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*First Time Hearing* Heavy D & The Boyz- Don’t Curse|REACTION!!

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  • Опубликовано: 1 авг 2024
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Комментарии • 18

  • @Dabridge4009
    @Dabridge4009 4 месяца назад +2

    Classic...one of the great collabs....loved it then love it now...

  • @robertepps2834
    @robertepps2834 4 месяца назад +2

    Yeah this when Hil Hop and rap was at its best in the early 90s. Rest in peace Heavy D. Great reaction!

  • @sammjackson70
    @sammjackson70 7 дней назад

    Rest In peace heavy D

  • @iceonthesun8880
    @iceonthesun8880 4 месяца назад

    Heavy D could always get the message across without being too crude. Real class.

  • @chrisv966-sp7dj
    @chrisv966-sp7dj 4 месяца назад

    If you're curious about the beat, the original sample is by Booker T and the MG's and the song is called "Hip Hug Her". Check it out!

  • @IceManLikeGervin
    @IceManLikeGervin 4 месяца назад +1

    A very kool reaction 😎! I see 👁👁that you have reacted to Heavy D before: Nuttin' But Love, We Got Our Own Thang, Now That We Found Love and Somebody For Me. Don't Curse was the third single released from Heavy D & The Boyz 1991 album: Peaceful Journey. It was written by Big Daddy Kane, Q Tip, Pete Rock, CL Smooth, Kool G Rap, CL Smooth and Heavy D. It was produced by Pete Rock. It sampled: Just Rhymin' With Biz by Big Daddy Kane ft Biz Markie (1987), Tramp by Otis Redding and Carla Thomas (1967), Hip Hug-Her by Booker T & The M.G.'s (1967), Step To The Rear by Brand Nubian (1990), She's Mine by Basic Black (1990) and The Do Do by Biz Markie (1988). The song didn't chart. The music video was directed by Lionel C Martin. Rappers in order of raps verse: Heavy D, Kool G Rap, Grand Puba, CL Smooth, Big Daddy Kane, Pete Rock and Q Tip.
    Lyrics 🗒:
    … This one definitely goes out on a censorship tip
    So everybody sit back, relax and have a champagne sip
    We gonna teach these people out there who are
    Against saying what we want to say the right way
    Y'know what I'm saying, so what we're gonna do
    Is kick back, swing a little funky beat by my man
    DJ Pete Rock, producer extraordinaire, yo Pete Rock
    Make it clear
    … I can flex, bend, lend a pen to a friend
    Keep a party pimping from now to then
    I don't have to swear, curse or juggle
    Lyrics in the verse to make a party bubble
    So mister Censorship, tell me, what's your problem
    There's girlies on the corner, and wifey can't solve 'em
    How did she say it, I'm curious G
    Does she say honey love me, or baby baby, funny
    Anyway, we say what we wanna say
    Play how we wanna play, feels good that way
    So G Rap, huh, it's time to kick a verse
    Do your man a favor and don't curse
    … You're telling me don't curse on a verse, they did it worse
    First I put a curse on every verse
    I kind of got outrageous
    Check it, even made a record on how I'm doing on the B-I-T-C-Hes
    Drop some verses for the bust
    Every word that you heard is cause I didn't give a f-, aw shucks
    Hey yo, I almost forgot
    The curse is a plot but it's getting kinda hot
    So I'ma let profanity retire, hey
    But if worse comes to worse, I'll cut you out like Richard Pryor
    So Grand Puba, kick a verse
    But do your man a favor and don't curse
    … Don't curse bust it
    I won't curse, I'll take a famous curse word and just say kcuf
    Kcuf flipped around the other way means ha
    Boy when I do, I see, I can't get stuck
