EARLIEST HIP HOP 1971 - 1975.. "BRONXDALE WAS LIKE THE ROMAN EMPIRE" ... DOMINATING OTHER AREAS
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- Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024
- (FULL DISCUSSION) We respect all other true Hip Hop stories... But no Hip Hop story comes before Bronxdale's Hip Hop story with The Black Spades Young Spades and Baby Spades... Deejay Phase and Green Eye Genie teaching.... • DJ PHASE "MY COLOR IS ...
This one of the best authentic hip hop story legendary interviews…… I’m here in 2022 cause I’m tired of fat joe and busta rhymes saying hip hop came from Jamaicans and the Latin community. But forgot that it was already going on before kool herc and herc did not invent hip hop ……… black ppl that’s non black Americans forget that the black Americans are the most talented and skilled on the earth and great historian
Ohh grow up, you focus on some bullshit...who was the first person with evidence that was playing funk breaks?
Yes sir! We black Americans are the most talented black people in the western hemisphere; these arrogant Jamaicans can't out do us period.... foundational black Americans all day
We black Americans don't rock with Jamaican music period; we black Americans have a whole different vibe
@@markdaniels4178 sounds like you have some issues ypu need to sort out, youre racist and bitter...
As a hip hop historian, this is the absolute BEST raw/non scripted interview/documentation on Hip Hop history I have ever seen!!!!!
thank you ... appreciate your comment
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 Is Stanley all right (I saw a BX Obituary from last Aug. so I was concerned). Great interviews!
Check out Jayquan the foundation
@@TheCulture..Starts1971, here is a special and true response that needs to be known about the influence of Caribbean music on hip hop " from a response by
MrGflash
1 year ago
Booby and green eyed Stanley mentioned that Afro Cuban Gauaguanco was being played on the benches in Bronxdale in 71" but the Apache and Bongo band was late because the real get down arrived in the South Bronx in the early forties by the Cuban Arsenio Rodriguez which also came before salsa and the Puerto Rican migration. Listen to Booby sing the beat. So yes the lineage of the O.G's are from North Carolina for the Disco Era and then came the West Indian influence for the B-boy era but first came Cuba with the essence of true Africa!"
@@biggerduke 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣what? WTF? Dude first of all Puerto Rican & Cuban have 100yrs in music together, let me repeat that again 100yrs salsa in nyc was created with Cubans & Puerto Rican & dominicanos 🤣🤣🤣 another u said Puerto Rican migration? Ricans been in nyc for decades ! Since 18 hundreds 🤣🤣🤣 Washington heights used to be Cubans, they came in the 60s in nyc then the dominicanos after we been there before Cubans & dominicanos. Another thing yes hip-hop is carribean influence , created by blacks , Puerto Ricans , west Indians. The Ricans and West Indians influenced the blacks in Hip-hop. The problem is they will never give credit to Ricans and West Indians on Hip-Hop, like these idiots saying that bronxdale this and that🤣🤣🤣 saying is a African American culture 🤣🤣🤣 etc , it's in writen in Hip-hop history that Kool herc is the creator and the godfather of Hip-Hop, it started in 1520 SEDGWICK AVE SOUTH BRONX! 🤣🤣🤣 these black Brothers are mad because Kool herc is Jamaican 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣What many do not know is that the majority of the people who were influenced and later contributed to hip hop were Latinos. Puerto Ricans are MCs', break dancers like the Rock Steady Crew, and Graffiti artists (Sal Rojas, Brown Pride).To close out our roundup of the Latinx originators of hip-hop, we’ll be talking about CRASH. Born John Matos, CRASH was part of the OG graffiti artists who painted on subway trains in New York. Like other iconic graffiti originators, he has collaborated with major brands, including Levi’s, Fender, and Absolut Vodka.Puerto Rican and Cuban DJ Disco Wiz, born Luis Cedeño, is credited as being the very first Latino DJ in Hip-hop. The Bronx native was one half of the Mighty Force crew, with Grandmaster Caz (then Casanova Fly), who presented the first Latino rapper, Prince Whipper Whip. Wiz is also credited with creating the mixed plate in 1977, the first mixed dub recording in Hip-hop.Another b-boy crew with Latinx members, which was there during the birth of Hip-hop, is the New York City Breakers. Hailing from the Boogie Down Bronx, the original five members were: Chino “Action” Lopez, Tony “Powerful Pexster” Lopez, Noel “Kid Nice” Mangual, and Matthew “Glide Master” Caban. The group shared hip-hop all over the world, with many people, including the King and Queen of Norway, Prince Andrew, and President Reagan (making them the first hip-hop group to perform for a sittingCRASHNew York City Breakers🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷☝️✌️👍🤫🤫🤫🤫🤫
Can you imagine how wild genie had to be if he so animated now. Pure energy.
