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BAD BOY RECORDS und Umfeld
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Autor:  Ill Phil [ 02.07.2006, 12:17 ]
Betreff des Beitrags: 

hat lil kim eigtl mal irgendwas erwähnenswertes rausgebracht?

kann mir da jemand ernsthaft was empfehlen?

Autor:  LL Cool Jeezy [ 02.07.2006, 12:56 ]
Betreff des Beitrags: 

Wie ich diese nutte hasse lol ein Homie von mir ist fan und hat fast alle ihrer Platten :hihi: ohne Scheiss
die fand ich, ist sogar nicht so schlecht
Bild

Autor:  kriZZe [ 02.07.2006, 12:59 ]
Betreff des Beitrags: 

von den produktionen her ist die wirklich nicht schlecht, sobald lil kim anfängt zu rappen war's das dann aber auch... :ugly_down:

Autor:  LL Cool Jeezy [ 02.07.2006, 13:02 ]
Betreff des Beitrags: 

:hehe: war . Der song "Lighters up" fand ich trodzdem ganz cool und noch ein paar andere.

Autor:  WRONGKIND [ 02.07.2006, 14:14 ]
Betreff des Beitrags: 

Bild

das album ist geil :thumbs:

Autor:  |>MH<| [ 02.07.2006, 14:17 ]
Betreff des Beitrags: 

Weiß einer was Aasim gerade treibt?

Hab "Money Pit" von ihm, war gar nicht so schlecht...

Autor:  LL Cool Jeezy [ 02.07.2006, 14:23 ]
Betreff des Beitrags: 

Wie ist die Money Pit so?

Autor:  |>MH<| [ 02.07.2006, 16:33 ]
Betreff des Beitrags: 

halt nicht schlecht, allerdings fand ich die teile die man auf diversen tapes von ihm hören konnte irgendwie noch nen stückchen besser.

Autor:  Face97 [ 19.02.2007, 20:36 ]
Betreff des Beitrags: 

G. Dep News

There are many problems with hip-hop music — there's misogyny and vulgarity, and far too many artists insist on maintaining a connection to real-world violence.
But one of the worst problems — one that rarely gets talked about — is the way young artists get picked up, financially exploited and unceremoniously dumped.
The fact that many of the record execs doing the exploiting are black doesn't matter. Young kids with talent who dream of hooking up with moguls like Jay-Z, P. Diddy and Russell Simmons should know the sad, infuriating story of rapper G. Dep, whose real name is Trevell Coleman...

Dep sat down to talk with me last week — two days after getting released from jail — about the ups and downs that took him from the top of the music charts to a cell on Rikers Island.
We met at the Daily News Harlem Bureau, better known as Amy Ruth's Home-Style Southern Cuisine on 116th St. near Lenox Ave. Dep was with a neighborhood pal, Eddie Gibbs, who is acting as his manager.

I could hardly believe the quiet, wary man across the table from me was the same G. Dep who made the hip-hop classic "Special Delivery," which carried an infectious beat and a video that introduced the world to the wiggly dance called the Harlem Shake.
Go online, and you can find videos of kids from Korea to the suburbs of Connecticut doing the Harlem Shake. I figured Dep would be rich, or at least comfortable, and a long way from his tough upbringing in East Harlem's James Weldon Johnson housing projects.
That's not how it turned out.

When I met him, Dep had just spent 23 days on Rikers after a Jan. 15 arrest for grabbing and breaking a display-model cell phone during an argument with a T-mobile salesman in a Manhattan store. Dep's bail was only $750, but he stayed in Rikers because he couldn't raise the cash — a sign of how far he'd tumbled since the heyday of the Harlem Shake.

Like all too many performers, Dep fell victim to the three-headed monster of drugs, illusory wealth and slick record execs who talked him into a contract almost guaranteed to leave him broke.
Dep signed a contract to create five albums for Diddy's Bad Boy record label for $350,000 — what seemed like a princely sum at the time. Dep's first album, "Child of the Ghetto," came out in 2001 and did respectably.