    Jump on the mic then I earn a quick buck
    Buck meaning loot, then I grab some boots
    And set wit my troops
    For those who can't follow and got stuck
    Kcuf flipped the other way means ahem, hem hem
    It's just a curse, I freaked a nurse in a hearse
    But I made sure I had my hat first
    CL Smooth, it's time to kick a verse
    God cypher the rhyme, you can't curse
    … Go ahead ask me, when I kick a curse in a verse, I say nope
    Grab you by your hand, wash you're mouth out wit soap
    Thinking to be the last one wit the bad lingo
    Scooping on the skinz in the church from your bingo
    Sounds of the Mecca, dark fresh from the tailor
    Because they made a movie when he cuss like a sailor
    Better yet, dialect dirty like a subway
    Freaking for your loot, here to make it go the other way
    In a vocabulary scrimmage
    But cursing in my village ain't good for my image
    So Big Daddy, you know it's time to kick a verse
    But do your man a favor, don't curse
    … Uhn, the smooth rap inventor that enter
    Parental discretion's not advised so there's no need to censor
    Kiss on, peep it, but you want to beep it, what
    I feel like slapping a sticker on ya (chill chill, see) but
    Too magical rhymes are too tragical
    For any source to stop Kane from getting capital
    If I thought sticking me was dissing me
    Man, don't you know that this would be worse than Stephen King's Misery
    So clean all profanity, stealing all the man to be
    Rocking any microphone you're handing me
    So Heavy D, I'm about to disperse
    So kick another verse and don't forget not to curse
    … God Bless but I can't mess around wit the curses
    So I'm a kick verses or a verse
    Soul brother #1 here to kick facts
    Smoke the microphone and produce crazy tracks
    Your my bad bro, let's start the flow
    I'm a kick rhymes till it's time for me to go
    I can't curse cause Heavy D said so
    Now I'm a get back to the subject
    Get wreck, if you think I'm bluffing, just check
    Wit the crew, Pete Rock and CL Smooth very down to earth
    And we didn't have to curse
    … Yea, yea the Abstract poet Q-tip of a Tribe Called Quest
    Here to wreck, y'knowhatI'msayin
    Got my man Pete Rock and my man Heavy D in the house
    And we're definitely chilling on the lifted tip
    So bust the spit out, aha
    … Flim flam flim, lick my big black stuff
    Plus I kick a curse to be rough enuff
    You can put the sticker where the sun don't shine
    So back off and let me get mine
    Visions in my head when it's dealing wit hits
    If I had 4 girls then I lick 8 its
    Wait, don't wanna hear no drama
    Cause the bum didaly Heav is a fav of my mama's
    So i blew out get mad lifted
    Don't have to say up the show that I'm gifted
    God bless me 'cause I reach my 21st
    Heavy D, don't drop a curse
    … Peace, peace, peace to the preacher
    I'm talking about a verse without a curse that's how I reach ya
    I can rock a party without a swear or a harsh verb
    Backwards, no curse words, Heavy D prefers
    So swing, swing to the Soul bequiem rhythm
    Before I say goodbye, let me tell ya how I hit 'em
    CL, Pete Rock, G Rap, Maxwell
    Big Daddy, Q-Tip and ah me as well
    Time to say peace, thank Pete for the beats
    This funky beat was made for the street
    Notice how clean that we kept every verse
    But if worst came to worst (We all say a curse)
    Heavy D & The Boyz Info 📰:
