Man....you could almost tell he wasn’t bullshitting about the pain. The guy therapist kinda came off like a bullshit artist himself but hey, that’s therapy. RIP to one of the nicest to do it on the mic. Gone too young
"Shook Ones, Pt. II"LISTEN: APPLE PODCASTS · AMAZON · SPOTIFY . OTHER APPSThe rappers Prodigy and Havoc met when they were still in high school in New York. Havoc grew up in Queensb
The rappers Prodigy and Havoc met when they were still in high school in New York. Havoc grew up in Queensbridge, the biggest public housing projects in the country, and as a teenager, Prodigy lived there for a while, too. The two of them formed Mobb Deep in 1991. In 1995, they put out their...
Havoc and Prodigy have reissued their classic album The Infamous via a PledgeMusic-funded project. In addition to the original album, they are including a disc of rare and unreleased tracks from the sessions along with a full new album, confusingly, called The Infamous Mobb Deep.
From the golden age to the shiny suit era, we’re counting down the best rap albums of the 90s, from classics like Nas″Illmatic’ to Eminem’s ’The Slim Shady LP.
Listen to The Infamous - 25th Anniversary Expanded Edition by Mobb Deep.
mobbdeep.lnk.to
The rappers Prodigy and Havoc met when they were still in high school in New York. Havoc grew up in Queensbridge, the biggest public housing projects in the country, and as a teenager, Prodigy lived there for a while, too. The two of them formed Mobb Deep in 1991.
Their biggest song from the album was “Shook Ones, Pt. II.” Havoc made the now-legendary beat that he and Prodigy rap over. To celebrate the 25th anniversary, Havoc told me the story of how the whole song came together. Prodigy passed away in 2017 from complications due to sickle-cell anemia, a debilitating disease he’d battled his entire life. But the legacy of Mobb Deep lives on. A new, expanded, 25th anniversary edition of The Infamous just came out in April.
Been enjoying checking out the reaction Youtube channels in recent months. It's fun seeing the range of emotions & feedback from people ... especially with the 70s - 90s music. Sometimes early-00s too. Stuff they were unfamiliar with artist or song-wise, or just casually knew in passing. Fun way to rewatch a music video that you haven't seen in many years.
Some of the movie trailer reaction channels are pretty good too. Especially the movie buffs reacting to brand-new trailers.