In 1990, he moved with his family to Paris, to Porte de la Chapelle, a district to which he would often pay homage in his songs.
Doc Gynéco launched his career at age 19, writing a few tracks for the hardcore rap group Ministère AMER.
[citation needed] This project partially fell through; Doc Gynéco then traveled to Los Angeles to work with American producer Ken Kessie.
The result of this work would be Première Consultation, released in April 1996, which received large media praise and huge success both in France and the world.
", "Viens voir le docteur", "Dans Ma Rue", "Passements de Jambes", and "Né Ici".
His music, a mix of ragga and rap, addresses controversial subjects like drugs, sex, women, racism, and poverty.
[3] Like "Nirvana", a lot of his songs are very nostalgic and refer to poverty and the poor living conditions in French social housing estates.
[5] Not all critics characterized him that way, though; one wrote, "Unjustly attacked for misogyny, he is in fact capable of encapsulating complex poetic emotion into the crude language of a ghetto love song such as 'Ma Salope a Moi' - 'My Slut'.
His laid-back attitude, his style, as well as his appreciation, knowledge and involvement with popular or controversial subjects like football, sex or drugs all strongly contributed to his fame, particularly among France's adolescent population.
Unlike many French rappers, Beausir's politics are conservative, and he is close to politician Nicolas Sarkozy, showing him his support during his presidential campaign.