    Dwight "Heavy D" Myers was born on May 24, 1967 in Jamaica and grew up in Mount Vernon, New York. He was the leader of the Hip-Hop group Heavy D & The Boyz, a group that included dancers G Whiz (Glen Parrish) and Trouble T Roy (Troy Dixon) as well as DJ Eddie F (Edward Ferrell). They released five albums as a group from 1987-1994 and Heavy D released four solo albums from 1997-2011. He has Platinum records for Living Large (1987), Big Tyme (1989) and Peaceful Journey (1991). Gold records for Blue Funk (1993) and Water Bed Hev (1997). While still an artist at Uptown Records Heavy D was instrumental in convincing Uptown Records CEO Andre Harrell to originally hire Sean "Diddy" Combs for his first music business gig as an intern. Heavy D & The Boyz were the first group signed to Uptown Records.
    Heavy D's musical career began, according to publicity material from Uptown/MCA Records, with remarkable ease and some unexpected capital. He won $1500 while gambling in Atlantic City, and lent the money to his friend Eddie F (Edward Ferrell) to buy a computer because, as he told Uptown/MCA, "Eddie F is damn near a genius; so I loaned him the money, and he got a computer. Before long he had traded the computer in for a drum machine, and that's how we got started making demos". Along with making the tapes, which artists typically submit to producers and club owners, they began playing at clubs and parties both in New York City and in Mount Vernon.
    The group, collectively labeled Heavy D And The Boyz, also included longtime neighborhood friends G-Whiz (Glen Parrish) and Trouble T-Roy (Troy Dixon). While Heavy D, Eddie F and T-Roy created the music, G-Whiz honed the group's image, including the choreography, stage sets, and costumes for performance; later, he would become the creative force behind their videos.
    While the friends naturally enough chose rap as their medium--all of them had grown up listening to it on their local radio stations--the influence of other sounds was evident in their earliest songs. Heavy D told Uptown/MCA, "I was always highly influenced by R&B.... My first single: "Mr Big Stuff", was based on an old Gene Knight record by the same name, and it was always my favorite record to rhyme off of in the park".
    The song: "Mr Big Stuff", an immediate hit on radio stations, prepared the market for the arrival of the new band's first album, 1987's Living Large. The album also introduced another hit single, which--as has become a trademark--punned on Heavy D's size: "Overweight Lover's In The House". Soon Heavy D And The Boyz were an important new name in rap music; the album went Gold, then Platinum, and earned Heavy D a reputation both as an original rap musician and as the "Overweight Lover".
    The group released their second album: Big Tyme, in 1989, and it quickly went Platinum and gained the Number One position on the R&B chart. Big Tyme also established Heavy D as an influence on the non Hip-Hop music around him. After Heavy D was featured on singer Levert's 1989 hit single: 'Just Coolin', everyone from Patti Labelle to Quincy Jones began incorporating rap into their formula for hits". In 1989 Heavy D performed a guest rap on Janet Jackson's hit single: "Alright", an early example of Hop-Hop appearances on Pop songs. It was also the highest peaking song (#4) which he had performed on in the Billboard Hot 100.
    Heavy D's success with the hybrid sounds in his own music widened his audience as his experimentation with rap and contemporary R&B has allowed him to 'cross over', which in Hip-Hop... means to receive radio air play. It also means that his music is palatable even to non Hip-Hop listeners.
    ****CONTINUE BELOW****

