first time I'm hearing this too, and I know my share of old school classics. I can't believe I didn't find it before, this is so fucking good. it's 90s as fuck, but fresh and original at the same time
NO, this is NOT The Polka Dot Kid! I was watching Kwame and somehow this came in before I finished my comment on his video. How rude, RU-vid! (Updated 6.29.23) Those were the days.
Don Jon True I know, it just like he knew that would always be a plague amongst women! And it is still today and for future generations! That’s why it hold significance! He seen the problem never ending! How long did you had that problem?
@@Ladygaga4047😂 as if only listening to Gang Starr legitimizes you. You're either born after 00, a suburb product, or nothing of the urban culture. Go listen to Kid Frost, Lost Boyz, Big Mike, or any othe90s rapper to legitimize a comment.
La Toya Stokes they acted like that before the song was made and both will continue to act like that for many many many years to come why? because hormones will never change
Yeah everybody's so fake now bbls and BBWs and fake asses... And all that s***... Yeah they wore a little bit of weave back then and some makeup, but that was about it...
True Black ⚫️ women are Black Gold ⚫️. Respect to Positive-K, showing all shades of Blackwomen with Respect! They have their men. They don't need anyone else.
i think the message of this song is what my generation sometimes lacks. romantic rejection is cool and sometimes rapping without cursing can still create a hit song.
you blame it on your peers instead of the real perpetrators. There are so many young talented people who make songs similar to this with solid fanbases. You only see what you are looking for, or whats right in front of your face when theres a whole new world behind that wall
i was 12-13 years old when this song was out. good times. music back then was playful and no one took themselves that seriously. they actually cared about what they're doing. nowadays, it's about brand or social media status.
In creating the song, Positive K provided not only the man's dialogue but also the woman's dialogue[1] by raising the pitch of his voice using studio technology.. You clever boy. Dec 1992. I remember !
I remember this song. I was 16 years old. 30 years ago. Wow, this song brings back good memories. Positive K was a creative artist to come up with this. Good Beat and song.
No one can listen to this and not be transported back to the early '90s! I can remember everything about my life back then down to how I felt and what I was wearing. ❤
I feel you Sheels , great taste as always btw. The nostalgia from these early 90's classics Is so vivid It hurts! , I'd give anything to go back and get stuck between 1980 - 1999 and just loop It. I'm still Impressed by how believably well Positive K did the female vocals raising the pitch of his own voice , and how well the back and forth rapping flowed. They don't make original Hip Hop like this anymore. Wish I could build a time machine.
Never heard that before but I do know that when he performed live he usually had a female rapper with him who would do the female part of song. In some performances it was lipsyching but in others it was entirely live. I do remember thinking that the girl rapper didn't really sound like the girl in the record and I assumed he was just using her for the live shows.
VitronEspada "I Got a Man" is a song by American hip hop rapper Positive K. It was released in December 1992 as the first single from his debut album The Skills Dat Pay Da Bills. Positive K provides not only the male vocals on the song but also the female vocals,[1] raising the pitch of his voice with studio technology.
Oh that was the thing then in everything Movies Sitcoms especially I think at some point black women complained about bein in demeaning videos So instead of makin less demeaning videos where everyone naked and shakin booty and bein sexualized The rappers just put in other races