DOUG E. FRESH: "PROFILE RECORDS CALLED 'LA-DI-DA-DI' AND 'THE SHOW' GARBAGE"

dik cashmere

Freaky Tah gettin high that's my brother
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@playahaitian @ViCiouS @keone @woodchuck


Doug E. Fresh was a recent guest on the Willie D Livepodcast, where he revealed that independent label Profile Records called The Get Fresh Crew's 1985 smash single "The Show, La-Di-Da-Di" garbage. "We made 'La-Di-Da-Di' a year or so before it came out, and we were already doing it at shows," he said. "

Doug said further that before securing a deal with Reality Records, the Get Fresh Crew shopped "The Show" and "La-Di-Da-Di" to Profile Records (the home of Run-DMC, Sweet Tee, Dana Dane and DJ Quik). "Profile was the mecca of Hip-Hop at the time, and they said: 'Both of these records are garbage,'" he recalled.

According to Doug, the owner of Profile didn't like Slick Rick's voice, or Doug's beatboxing on the monumental songs. "He said: 'That guy doesn't even sound right rapping, and what's that sound in the background? I don't understand.'" Doug says that after a deal was secured for the songs, he encountered the Profile executive in the Roxy nightclub where he expressed regret for passing on the then popular songs.

"The songs were on fire, and he asked could he talk to me," he said. "He said that he was wrong and he apologized, and he asked if we could sit down and have another conversation. I told him that I was already doing something, but if the opportunity arose down the road we could sit down. Sometimes you have to keep your mind open, just because something is different that doesn't mean that it's wack."

 
I get it cause it wasn't what had already been done that was a sure thing.

So being melodic,catchy and beatboxing was a curve ball...I get it but those two songs raised that bar in hiphop/ rap so high it created a big fucking wave that sound and energy went to create other songs in the same vane.Where 35-40+ years later we're surfing on that wave cause the youngins may not know the artist but they recieve it and know it,just like I did when I was a child,it never leave your memory.
 
Hearing “The Show” playing from a boombox is one of my earliest childhood hip hop music memories. The Inspector Gadget beat hooked me…That song and “Planet Rock” made me fall in love with the genre….
In 1985 I was 8 years old. My cousin Desmond put me on to Slick Rick and Doug E fresh with Lottie Dottie. Stupid ass talk to text I'm not going to fix it. That got me hooked up to the genre
 
@playahaitian @ViCiouS @keone @woodchuck


Doug E. Fresh was a recent guest on the Willie D Livepodcast, where he revealed that independent label Profile Records called The Get Fresh Crew's 1985 smash single "The Show, La-Di-Da-Di" garbage. "We made 'La-Di-Da-Di' a year or so before it came out, and we were already doing it at shows," he said. "

Doug said further that before securing a deal with Reality Records, the Get Fresh Crew shopped "The Show" and "La-Di-Da-Di" to Profile Records (the home of Run-DMC, Sweet Tee, Dana Dane and DJ Quik). "Profile was the mecca of Hip-Hop at the time, and they said: 'Both of these records are garbage,'" he recalled.

According to Doug, the owner of Profile didn't like Slick Rick's voice, or Doug's beatboxing on the monumental songs. "He said: 'That guy doesn't even sound right rapping, and what's that sound in the background? I don't understand.'" Doug says that after a deal was secured for the songs, he encountered the Profile executive in the Roxy nightclub where he expressed regret for passing on the then popular songs.

"The songs were on fire, and he asked could he talk to me," he said. "He said that he was wrong and he apologized, and he asked if we could sit down and have another conversation. I told him that I was already doing something, but if the opportunity arose down the road we could sit down. Sometimes you have to keep your mind open, just because something is different that doesn't mean that it's wack."


I mean we can make a whole list about this. At the end of the day the fans decide whats a hit. They dont care about skills etc.
 
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I mean if we can make a whole list about this. At the end of the day the fans decide whats a hit. They dont care about skills etc.
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