@@ONEPLAYK_ I wonder why nobody ever tried to put me up on them when I was in Ga.? Were they still hot in "01"? When I was there, it was all about Lil Jon, Young Bloodz, and Pastor Troy. Lil John had just dropped that "Lay it Down" Remix with all them different Artists on there, and Drama was goin crazy with his "Left, Right" single. Oh, and Ludacris was just heating up with his cuts from his ep Incognegro. Him and Pun Daddy was still doing they show on the radio station.
@@byobtv1394 go listen to "King of the hill" by dsgb that's wicked on there.... They had a good run in the 90s but in the early 2000s that's when that trap wave came through heavy but in Atlanta and the south they highly respected
Yea, I'm Jamaican and in the islands ad-libs were a common thing, every artist always had their own unique ad-lib. Its Dancehall music though, not reggae. For over a decade I've been telling my homies Hip Hop becoming more and more like Dancehall. From the ad-libs, to the melodies, to dudes who don't got a goid singing voice still singing.
I ALWAYS felt that Wicked sounded Caribbean. It was just something different about his accent. Now after like 20 years it's been confirmed that he's from St.Croix. Alot of people from ATL are from somewhere else...you can just heard the other places mixed in with their ATL accent. Like Wacka, Hoodrich or Luda all rep ATL but there are originally from NYC, NJ and IL and you can tell unlike Andre 3000, TI, or Thugger who have deep untouched ATL accents.
I couldn't ever find that fuckin remix forever 😅😂 See y'all bois ain't hard like we Nino & Wicked from the DC Say whatcha want mayn we str8 country but y'all foos gon' feel mehh
My Big brother use to stay in CLARKSTON off ANDREW JACKSON & MEMORIAL DR. I stayed there when I use to visit for the summer 97,98,99. They called it "CRACKSTON" 🥴🤣
Clarkston Killa Thugs!! I remember them boys back in the day. You also had the Brick Road Boys, Shermatown , And Scottdale holding it down. Alot of folks don't know about that Deep Eastside ish.
@@lo3ful Oh gosh, my sister went to Lithonia high, we lived off marbut rd, I went to Redan high...all of this brings back memories. I always say Ill never live on the eastside again...just grew tired of it, but this definitely brings the memories back. Even hearing them talk about Clarkston sigh lol
@@tamikad3535 oh yeah it's nothing like the good old younger days in the Eastside, you've out grown it but it's still in your heart like mines, wonderful cool memories, I miss those times, striaght up. Would love to go back to those days shiit... lol I'm Gresham Park and McNair Shawty
I'm Dominican but my grandfather is from St. Croix he moved to DR when he was young for better financial opportunities. I was a big ghetto mafia fan, I didn't know that Nino was from St. Croix we could be distant relatives.
😲 Now when you said Ghetto Mafia these are the guys I would think about but I haven't seen them since I was a teenager! I had to RU-vid it and make sure and OMG THESE ARE THEM! I FUCCS WITH THEM TOUGH💪🏾
Been a fan of Nino in Wic since 97 I believe and ever since I got their tapes and listened to their music.... Went back and got Draw The Line later on after I had Straight From The Dec and On Da Grind, classic ATL rap albums.
Ya had to know the people kept asking B & Wick "Where Nino at?? Where Nino at??" 😅😂 The OG 9o's ATL Hood Sndtk 4 Life Period aka Full Blooded Niggaz 1994 4 Real
I remember the first tape had their crew on the inside and the everyday in the hood single...And they had sniper unit on that A-town song..that's on my playlist.
When you guys going to interview shorty from ghetto mafia he was on every album and he was number one soldier for the whole ghetto mafia movement frfr🏴🏴🏴🏴💪🏿👑👑🔥🏆
I'm absolutely still bumping Ghetto Mafia on my 2016 golf cart through the community, not trap😂..lol. 24/7 on my Amazon playlist. Ghetto Mafia, UGK, X-Mob 100%. Going to release a story on my Channel later about Ghetto Mafia and Leroy McMath I personally experienced
He's not lying. Plus tongue twist flow came from Jamaicans & Haitians. Then also came from Moors was Arabic speakers that created the alphabet and the European languages. The Moors are black people from Africa
Naw bruh they wasn’t the first. You had the Hard Boyz, Sammy Sam, and Kilo all saying trap in they raps as far back as the late 80’s early 90’s. The word trap as a reference to a dope spot goes back to at least the late 70’s in Atlanta. We was calling the Bluff a trap in the early 80’s. It’s an Atlanta area word for sure but they wasn’t the first to say it.