I saw Schooly D on the Morton Downey show back in 1986 or so. I was fascinated with the gangsterism and I bought all of his albums. He not the best lyricist but he was real. Philly had an interesting hip-hop scene.
P A R K S I D E - FIVE - FIVE TWO, P A R K S I D E - FA - FI - FIVE TWO! Classic Philly. I came up in this era, many memories brought back seeing this*
B O damn salute bro!me being 40 and been out of town so much plus feds nobody like us and hateeeeee to give us props n credit!a lot shit I dnt like here but we are only city stuck to our east coast culture everybody else on la n Chicago time ..but no pun intended bc I believe every city has decent shit the next city dnt have !!brick city strong m produce good men legendary ones !s/o my oldhead bashir el Amin in fci Devin in Massachusetts!!
Dam this is my child hood right here Saturday nights channel 48 cheese steaks and blunts in my niggas basement Shelly shell was my first big girl crush
@soln4suhreborn Thank you kindly Soln4suhreborn... BIG UPS... I have that album on vinyl but I could not remember it anymore from what artist... :-) Thanks again bro...
Can anybody tell me the name of the song that is starting from 6:42 I heard it when I was a kid but I can't remember the ID anymore... :( Thanks in advance for any help...
Esto es lo que realmente me gustaría encontrarme en la escena cultural urbana, el conocimiento es el rey y hoy perfectamente puede existir grupos que defiendan el estilo original y fresco de Philadelfia... El hip-hop se impuso contra las modas y la cultura comercial y ese era el camino,el rebelde ha perdido contra las corporaciones, hoy te quieren como un simple consumidor, te han vuelto a domesticar y gracias al gansta rap llenan cárceles privadas, le robaron el estilo y el altavoz al barrio y le están mercantilizando... La culpa también la tubo la inexperiencia, muchos firmaron contratos y vendieron parte del alma de esa época...