....seem like he on drugs.
These guys should have there own show....what a double act😂 respect from Ireland
yes please we need more stories
I agree
Agreed, we need "the Phase & Green-Eyed Genie shown". Somebody get at them
I would be glued to that show.
DJ Phase and this brother are awesome to watch together.
4 years later and i had to go back to watch this again one of my favorite interviews of all time on RUclips! Great job micheal Wayne!!!!
Wow, thanks!
Yo green eyes and phase need a pod cast lol
The MISSING PIECE TO THE PUZZLE 🧩 (🗣BRONXDALE) ! NOW THE HIPHOP PUZZLE IS COMPLETE 💯👏🏿
Yoooooo. Im from Alabama and listening to these brothers make me feel like im standing in new york lol i love it
This is incredible. You can find a superstar on every corner of NYC.
Netflix- Please give these two a show - Absolutely brilliant!
F netflix. Make our own show. We gotta stop being complacent with our opps things and start creating our own.
We was so heavy into karate back then. So gymnastics and karate played a significant roll in hip hop culture.
youtube.com/@kooldjphase?si=9gm-8yZSF1An3pRx
What an amazing interview! His recollection is incredible. I'm speechless. The gang history and martial arts history itself is priceless jewels. Awesome job bro!
Movies & Documentries tht all I can say !! B4 them ppl pervert it
Yo. i love how they would go wild when they remembered things together.
This has to be the best interview I've seen about the subject it's so real. You can see when they start to reminisce and remember things that they hadn't thought about it so long and the way they react you know these brothers I'm not lying makes me feel good to see this
EXACTLY!
Love this u can tell that these brothas not lying from the reactions
Real talk
These dudes make me feel like I haven't lived.
@@DefSquadFan❤
You need to take all this information that you are Gathering and get some writers to help you write the real story of hip hop before the wrong person finds these videos and steals all the information.
Yes! They should do it and bring with them any documentations and tell the story of early hip hop and clear the airwave
true i thought the same ....100 ...
Real talk
Now what Genie was saying is what I was saying because we from the same era. Boobie I knew cause we went to church together in Hunts Point. No credit taken away, I went to Executive Playhouse to hear Herc. But I heard about Spade parties in 72, that's how I heard about the genre, Bronxdale and the Spades period.
Incredible job. The cuts to the different stories that lined up....Blackie the dog ect. we're spot on. This was a beautiful documentary about New Yorks most misunderstood borough. Please keep up the good work.
This is incredible to hear the real story.
Everybody always forgets the 5th Element. Knowledge.
This interview about hip hop culture was so deep that it was mind blowing, for real, salute!!! To Bronxdale and all of the Bronx for creating hip-hop.
BronxDale. Soundview Section of The Bronx where Hip Hop was conceived...... before it was Born
This interview is the best thing on RUclips! Thanks for the history lesson!
These Kats Got The Beginning of Hip- Hop on All Early Accounts and REAL FACTS!!! I personally have heard Enough!!! So We Can See That These Dudes Were the first the Brick and Mortar to what Hip Hop Became Later on with names like,, Kool Herc, Cold Crush, Grand Master Flash etc, This is where Hip Hop took the training wheels off, and lead to Bigger, Fresher, and Deffer, The Genre put Faces, Names, & Crews, together that stuck in the Golden Era of Hip Hop. djays Emcees, Break dancers, & Graffiti Artist, and so forth this led to hip hop being birthed in the Bronx Period!!! Different eras and different people expanded the genre leading to much success for many others in future generations in Hip Hop. Much respect to Hip Hop on GP, though in my humble opinion Brondale should get their flowers too!! So when the True Story of Hip Hop is told Brondale should always be remembered as the Foundation Place Circa 1971-1977 in Bronx Hip-Hop. #Phase #Stanley
#RIPMariothediscoKing
4 years later, this is still dope info. Peace to the gods and earths.
