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Sunday, November 18, 2007

Pleasure & The M.O.B. - It's About That Time/No Escape From The Underground

Label: Mixed Emotions Records

Catalog# ME 12-359
Format: Vinyl, 12", Maxi-Single, 33 ⅓ RPM
Country: US
Released: 1991
Genre: Hip Hop

Tracklisting:
A1 It's About That Time (Radio Mix) (4:35)
A2 It's About That Time (Explicit) (4:35)


B1 No Escape From The Underground (Original Radio) (5:22)
B2 No Escape From The Underground (Explicit Remix) (5:18)

Credits: Engineer - Jeff Salinger Executive Producer - Mike Giangrasso Producer - "R.C. Quest" (Carlton Clark) , (Kelvin Bacon) "Kat Daddy"

Notes: Distributed by LITTLE MAJOR RECORDS, L.I. N.Y.

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The roots of hip hop can be found in 1970s block parties in New York City, specifically The Bronx. Hip hop culture, including rapping, scratching, graffiti, and breakdancing. In the 1930s more than a sixth of Harlem residents were from the West Indies, and the block parties of the '80s were closely similar to sound systems in Jamaica. These were large parties, originally outdoors, thrown by owners of loud and expensive stereo equipment, which they could share with the community or use to compete among themselves, who began speaking lyrics or toasting. ****** Rap music emerged from block parties after ultra-competitive DJs isolated percussion breaks, those being the favorites among dancers, and MCs began speaking over the beats; in Jamaica, a similar musical style called dub developed from the same isolated and elongated percussion breaks. However, "most rappers will tell you that they either disliked reggae or were only vaguely aware of it in the early and middle '70s." * * * * * * * *Lastly, most existing hip hop acts were shocked when King Tim III's throwback to radio DJs rhyming jive and the Sugarhill Gang's appropriation of rap on their remake, not sample, of Chic's "Good Times" were released, as most DJs and MCs knew each other and many had been attempting to record. Early rap records are a mix bag of quality material by party veterans and poorer material quickly produced for a profit. * * * * * * *Lil Rodney Cee, of Funky Four Plus One More and Double Trouble, cites Cowboy, of Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, as, "the first MC that I know of...He was the first MC to talk about the DJ." * * * * * * *
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