But industry experts say it takes about two years, on average, to create and launch a new album, partly because the creative process can't be rushed and partly because an artist's sales slump when radio stations and fans get flooded with too many albums to choose from.
Dep's five-album deal, in reality, was more like a 10-year employment contract — the equivalent of making $35,000 a year working for somebody else. Actually, it's worse than that, because the money's gone now — but any new music Dep wants to record will belong to the label.

"There's a lot of things I should have looked into," Dep now says. "At the time, I didn't think about it too much."
Gibbs, who watched his buddy's rise and fall, blames the situation on Dep's mentor. "When you got P. Diddy pulling up in the Johnson projects in a sky-blue Bentley, you don't ask a lot of questions," he says, recalling the way the flashy music mogul swept Dep into his orbit.
Hit by sudden fame and money, Dep blew through the cash, and began dabbling with drugs with disastrous results. It reminded me of the tragic story of Flo Ballard, a girl from the Detroit housing projects who became one of the original members of the Supremes alongside Diana Ross.

At the height of the group's fame, Ballard left the group and began an unsuccessful solo career and downward spiral that included addiction and poverty. Ballard was on welfare when she died at age 32.

Dep, who makes frequent guest appearances on other rappers' songs, is planning a comeback — going into the studio to record new songs this week, preparing to go on tour and talking with VH1 about a new video. I hope he makes it.
And I hope youngsters thinking about going into the music business remember his story, and remember not to sign their lives away for an illusion. Better still, become the lawyer who writes the contract.

Autor:  h-town [ 19.02.2007, 20:41 ]
Betreff des Beitrags: 

kriZZe hat geschrieben:
von den produktionen her ist die wirklich nicht schlecht, sobald lil kim anfängt zu rappen war's das dann aber auch... :ugly_down:


Wie kannst du nur? :nono: Find sie auf jeden Fall immernoch cool (als Rapperin) auch auf dem neusten Album!

Autor:  Don Bishop [ 19.02.2007, 22:44 ]
Betreff des Beitrags: 

kann einem schon leid tun für g-dep, wobei ich sagen muss dass mir sein album damals sehr gut gefallen hat, habs im schrank stehen und könnte es mir heute sicher auch noch gut anhören....er hat ja jetzt sone art kollabo album mit loon draussen, nur den kann ich mir nich so geben.über n neues album von dep würd ich mich aber freuen.....solange p.diddy da nich wieder mit reinkreischt und alles bzw überhaupt mitfeaturet

Autor:  10th Prince [ 20.02.2007, 00:12 ]
Betreff des Beitrags: 

Ich fand das G. Dep Album damals auch sehr cool! :thumbs: Wusste von dem Kollabo-Ding gar nichts... werd mal reinhören!

Autor:  Don Bishop [ 20.02.2007, 00:15 ]
Betreff des Beitrags: 

gibts für 11€ bei siccness.net

Bild

1. CALLIN
2. CODE OF THE STREETS FT SMIGG DIRTEE
3. NOODLE
4. REMEMBER
5. SPECIAL FT STYLES P
6. SHRIMP & LOBSTA FT STYLES P
7. LIKE ME FT GINUWINE
8. ELMO
9. JIMMY
10. BLAP BLAP FT SMIGG DIRTEE & I ROCC
11. THE STORY
12. OUTRO

Autor:  Jasmin [ 20.02.2007, 11:46 ]
Betreff des Beitrags: 

hm das sieht aber ehrlichgesagt ziemlich interessant aus..
hats jemand schon gehört?

Autor:  10th Prince [ 20.02.2007, 11:49 ]
Betreff des Beitrags: 

Jasmin hat geschrieben:
hm das sieht aber ehrlichgesagt ziemlich interessant aus..
hats jemand schon gehört?


Ich find ehrlich gesagt, dass es ziemlich uninteressant aussieht... :skreel: Ich hab's jetz als SE, aber noch nich reingehört...

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