Jawaan Peacock, Benjamin Bush and Stephen Garrett met in the late 1980s and formed while the guys were still in high school. Smokey and Digital Black met through a mutual friend who thought the guys would sound good together, while Smokey and Static met in church while performing in a gospel group. Alongside other guys, the three men that would eventually form Playa created a group called A Touch of Class.
As A Touch of Class, the group met DeVante from Jodeci backstage at a concert. They began singing Boyz II Men songs when DeVante asked them if they knew any Jodeci songs. Essentially they impressed DeVante by performing a cappella versions of Jodeci songs backstage after a concert in 1991/1992. The guys were then signed onto DeVante's Swing Mob label with Elektra Records in 1993/94. Magazines such as Vibe and The Source attribute the signing to Static's close friendship with the boss and producers of the DeVante recording label. The group finally became known as Playa after DeVante heard the guys sing and called them "lil playas". In 1995 Playa contributed to Jodeci's album "The Show, The After Party, The Hotel."
Part of Swing Mob
Other members of Swing Mob at the time were young hopefuls such as Missy Elliott, Timbaland & Magoo, Ginuwine, Tweet, and Renee Anderson. By 1996, most of the Swing Mob artists—Playa included—had left DeVante for better luck elsewhere. They participated in the production of Jodeci's The Show, The After Party, The Hotel album in 1995. During this time, the members of Playa learned production and built up a catalogue of material that would later be released as part of their Cheers 2 U album.
''Cheers 2 U''
In 1998, Playa released their album, Cheers 2 U. The album featured production by Timbaland and Smokey and had two singles. The album's first single, "Don't Stop the Music" reached #26 on the R&B charts, while the second single, "Cheers 2 U" reached #10 and final single "All the Way" failed to reach to the charts.
''Never Too Late''
In 2002, Playa had plans to record their second album, Never Too Late, on Def Jam Recordings. They only spawned one single, "Never Too Late", which went no. 1. But in the U.S., it went #59. The album shelved a few days after the single dropped.
Discography
Albums
1995: Untitled Album
1998: Cheers 2 U
2001: Throwback Legends
2003: Never Too Late
2009:
Singles
1995: "Ridin' Around"
1995: "Gotta Feel Tha Vibe"
1995: "Come On Girl"
1995: "B Funk"
1995: "Pass Da Light"
1997: "Don't Stop the Music"
1998: "Cheers 2 U"
1998: "I Gotta Know"
1999: "Your Dress"
1999: "Playboy Like Me"
2000: "Woozy"
2001: "Incense Burning"
2002: "Wrong Side of tha Bed"
2002: "Lust"
2003: "Island Girl"
2003: "I'm Available"
2003: "Never Too Late"
2003: "Weekend"
2009: ""
2009: ""
Soundtrack and compilation contributions
1997: "Joy", from Welcome to Our World by Timbaland & Magoo
1997: "Smoke in 'Da Air", from Welcome to Our World by Timbaland & Magoo
1998: "Birthday", from by Timbaland
1998: "Your Dress", from the Dr. Dolittle soundtrack
1999: "Playboy Like Me", from the Blue Streak soundtrack
2000: "Woozy" from the Romeo Must Die soundtrack
2001: "Incense Burning" from the Exit Wounds soundtrack