    • @IceManLikeGervin
      @IceManLikeGervin 4 месяца назад

      The album: Peaceful Journey (1991), added to Heavy D's reputation. The album's success began with a series of hit singles, including "Now That We Found Love," which made it to the Number Five position on the rhythm and blues singles charts in Billboard. Alan Light, writing for Rolling Stone, reflected the general excitement: "Peaceful Journey is a triumph of sung choruses, insistent hooks and clear, upbeat lyrics--a masterful display of pop's rap strengths."
      After the release of Peaceful Journey, Heavy D admitted that he had become uncertain about which direction he wanted his career to take. Already known as an especially talented stage performer, he developed an interest in acting. In 1992 he appeared on Michael Jackson's hit single "Jam". He also gained a higher industry profile by singing the theme songs for the popular television programs In Living Color and MADtv.
      The 1993 release of Heavy D And The Boyz fourth album: Blue Funk, marked a deviation from the band's musical norm. In a critically acclaimed collaboration with some of the genre's top producers, Heavy D turned out a collection of strong dancehall rhythms, a sound that was funkier, smoother, and more street-oriented than any of his previous recordings. In addition to his work with The Boyz, Heavy D has released two singles in Jamaica that have become dancehall hits, both of which he cut with popular Jamaican musicians Super Cat and Frankie Paul; the singles: "Big And Broad" and "Dem No Worry We," have been the work of Heavy D's independent record label: Music 4-Life.
      In late 1991 Heavy D was caught up in the controversy surrounding a tragedy that received considerable publicity in the New York Times and on television news. As part of his charity work, Heavy D became one of the promoters of an event to raise money for AIDS education. The basketball game, featuring a lineup of rap stars, was planned for the Jeremiah T. Mahoney Hall gymnasium at City College of New York on December 29. Extensive publicity drew a turnout of about 5,000 people--twice the number that the promoters had expected--and the crush in the hall outside of the gym caused nine deaths. In the following month, as the promoters, the college, the city, and the news media cast about for someone to blame, stereotypes about the inherent violence of rap surfaced.
      Heavy D & The Boyz returned to platinum status with 1994's album: Nuttin' But Love, which spawned hits including: "Black Coffee", the R&B Top Five "Got Me Waiting", and the title track "Nuttin' But Love". It also became their second album to top the R&B chart, and was their last album release as a group.
      After the group went their separate ways DJ Eddie F added the title of Vice President of A&R for LaFace Records to his repertoire, reporting to co-owner and founder, LA Reid and was responsible for assisting LA Reid in managing its talent roster including: Usher, OutKast, TLC and Toni Braxton. He would also serve as A&R for the Grammy winning album of The Tony Rich Project: Words. He later segued to Motown Records as the Executive Vice President of A&R- managing a roster including: Queen Latifah, Stevie Wonder, Diana Ross, The Temptations and Boyz II Men, as well as newcomers 98 Degrees, 702, Taral Hicks, and his personal signing of Mario Winans. This was also around the time that he discovered a then unknown Chicago singer named Donell Jones. Eddie quickly invested in Jones by making him a part of the Untouchables Records family. He then secured a distribution outlet for Donell Jones and further developed his relationship with LA Reid and LaFace Records spawning the hit single: "U Know What's Up", featuring Left Eye of TLC which was also produced by him.
      The next two years were big for Heavy D, even though he didn't release any material of his own; he wrote and produced material for the likes of Montell Jordan and Soul For Real (including the hit "Candy Rain"), briefly served as president of Uptown Records, and made his off-Broadway theatrical debut starring in the one-act play Riff Raff (written and directed by Laurence Fishburne). In 1997, he returned as a solo act releasing his album: Waterbed Hev to surprising commercial response; it made the Top Ten on both the pop and R&B charts and produced a Top Five R&B hit song: "Big Daddy." His seventh album, 1999's Heavy, became his seventh straight to reach the R&B Top Ten.
      Heavy D would go to release new music and following his acting bug on tv and in the movies in the 2000s.
      In 2013, TV One produced an Unsung on Heavy's life and career.
      Group Members Who Passed Away 🙏🏾:
      1. Troy "Trouble T Roy" Dixon (October 19, 1967 - July 15, 1990)