Probably the GREATEST video on the origins of Hip-Hop and its culture in NYC. Had to leave another comment on this joint
Green eyes always been an animated character but will get it poppin in a heartbeat and defend wrong and no what's right I wonder what he got to say about Bambaataa 👀))
Wow! this all makes sense! I was born in 71 but I remember the Bronx in 75 - 76
Great interview I loved it I was born in Brooklyn mid 60s and I love hearing real stories like this from other boroughs about the hip hop culture
Green Eyed Genie has that energy. He should be a narrator too. ILL Voice
I had rough week. This video automatically popped up in my RUclips recommendations. I pressed play and WOW! These stories are so interesting! I started pieces together the puzzle pieces when they started talking about the meeting with the Savage Skulls and everyone else. I think that's where The Warriors movie came from. Just everything about this was so interesting but my absolute favorite parts was when they both remembered something and they started hugging and laughing. I loved those parts! Put me in such a positive mood. Thank you to everyone who had something to do with this! Happy Friday and to YOU reading this comment right now...God bless you 🙏🏾
Doc Miaz.. God Bless you too ... thank you
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 🙌🏿
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 Naw bro. Thank YOU. I'm watching one of your other videos called The Culture right now. I got to part 3, then stopped it. Went back to part 1 to start it over. The work you've put into these videos are too informative for just a one watch. Real talk.
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 it's some angry guys that don't agree with Bronxdale starting Hip Hop and they say there wasn't anything going on there. They claim it was just a dirty crime and drug infested worthless project. Please tell enlighten this uninformed brotha
5:40 ..when you know you about to hear TRUTH, with Theatrical Commentary.
Thank you my OGs. Yall are laughing like little boys again. Thanks for creating our culture. I love seeing yall OGs reminisce about the good days much respect
Tru dat!
Someone needs to hire this dude to do story narration in film and TV or voiceover work
💥💯💥
Green eye genie need his own you tube I swear he has a way of telling the stories he is so new York very colorful !!
💥💯💥
You brothers from New York did it!
You didn’t give up until your voices were heard.
Shout out to our Black American 🇺🇸 brothers in NYC.
The true pioneers of Hip Hop.
I’m glad he mentioned how the street dudes, female /hustlers set the jewelry/fashion trends back in the day. Run DMC, LL Cool J, Lil Kim etc dressed and emulated the dudes/females on the block.
Much respect to my FBA brethren for clearing up the lies being told
they waited a long time to try and steal our art-form. but they didnt wait long enough. its too many ppl still around that remember how it all went down- and who wasnt there
FBA is a made concept. Black people created Black people music
Right
Lol theres no actual proof that anyome else was mixjng breakbeats
@dj_adam_g_uk all that music was ours anyway.. nothing jamaican about hip hop
All of these interviews fit together like a puzzle, but this interview is the core piece of the puzzle. To this day.
My man sounds and moves just like comedian Tony Roberts. LOL. This is wonderful.
Beautiful memories Know my boys 30 yrs strong still When we reminisce Bust out laughs Headin 50 in 3 yrs Mad props n respect to these cats 👊🏾👊🏾👊🏾👊🏾
Wow...mad props to the producer of this historic line of interviews. Please continue creating truthful history.
Truth coming to light... Mad respect to all you Brothas from Bronxdale
This has got to be your BEST interview! Legendary...Please Please compile all of these interviews & write a movie.
thank you
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 do your documentary bfor tariq nasheed jack the work.
Respect to Bronxdale, the originators. This was the best interview of Hip hop produced. It was so informative, and amazingly entertaining.
I love my black American people I love us everything about us peace.
Real talk nothing or nobody like us
These cats take me back! My NY older cousins & a few of my OG NYC boys used to chop it up JUST like THIS. LOL
I guess that's where the phrase "kicking like Cato" came from that rappers used to drop in the late 80's lol. This was some dope history.
Kato was Beuce Lee’s character who was the side-kick on “the Green Hornet” TV show way back in the days (that dude most likely jacked the name from the show cause he was nice with his kicks too 👊😉).
Im at work doing a double shift at 1:30am and this interview has given me energy and woke me up like i drank 3 Red Bulls and 3 cups of coffee. Stan The Green eyed energizer can hype anybody up.
