Man I remember standing by the radio hoping they play the song I'm looking for to record it.Whole lotta recording shyt off the radio.
Fred.
Man I remember standing by the radio hoping they play the song I'm looking for to record it.Whole lotta recording shyt off the radio.
Fred.
Random thoughts reading the thread:
1. The 2nd DAS EFX album was dope as fukk. After that, aside from a random song here and there I lost track of them.
Whole lotta recording shyt off the radio.
Fred.
Never got into the 2nd album. They really got lost in the sauce when the EPMD split, which was right around the time after that 2nd album. They and K-Solo went with Parrish. Redman, Keith Murray and Hurricane G went with Erick.Random thoughts reading the thread:
1. The 2nd DAS EFX album was dope as fukk. After that, aside from a random song here and there I lost track of them.
2. Mobb Deep blew up off the strength of "Shook Ones II". I'm talking on a street level. If the labels or radio or whatever decided to give them a chance because of Nas or them being from the same hoodok cool but that had zero bearing on people checking for them on a street level. I seen their video on BET, went to school the next day asking people if they'd heard of the group. And then copped the single like 2 weeks later. Passed it around. That's how Mobb Deep blew up.
Fred.
So many late nights up late waiting on the DNA-Hank Love show at 2am on Sunday mornings, then Awesome Two (Special K & Teddy Ted) at 4 am in the morning to play that underground ish on 105.9. They broke Ultramagnetic MCs (Funky), Beastie Boys (Hold It Now, Hit it and Paul Revere were hot back then, and people didn't know they were white at the time. Before the album came out....), Public Enemy (Rebel Without A Pause debuted and was played like 4-5 times in a row, people kept requesting it..)....Man I remember standing by the radio hoping they play the song I'm looking for to record it.
Except for when you forget to call and cancel and end up with Taylor Dayne's 3rd album for $19.99....For those not a around then, that 12 tapes for a penny is no exaggeration btw
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Except for when you forget to call and cancel and end up with Taylor Dayne's 3rd album for $19.99....
This is a big one. KRS was calling Run DMC "old school" & "played out" in 1988.
When them Columbia House CDs came towards the mid-late 90s it was a game changer lmao. nikkas was coping 12 CDs for like 1 penny or some crazy shyt like that.
Whole lotta recording shyt off the radio.
Fred.
The biggest misconception of 90's hip hop is the internet myth of GANGSTA RAP was created from a secret meeting among label executives and the government to promote the music to build more prisons.
The truth of the matter is most MAJOR LABELS resisted the growing movement of gangsta rap. There were even Congressional hearings and an anti-movement spearheaded by C. Doloros Tucker and Dionne Warwick to end hip hop because of their views of Gangsta Rap. Warner Brothers in particular ended their deal with Ice-T over the song Cop Killer. Interscope lost their own distribution deal over the fear of Tha Dogg Pound debut album. For a whole DECADE there were federal investigations on J. Prince and Rap-A-Lot.
The music industry and the government did NOT want so-called Gangsta Rap to succeed because of fear it has a huge influenced to young white American. They thought it was poisoning. The only reason why it triumphed despite it all is the reason why America capitalism triumphs in general. Because controversy, sex, drugs and violence always SELLS.
For those not a around then, that 12 tapes for a penny is no exaggeration btw
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