eventually
Young Buck was signed and added to the group as the official fourth member; Buck was later retracted as Yayo's temporary replacement due to his incarceration. From 2003 to 2010, most of G-Unit's artists (including Yayo) were distributed by
Interscope Records. G-Unit released their debut studio album,
Beg for Mercy, on November 14, 2003. It went on to sell over four million copies in the United States alone. The album was released while Yayo was still finishing a prison sentence on various charges, but he was still featured on the album and his face was also shown on the album cover. G-Unit's sophomore and final album,
T.O.S: Terminate on Sight, was released on July 31, 2008, and went on to sell 102,000 copies in its first week. Due to issues between Yayo, 50 and Young Buck, G-Unit went under in 2014, but later reunited as a quintet with the original four members and a newly added
Kidd Kidd. They only released two EPs,
The Beauty of Independence (2014), and
The Beast Is G Unit (2015), before 50 Cent publicly dissolved the group again in 2022.
Solo career His career as a rapper was halted by his ongoing jail sentence from early 2003 until mid-2004. With Yayo incarcerated, G-Unit and close friend
Eminem began a campaign called "Free Yayo". Yayo said that he was unaware of the attention the campaign was getting until he saw Eminem wearing a "Free Yayo" shirt on stage at the
2003 Grammy Awards, where he performed his
8 Mile theme song, "
Lose Yourself". Though his appearances on numerous mixtapes throughout his jail time announced his return on a street level, it was not until the release of
Lloyd Banks' "Ain't No Click" and its parent album,
The Hunger for More (2004), which featured Yayo that the latter received widespread recognition. His solo career hype was followed up by his debut single, "
So Seductive" featuring 50 Cent, On August 30, 2005, Tony Yayo released his debut studio album,
Thoughts of a Predicate Felon, debuting at number two on the
Billboard 200 behind
Kanye West's
Late Registration. He also appeared on the track, "Fake Love", which made its way to the
soundtrack for 50 Cent's acting debut,
Get Rich or Die Tryin', which released that November. In 2007, Tony Yayo confirmed that work was in progress for his second studio album. In 2009, Yayo and Lloyd Banks were released from Interscope due to disagreements between the two members, 50 Cent and their former label's co-founder,
Jimmy Iovine. On May 20, 2010, Yayo released the single, "
Pass the Patron", once again featuring 50 Cent. The single's release was distributed by G-Unit Records and
EMI Music Distribution (which is now known today as
Virgin Music). On March 2, 2011, Yayo released another single called "
Haters". The song features 50 Cent,
Shawty Lo and
Roscoe Dash. The single was released via the This Is 50 website after its premiere on
Hot 97 through radio DJ
Funkmaster Flex. The single rapidly started to gain success on the urban radio charts and soon debuted on the
Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop song chart at number one-hundred-twelve. After a twelve year hiatus, Yayo released his sophomore solo album and his first following his disaffiliation from 50 Cent and G-Unit,
The Loyal, on February 10, 2023, exclusively on
Apple Music, but it was later released on other competing streaming services four days later on
Valentine's Day. ==Legal issues==