I’m so glad I found this, it was beautiful 🙏🏽
Glad I found this channel. I’m definitely here to learn the history of our culture and dance I’ve been a part of since 1980.
Pablo D/North City Rockers
Green eye Genie Need a life story To tell Real New Yorker
Awww man!! Getting your sh!t ‘roofed’. Memories for real. Lol
Sooo dope how they could go to others perspective in another area, and it naturally confirms that man’s story!
Without Bruce Lee and James Brown NYC wouldn't be Rocking! 60's and 70's!
Stop smoking
Ohh wow my brother a huge thanks for that imput of those two names that has influence hiphop and life growning up those are big facts glad you mention that! IMPRESSIVE!!!!
Bruce Lee was a king in the hood. I remember coming out The Melba movie theatre with my friends doing flying kicks after watching Enter The Dragon, Return Of The Dragon, Fist Of Fury and even Chinese Hercules and other karate flicks
@@donaldhines2092 Burn or get Burn Bk 1967!1
Dude in the green hat should be getting PAID doing voiceover work. 💯💯💯😂
Pure energy you can feel the beginning of Hip-hop, I have the hairs on end of emotion ... 💪💪💪 All my life I believed that the Hip-hop we know was born from the looting of "blackout" ,...
I find this story to be very interesting.I'm kinda sold.great interview peace to these brothers,and the camera man.
Agreed, this needs to be turned into a proper documentary and a book. What you need to do is a timeline, with all the bits of information coming from these guys....
Everyone wants to know what was going on before Herc and Bambaataa...
I have watched all of these videos, and what im seeing is that Herc and Bambaataa were influenced by and carried on what was going on in Bronxdale and Soundview...
Also so interesting that the start of hip hop crosses over with the black gang culture... the martial arts, the music, the parties all cross over and become part of the melting pot...
What was going on before Herc was not hip hop or hip hop culture.. At no time what was going on before Herc was called hip hop or had anything to do with hip hop and life choice changes in New York it was just regular social behavior of black youths living in an environment and what was trending at the time... It was after the implementation and fundamentals of several activities brought to the forefront by Herc that the word even came about....you cant take something of the past and just stitch into something of the future and say this is were it all started...It a lot of thing and what was before hip hop might have played a role as a part of developing the genre but its impossible to say Herc did not play the major and most important part of developing the genre.. Herc used bits from what he know about the sound system in Jamaica he used the funk beats from the USA and developed the this art form which then became what is known as Hip hop and a culture developed behind it to compliment the art.. everything else is total rubbish and there is no way of going around it...
@@franklynbramwell2593 Correct. These dudes are trying to rebrand Hip-Hop culture, and remove the Caribbean innovators of the CULTURE.
@@franklynbramwell2593 first off you can tell y'all weren't paying attention they mentioned it was a dj djing already before herc and bambatta in bronxdale that bambatta use to come over to bronxdale and listen to and go back to bronxriver and school herc about it we black Americans created the entire hip hop everything remember that
@@randee4550 and also can tell you weren't paying attention if you were you would've heard him say before bambatta and herc there was a dj in bronxdale djing there and bambatta use to come over to bronxdale to listen to and bambatta would go back to bronxriver and herc and get him up on it get it right black Americans created all the hip hop from the beginning that shit you talking is foreign
@@zep1898 SMD! You're not from NY bro. GTFOH
NUFF RESPECT...WOW! Could you do a little something for the writers out the Bronx man? I'm out the Chicago Land Area, as I was told one or some of yall came out here and started a Zulu nation Chapter out here like in 82' or something and that shit became Chi-Rock Nation with all the elements in place and them dudes was basically the OG's of MY own OG's that put us on...I know this is new baby shit to these brothas in the vid because they was APPARENTLY doing they Hip Hop thing WAAAY BACK in the early to mid 70's even before Bronx River and Zulu nation...Peace and respect from CHICAGO ILLZ FOR REALZ..
Im from the Chi and its great to see a Chi Town brutha who was around. I'm young and just want to know the truth. I wish these guys go on a tour or make a play called Hip Hop. This would give them millions and give DJ Mario his credits.
This was fantastic I always felt the origins were from the bronxdale area. Great interview. Funny I remember Korvettes I got my first stereo with a record player there.
Excellent deep raw interview, great history lesson, outstanding job man, bless!!
