Your fam raised you well my yute!!!...big up!
Yeah i was TOO YOUNG as well to attend...but it was those WICKED DANCEHALL TAPES that my uncle use to give me which got me hyped as fukk.....
the shyts were SO LIVE that you felt like as if you were thier!!
it had all the energy of hip hop, and then some, because these dancehall artists really perfected thier craft live on stage or in a session....
and being that most of these clashes took place in the brooklyn streets at these venues (starlight, biltmore) you could feel the energy litearly as the mic men shouted out the various posses and dons who really "ran tings" in NYC and abroad ...such as Barry G. and the schenectedy crew, fadda eaton, the moscow posse, spanglers, jungle, and the legendary 90's crews.
its funny cause when i got introduced to dancehall via listening to the Red Alert rap show on KISS FM, i really wasn't feeling the culture even as a child of a west indian mother, because i was so "americanized" but after that exposure to dancehall on red alert hearing some shabba, sanchez and louie rankin...
it was my UNCLE a dread fresh from the carribean who introduced me to that REAL SHYT!!
I'm talkin real GANGSTA HARDCORE DANCEHALL CLASH TAPES from sounds such as Bass Odyseyy, Kilamanjaro, Earth Ruler, Saxon, Tec-9 and often mentioned King Addies....
i was good

....next thing you know i'm

dancehall tapes on the reg..and when i got old enough started attending dancehall sessions myself....
i tell ya ain't nothing like eating a nice pot of rice and beans and listening to the rumbling sounds of the bass going thru the speakers while drunk off a Red Stripe singing at the top of your lungs with the rest of the crowd to a wicked tune at 2 in the morning!
yeah i remember the Gun Salutes and PRAM PRAM blank shots going off during those clashes...Fortunatly i was never thier at one that had that shyt going on
cause shyt was grimey...gotta keep in mind this was NYC in the 90's..and as KRS ONE said..."The DREADS IN BROOKLYN WAS CRAZY!!!"
So to this day i am SOOOOOOOOO THANKFUL for those tapes....
yeah i remember that spot, i think you talking about "Ethopian Taste" in brooklyn..if that location is correct in flatbush..i could be wrong..it's been soooo long
yeah BK did have many shops that one could pass thru and see artists come in..and usually they had turntables set up with mic booths in the back to cut "dubplates" on sight for the various soundsystems that populated BK...
as far as the record shop that Supercat had

his gun that was the SUPER POWER store.....yeah the whole Stereomarrs crew and Spangler Posse was thick up in thier....Church Ave. was were my aunt stayed at.....that shyt had more jamaicans than jamaica itself
but i loved that area and i loved the history it gave me....even down here in the south when i munch on a beef patty or crack open a crisp Red Stripe i get kinda tearyeyed thinking of those days long gone....ahh the memories