DJ Kay Slay, Prolific New York Hip-Hop Mainstay, Dies at 55

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DJ Kay Slay, Prolific New York Hip-Hop Mainstay, Dies at 55

The DJ and radio executive worked with Nas, Kendrick Lamar, Three 6 Mafia, and more

DJ Kay Slay

Keith Grayson aka DJ Kay Slay, September 2016 (Johnny Nunez/WireImage)

DJ Kay Slay, the New York disc jockey and record executive, died yesterday (April 17), a representative confirmsed to Pitchfork. Hot 97, where Kay Slay hosted a radio show called The Drama Hour, also shared the news, following a statement from the family reported by the New York Post. No cause of death was given. DJ Kay Slay was 55 years old, according to The Post and Hot 97.

In the months before his death, Kay Slay had a serious bout of COVID-19, as documented on social media by his longtime friend Wack 100. In January, Wack 100 wrote on Instagram that Kay Slay had been put on a ventilator. Last week, he added that his friend had been taken off an extracorporeal life support machine and was “still fighting.”

Born Keith Grayson on August 14, 1966, in New York, DJ Kay Slay originally gravitated towards graffiti art, and appeared in the landmark 1983 hip-hop documentary Style Wars. Having observed the rise of legendary disc jockeys like Grandmaster Flash and Kool DJ Red Alert firsthand, he was inspired to try out the discipline himself. “I didn’t so much set out to be a DJ,” he told Forbes in 2019. “It was just something to do that was fun and that I enjoyed doing.”

DJ Kay Slay released his debut album, The Streetsweeper, Vol. 1, in 2003. It included his highest-charting single, “Too Much for Me,” which featured Amerie, Birdman, Nas, and Foxy Brown. The next year, DJ Kay Slay released his follow-up LP, The Streetsweeper, Vol. 2, which featured the Three 6 Mafia single “Who Gives A… Where You From” and the Kanye West–produced “No Problems.”

In 2003, The New York Times dubbed DJ Kay Slay “Hip-Hop’s One-Man Ministry of Insults” thanks to his ability to capture high-profile beefs between the likes of Nas and Jay-Z, Eminem and Benzino, and Ja Rule and 50 Cent on his tapes. “Cats know it’s no holds barred with me,” he told The Times. “They know that I’m not going to edit anything. It’s going out the way you gave it to me. No watering down.”

DJ Kay Slay released several studio albums, countless mixtapes, and one collaborative LP with Greg Street titled The Champions: North Meets South. Throughout his career, he worked with some of the biggest names in hip-hop, including Nas, Busta Rhymes, Rick Ross, T-Pain, Nelly, Juicy J, 2 Chainz, DJ Khaled, Schoolboy Q, Kendrick Lamar, and Mac Miller. DJ Kay Slay’s most recent record, The Soul Controller, came out at the end of 2021.

Upon his death, Hot 97 thanked the “cultural icon” for “the twenty-plus years he dedicated to The Drama Hour.” Kay Slay “was more than just a DJ,” the station wrote. “To us, he was family.”

The statement from Grayson’s family reads: “Our hearts are broken by the passing of Keith Grayson, professionally known as DJ Kay Slay,” the bereaved Grayson family wrote in a touching tribute. “A dominant figure in Hip Hop culture with millions of fans worldwide, DJ Kay Slay will be remembered for his passion and excellence with a legacy that will transcend generations. In memory of DJ Kay Slay, our family wishes to thank all of his friends, fans, and supporters for their prayers and well wishes during this difficult time. We ask that you respect our privacy as we grieve this tragic loss.”

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