DAMN, i was born in 1971, lol....... i was just a Baby in the 70's decade
Thank you Brother
Love your new videos your editing is great
Greatest interview ever 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾. Keep bringing out the truth!!!!
appreciate your comment
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 I appreciate you my brother. The true originators of hip hop have not been given their due and the people that we welcomed into our communities are now trying to attempt to take something they didn't create. I applaud you for what you are doing for our people and for history's sake 👊🏾
The best interview for sure . Respect
I love green eyes energy. He sounds like he could've been a member of Onyx. 😂
This is so raw and aithentic. I'm a student of a game and just learned today. Man I would love to reach out to these brothers and give them their roses. Are they on social or somewhere else to be contacted?
@Nate28tv Yes they are on social
I love his energy! 😂
Man, I like how this guy talks😂 he could have his own show 😂😂
That’s that old N.Y. energy.
Just looking at this made my day Stanley look good god bless him
@58:02 What he is sayin makes perfect sense. If you have drums...you don't need to loop a record. You just play the beat on drums.
I play on my machine everyday wit mine I play my own versions of apache but he's telling the truth when I make a beat I go straight to the kit
I'm from Patterson Projects. 424 Morris Ave. P.S. 18 Park. My cousin P.O. is from 1st section building 5 in Bronxdale! White Castle across the street! My Grandmother is from Jackson Projects, 3050 park ave.
I was born in 74, my whole life was park jams! Hiphop all day! My other cousins lived near Edenwald Projects. We use to play ball in the TURF, and East Chester BIDDIES....You will get dunked on. Man, Souza woods!!! BX The home of HIPHOP, THE DALE IS THE FOUNDATION!!! Peace to the Gods! -Daykwon Infinite
Dam my mom and family from Brooklyn but grew up in the 70s and 80s and ya all have similar stories… wild both good and bad
This is refreshingly enlightening, entertaining and insightful
I saw the founding fathers of hip hop but u agree with some of the facts but, some facts aren't true...being from the bronx Patterson houses I agree Brooklyn & Queens had the monster dj equipment
Hugh bug sound Systems they definitely had that on lock big ip to Grand Master Flowers, Infinity Machine, Disco twins I heard of all of these cats & all respect dye but up in the bronx we created the sound hip hop rappin break dancin. I'm 57 yrs old the 1st time I saw a dj it was Grand Master Flash Mean Gene, Grand Wizard Theodore & The 3 EmCee's Melle Mel, Cowboy & Tge Kid Creole ! This was bck in 75'... 1974 was the 1st time I heard of B Boy Contest! SO, The Bronx has delivered us from Disco that's what we did up in the bronx...
This is brilliant, real Hip Hop history right here. Respect to these to gentlemen, true brotherly love which makes there stories genuine and factual, these stories need to be written down so that people worldwide can know the real truth.
Herc belongs on the Mt.rushmore of Hip Hop but it's a shame that he wouldn't give a inkling of a hint to the man who truly started it... #discokingmario
Yeah I've noticed over the years Herc has not given a definitive "real real" as to who came before him. On some YOU figure it out bs
yeooo im not gonna lie, I loved every minute of this! wowwww
Ditto!
Third time watching this.. green eyes' energy is off the chain!
😆🤣😅 ... these two cats are incredible storytellers... hyper.. edge of the seat stuff.. they almost pulling you into the conversation lol... amazing to hear
MAN, This is very very wonderful and historical. So so glad to be a part from the start. Love you Hip-'Hop.
He's the OG to Flava Flav lol i like him as a Hype Man
Good interview, brought many memories...I'm from Soundview, Bronxdale was King...Soundview did have Louie Gaza...
Omg I haven’t laughed so much in an interview glad this popped up
I love these guys finishing each other’s sentences
This was Great to watch Bro!! Grew up in Bronxdale, These guys are Speaking Facts!!
I grew up in the 3rd sec 1960 to1983
@@Thatsnotfunnie
And the most interesting thing about this was that Sinbad is finally getting his due as the guy that coined the term "hip hop."
