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*
PHILADELPHIA was rocking Schoolly D, Code Money, Tat Money, Steady B, Marvelous and Cash Money, Jazzy Jeff and Fresh Prince. Some serious funky pioneers. FUNKY FUNKY FRESH!
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
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!!
@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...
Classic footage. We will never live these times again 😒🤣😞😢 I love all old school 70s 80s or 90s footages
💯💯💯 I became a historian cause of it...love it...🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Me too it’s like a deep emotion
I'm 44 and From @NewOrleans Louisiana As A Kid In 88 Me And My Brothers Used To Rock With #SchollyDThankYouHipHop✊🏽⚜️🎤💖🌎💯
never get tired of seein my homey schoolly d & my hometown philly. whatz good west philly.......logan n da house.
West Philly for life 💯💯
Logan that’s why I’m from, 13th n rockland
@KeithPullium-qm9ov Bouvier street.
Ok logan low life's in the building philly 💯💯🦾
Swp here 66th and Elmwood. I love that gangster rap started in our city
When rappers still had respect from the hood they grew up in..
Or just people in general
Philly always fresh rap- 80s style and music the best- schoolly D great tracks
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.
Am I Black Enough for You is a masterpiece. Front to back.
Schooly D 1st gangster rapper!
First you have to know how to spell Schoolly D.
Sp all day
If you're looking for part 1 search on youtube for "philly hip hop old school 1988 lady b jazzy jeff fresh prince pt. 1"
53rd and turner - west Philly !!
Philly is my hometown. I miss the 80s era!!
documentary was so short salute 2 whoever did this doc classic hip hop footage
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*
Dang schooly was talking about the dopeman and could of pioneered the original dopeman track and this was waay back props schooly👌👊
Way back in the day before East Coast artist started to sound like they were from ATL or Down South.
💯💯💯
FILA windbreakers!!!!!
Philly and rap needs to get back to this
when i was working at power play studio i use to see schooly d names on different reel to reel tapes
Power Play was an awesome place. I used to be there in the early 90’s when Doc was there.
I would Like to know the excact Date of Recording in 1988 Please ..
52nd & Thompson..
PHILADELPHIA was rocking Schoolly D, Code Money, Tat Money, Steady B, Marvelous and Cash Money, Jazzy Jeff and Fresh Prince. Some serious funky pioneers. FUNKY FUNKY FRESH!
Young people nowadays will never be as intelligent and mature as the ones they interviewed in this documentary.
The old school philly
58st Greenway and Kingsessing in the house 🏠
That's the 1700 block of North Wilton Street, where Schoolly grew up. It looks nothing like that today. Wow!
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
Schoolly D is the man...
52 ND ST (821 CREIGHTON ST.) PARKSIDE TO CHESTER AVE.
@J4s0n3r The song is "It's Krack" by Schoolly D
5:49 she wanted the Schoolly-"D" lmao 🤣
Code Money: "What,are you guys following me?!" HAHAH!
Ima Bricc City ryda but ain't no place like Philly s/o Cambridge n 17th
Philly and Newark aka da bricks are very similar
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!!
@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...
West Philly stand up
Yo I remember when this came out.
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...
West Philadelphia 49 th hoopes st holla 🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌
What tha hell does that mean?
I want to like this but it already has the perfect amount.......
“Find me a wife to do my dishes! “
💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯💯
First gangster rapper but nwa made it famous!
Not true at all but definitely an early pioneer
@@chrissygriffin6287 NWA will tell you it’s true themselves. Ice T said himself he copied Schooly D.
@@mackinshizzaveli4202 ice t not even a gangster lol
@@NorthPhilly-zr7xc Who tf said he was?
@@mackinshizzaveli4202 he himself my nigga lol he hate cops but always playing them
Skooly was the man his style was original strong and gangster
you came fuck I came to rap."
52 Jefferson
When Philly was half decent And somewhat clean
Rodriguez Angela Lee Amy Gonzalez Daniel
People always say what the hell does that mean.
LOL makes philly look like black sesame street
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...
!
Ps Much Gratitude
Garcia Brian Thompson Angela Harris Melissa
o-z stand up!
agreed
PHILLIES THE BEST!!!
6:08 = original Jugaloo? Ha!...
Flame records
Rock OFF RAVE ON..!
Schoolly is the real deal
Cheba cheba y'all
beans!
Rip sause