      He passed away at age 22 on July 15, 1990 while on tour in Indianapolis, Indiana. Trouble T Roy and others were horse-playing after a concert performance and walking on a raised exit ramp outside Market Square Arena. During the commotion someone pushed a trash barrel down the ramp. Trouble T Roy got on the ledge to avoid the barrel however he lost his balance and fell from a height of approximately two stories (18-20 feet). He was rushed to hospital but passed away the next day from injuries he had suffered in the fall. His passing was ruled an accident. He was laid to rest at Ferncliff Cemetery And Mausoleum in Hartsdale, New York.
      Trouble T Roy's passing led to a tribute on the follow-up Platinum album: Peaceful Journey. Pete Rock & CL Smooth created a tribute song for Trouble T Roy called: "They Reminisce Over You (T.R.O.Y.)", which is regarded as a Hip-Hop classic.
      2. Dwight "Heavy D" Myers (May 24, 1967 - November 8, 2011)
      Heavy D's final live performance was with DJ Eddie F at the 2011 BET Hip-Hop Awards on October 11, 2011, their first live televised performance together in 15 years. Heavy D later passed away on November 8, 2011 in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 44. He collapsed outside his home in Beverly Hills, California, and was taken to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.
      His passing was initially thought to be connected to pneumonia. An autopsy report, released on December 27, 2011, stated that the cause of death was a pulmonary embolism (PE) caused by a blood clot in a leg. He had also suffered from heart disease. Craig Harvey, chief of the Los Angeles County Department of Coroner, said that the blood clot that resulted in the PE was "most likely formed during an extended airplane ride". Heavy D had recently returned from a trip to Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom, where he performed at a Michael Jackson tribute concert.
      He was laid to rest at Ferncliff Cemetery And Mausoleum in Hartsdale, New York.
      Heavy D appeared in some films including 🎬: Who's The Man (1993), New Jersey Drive (1995), B.A.P.S. (1997), The Deli (1997), The Cider House Rules (1999), Life (1999), Big Trouble (2002), Black Listed (2003), Dallas 362 (2003), Larceny (2004), Step Up (2006) Tower Heist (2011) and more.
      Heavy D appeared in some tv shows including 📺: A Different World (1989), Booker (1990), The Fresh Prince Of Bel-Air (1990), Tales From The Crypt (1992), Roc (1993), Living Single (1994-1996 3 Episodes), Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child The Golden Goose (1997), Martial Law (1999), For Your Love (2000), Boston Public (2000-2003 13 Episodes), The Tracey Morgan Show (2003-2004 17 Episodes), Yes Dear (2005), Bones (2005 3 Episodes), Are We There Yet? (2011), Law & Order: Special Victims Unit (2011) and more.
      Heavy D Albums 📀:
      Living Large w/ The Boyz (1987)
      Big Tyme w/ The Boyz (1989)
      Peaceful Journey w/ The Boyz (1991)
      Blue Funk w/ The Boyz (1993)
      Nuttin' But Love w/ The Boyz (1994)
      Waterbed Hev (1997)
      Heavy (1999)
      Vibes (2008)
      Love Opus (2011)
      Some more good Heavy D songs 🎶: Mr Big Stuff, Ez Duz It Do It Ez, Dem No Worry Me, Tonight Is Your Night, Got Me Waiting, I Can't, A Better Land, Don't You Know, Peaceful Journey, Blue Funk, Waterbed Hev, The Overweight Lover's In The House, Ask Heaven, Letter To The Future, Nike, I Don't Think So, Still Missing You, No Matter What, Gyrlz They Love Me, Is It Good To You, Here We Go Again, I Can Make You Go Oooh, Silky, Big Tyme, Move On, Flexin', Big And Broad, Who's The Man, Got Me Waiting, Wanna Be A Player, You Can Get It, Don't Be Afraid, Black Coffee, Something Goin' On, Money Earnin' Mount Vernon, Yes Y'All, Cuz He's Always Around, Body And Mind, Keep It Goin', The Lover's Got What U Need, Sister Sister, Let It Rain, Girl, Can You Handle It, You Know, Listen, Slow Down, Truthful, You Ain't Heard Nuttin' Yet, More Bounce, On Point and Big Daddy.
      Fun Fact 🕵🏾: Heavy D discovered the R&B group Soul For Real and R&B singer Monifah.

  • @andrewashington3582
    @andrewashington3582 4 месяца назад +2

    That was G-Rap leading off

  • @lindamacduff2566
    @lindamacduff2566 4 месяца назад +1

    Luv ya girl!! Get down with the best. Try some Supersonic

    • @Sheraytv
      @Sheraytv  4 месяца назад +1

      I did that one lol

    • @sebastianshaw5534
      @sebastianshaw5534 4 месяца назад

      Also, just a pro tip, when you pause the song to react, back the track back a tiny bit, that way you won't miss anything or a crazy bar. Thanks again. Great reaction tho.

  • @sebastianshaw5534
    @sebastianshaw5534 4 месяца назад +2

    Great review... Please do more Kool G Rap reactions. He's the one you said you liked the way he was rapping, he went 2nd I think. Check out IT'S A DEMO or Talk like sex, or Road to the Riches. You'll thank me later.

    • @kevinsanchez4255
      @kevinsanchez4255 4 месяца назад +1

      Real talk. He did this dope ass song with mobb deep. I forgot the name of it tho.

  • @davidwaite7861
    @davidwaite7861 4 месяца назад

    🥀🌷⚘️🌹

  • @bassthumper7331
    @bassthumper7331 4 месяца назад

    Any thing by Skyzoo...