Birthplace of Hip-Hop 1520 SEDGWICK Ave 73🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🇵🇷🤣🤣🤣🤣 🇯🇲 you idiots need to stop with this lies.What many do not know is that the majority of the people who were influenced and later contributed to hip hop were Latinos. Puerto Ricans are MCs', break dancers like the Rock Steady Crew, and Graffiti artists (Sal Rojas, Brown Pride).To close out our roundup of the Latinx originators of hip-hop, we’ll be talking about CRASH. Born John Matos, CRASH was part of the OG graffiti artists who painted on subway trains in New York. Like other iconic graffiti originators, he has collaborated with major brands, including Levi’s, Fender, and Absolut Vodka.Puerto Rican and Cuban DJ Disco Wiz, born Luis Cedeño, is credited as being the very first Latino DJ in Hip-hop. The Bronx native was one half of the Mighty Force crew, with Grandmaster Caz (then Casanova Fly), who presented the first Latino rapper, Prince Whipper Whip. Wiz is also credited with creating the mixed plate in 1977, the first mixed dub recording in Hip-hop.Another b-boy crew with Latinx members, which was there during the birth of Hip-hop, is the New York City Breakers. Hailing from the Boogie Down Bronx, the original five members were: Chino “Action” Lopez, Tony “Powerful Pexster” Lopez, Noel “Kid Nice” Mangual, and Matthew “Glide Master” Caban. The group shared hip-hop all over the world, with many people, including the King and Queen of Norway, Prince Andrew, and President Reagan (making them the first hip-hop group to perform for a sittingCRASHDJ Disco Wiz
New York City Breakers
We "roofed" the blue balls (pause) on top of the school yards back in the 80s....i remember scalzies too....
"Toney The Cop!!" This is one of the best interviews ever.
thank you for this video brotha
Beautiful and Hilarious!!!!! Salute!!!
Reminds me of Funky Finger Productions from In Living Color.
Green eyed Stan still has the energy of a teenager.
Mad animated 😂😂.. love seeing these REAL hip hop pioneers reminiscing
I love that they are so happy
Herbert Campbell it was soooo cute. Lol.
That's how me and my childhood friends are whenever we see each other I can respect that so many memories 😂
Bro this is gold 😂 genie and dj phase reminiscing about early hip hop is priceless . I’ve never been to New York but when I watch this I feel like I’ve been there my whole life 💯
I'm dying at Genie's voice! 😂
yeah Genie is a character ...and great artist
@@TheCulture..Starts1971 much respect and love brother. I'm affiliated with the Gun Hill division. ♠ I was brought in by "House" from the war council. Also, my former roommate and close friend was a baby spade from the Tremont area. He was the first to teach me about TBS. I'm from Providence, RI (born and raised) so you got New England ♠ out here. 💯
1st of all I'd like to say
😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂 The way these 2 connect their past is amazing Green Eyes is so animated hahahaha!!! This interview gave me the chills. It sent me way back to the first time I heard "Larry Love" Grand Master Flash and The Furious Five in Midtown, Jersey City, NJ Wow. For me, that was 1981. I was 8.
This channel mostly sounds like old war stories of black spades members as well as ppl who did block parties in the soundview area. I havent heard anything disproving that hip hop started out in Bronxdale nor that Herc didnt start what we know as hip hop. I can believe Disco King Mario was the man out there and all the disco parties but nothing that debunks the many documentaries and first person accounts of hip hop's origins. At most this channel tells me Bambataa wasnt the first to throw parties in the soundview area.
There is a question of the origin of hip-hop, it would be a start to see if there are any date stamped photo from both the east side and the west side. I came from the Soundview projects on the east side, I remember Mario playing cheep record players. We need to look for the photos or tapes from the time, I went to work at sixteen at Hills food store in 1969 Mario p.r. Text Spanky, and Sinbad. The history of the west side is not clear. Cool hunk and Bambara came later. Cool Hurks sister and cool Hurk wood come to noble park before he ever played out side. In the early days Hurk was being robed by the stickup boys.
It sure didn't come from California. Or Philly. Or Chicago. Or New Jersey. Or Boston. Or Milwaukee.
American Born Patriot New York was on a different level, I don't care what anyone say.
@@ziggyzeke6256 Yeah, but a lot not from NYC added their flavor. I don't care what you say.
Don't care were it came from just no it didn't come from Puerto Ricans. it came from fba
This all needs to be made into a movie. Where the hell is Spike Lee?
spike lee word
Yo M.W.tv💯 This was the best video I seen in a min Great work👊🏿 😂 🤣 😅 these brothers are RUclips General's 😆😅🤣😅🤣
Haliarious 😅🤣
ROTFLMAO!!!!! I love this.