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Michael Diamond
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Diamond was born in New York City to an upper-middle-class Jewish household. He attended Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York for six months. In 1979, Diamond co-founded the band The Young Aborigines. In 1981, Adam Yauch, aka MCA, a friend and follower of the band became their bass player, and on the suggestion of their then-guitar player, John Berry, the band changed their name to the Beastie Boys. By 1983,Adam Horovitz (Ad-Rock) joined, and their sound began to shift away from punk to hip-hop. In 1992, Mike D founded the Beastie Boys' now-defunct record label Grand Royal Records. He is also interested in interior decoration, and designed Brooklyn-themed toile wallpaper; it was used in the renovation of the Marquee nightclub in Chelsea, which reopened in January 2013. A year after the passing of MCA in 2012, Mike D told Rolling Stone he was "excited about making new stuff again" and released "Humberto Vs the New Reactionaries (Christine and the Queens Remix)" in July 2013. A remix of Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band's "Bad Dancer" by Mike D and Adam Horovitz was streamed online in August 2013. The pair is credited with “additional beats, programming and other curve balls.”
Known For

Beastie Boys Story
as Self

Krush Groove
as Self (Beastie Boys)

Fight for Your Right Revisited
as Cop 2

Our Vinyl Weighs a Ton: This Is Stones Throw Records
as Self

The Legend of Dolemite! Bigger & Badder
as Self

Yo! The Story of ‘Yo! MTV Raps’
as Self

Downloaded
as Self

Celebrity Escape Room
as Self

Ben Lee: Catch My Disease
as Self

Beastie Boys: Video Anthology
as Self