The Fall of MAX B (long ass read, CP warning)

Never even heard of this cat until the other thread. He got fucked.....:lol:

She takes the loot to another cat and you are eating the robbery and murder charge? Off her word? :lol:She is there and will get out, but you get Buck Rogers time? :smh:
 
IM a max fan

i felt like i wish he'd never got caught up doing the bs but i understood a man lost his life over Max tryna get him robbed

then i read this article and now im officially pissed

i know cats that murdered ppl and did WAAAYYY less time and im from Jersey

Its really fucked up cuz its no doubt in my mind Max was gonna blow up, i mean c'mon even Jigga knows of Max

the whole wavey surfing slang all comes from max
 
peace

Jim Jones best work was when he was fucking with Max B. Max got knocked and Jim shit aint pop since.

:idea:
Guess that kat found a different way to cash checks by going 'pop' via vh1 with this same chick

Towards the end


1st Love & Hip Hop:hmm:
Then
this



Bizzaro World shit:rolleyes: wtf


peace
 
I read the ENTIRE article and to be honest I have no fuckin clue how a jury can find this man without reasonable doubt.

All cause ONE drug addict guilty bitch said so?

It seems to me that even I would be capable to cross examine the bitch, blow holes through her story, and have this case laughed out of court.
 
Max not getting out anytime soon. One thing I would like to see if he did get out would Max B get the support of someone like a French Montana, and be gettin that shine he deserves

Sent from my SGH-M919 using Xparent Purple Tapatalk 2
 
Biggavell use to crack me the fuck up

He was in the county with my dude, my dude Fuzz told me no matter what Max was always up beat never let any of that shit get to him

If I was facing that time I woulda been sick all day every day
 
https://myspace.com/discover/editorial/2014/06/06/speak-talks-essential-max-b-songs/

The Essential Max B Songs

Although he is in the midst of serving a very long prison sentence, Wavvy Crocket’s legend endures. Here Speak lists out the most important records in the Harlem rapper’s extensive catalog.

Like a harmonious typhoon of style and melody crashing upon the unsuspecting shores, Charly Wingate, known to the world as Max B, was a destructive force of nature that hit the world of rap with a prolific fury of creativity seldom seen. How appropriate the Boss Don compares himself to the waves conjured by the tide and current of the ocean. His life story and brief spell in the limelight reflected the erratic unsteady behavior of Mother Nature's waters, and would ultimately end in a shipwreck prison sentence that cut short one of the most promising voyages. Much has been made of the turbulent trails and tribulations that surrounded the Harlem icon's short lived career. Well-documented beefs with Dipset, outrageous WorldStar videos, claims of fucking Jim Jones' wife and of course his 75-year prison sentence are the things the media often associate with his name and understandably so. Rap media and hip-hop news sites are bottom of the barrel, supermarket tabloid TMZ-like information dumpsters that are more interested in drumming up controversy and web traffic than giving insight on art, music and culture. It seems that more focus and attention were given to what Max did outside of the studio as opposed to what he did inside of it. This, coupled with bizarre charisma, undaunted self-belief and great fucking music made Max one of the more interesting rap artists to emerge in the last decade.

As so often is the case when a rapper dies or is incarcerated their legend tends to grow to mythical levels of proportion, Max's legacy is no different. Though he's been sitting behind a wall since 2009, Wavey Crocket's popularity has surged and "Free Max B" has become a common battle cry amongst punks, hipsters, skaters, rap fans, hypebeast and hustlers a like. Music is the great unifier capable of bringing people from all walks of life together to celebrate, fans of Biggavel are no different. Through his music we were given a look into the life of a man who was undeniably talented and troubled. Each time he sang you could visualize his voice cracking like chipped pavement because his song was that of a man with a life time full of pain and abandon. The unbreakable smooth Wavy cadence, which he demonstrated, was that of flowing water uninterrupted, his melodies a cloud of sour diesel smoke slowly disintegrating into the night air. Though the possibility of an appeal seems to grow darker by the day, the body of work Max left behind has ensured his street immortality and inspired many to grab a surf board and try to hop on the wave. No doggy paddling in the shallow end, these are some of my personal essentials from the wave master himself.





Shortly before his fall out with Byrd Gang boss, Jim Jones, Max was fresh out of jail and on creative tear through the streets of New York. 2008 proved to be a prolific year for B as he released a ridiculous 11 projects in a 12-month span. The first project in that outpouring of music was Million Dollar Baby. The title played on his reported 1-million dollar bond paid by Capo and his status as one of rap's hottest prospects. "Why You do That" is a soulful slap that sounds like a televised high speed chase. In the song the Boss Don recounts a tale of smashing down the freeway while his down bitch is riding shotgun with a pizza and cola. Always dropping introspective dimes Max laments, "They say I got what it takes, I should be up in the stu instead of poppin the hate." The hook is comprised of melodic contradictions as Bigga tells his trusted ho, "Im sorry baby that was Biggaveli not Charly baby."





Want to get back at your former friend for locking you into a slave deal where your creative freedom is held captive? Then fuck his long-time girlfriend in Miami and write a song about it. Whether or not Max really fucked Jimmy's girlfriend is up for debate, but the potency and hilarity of the song is not. Legendary NY producer Dame Grease help sculpt and refine Max's later work and the duo were gearing up to make a major run as industry hitmakers. Dame made a monster slap and Max finessed the fuck out of it. The distorted synth line sounds like something straight out of The Lawnmower Man and the thumping drums sounded like the apocalypse was near. With childish taunts claiming Chrissy loved Max's pastry tasting genitals and a hook borrowed from Blondie's "Heart Of Glass," this is one of rap's most slept-on diss tracks





Expanding on another popular artist song is something that is commonplace amongst mixtape rappers. Often times a rapper will borrow a beat or melody from an already poppin song to get their buzz up. On Rise of the Silver Surfer Max took it to a whole new level by using The-Dream's "Shawty Is Da Shit" for his humorous "Give Dem Hos Up." What followed was a hilarious tale about the struggles of pimpin and conflicts one runs into when having bitches on the track: "My baby said Maxy you need to give dem hoes up…Then when I tried to call her she wouldn't pick the phone up.





Written and released while on trial for murder, "Go Back" is a heart-breaking tale of the misery a man endures while being incarcerated. Having spent the most of his adult life behind bars, Max pledges never to return to prison. A somber Young Los beat compliments the desperate howl of an artist who is tortured by his past life as an inmate and hell bent on not returning to the correctional facility. Sadly, this song would act as a cruel foreshadowing, as Max would be sentenced to 75 years shortly after the release of the song. The sadness in "I Never Wanna Go Back" can bring a tear to toughest of men





Public Domain 3 may be Max B at the peak of his powers. The theme of the project was revenge and the battle lines were drawn as Max prepared for war against his former collaborators and the music industry that kept him in the shadows. Blessed with another soulful sample-heavy production from Young Los, the wave is unleashed with the fury of hell-bent. Taking aim and threatening to confront all his enemies in their recording studio , he drives home the point that he is being held back because of his unwillingness to write for his former creative partners. Further displaying his duality, we hear of his desire to start a little "fam-lay" and cook,clean,cater and be nice to the woman of his dreams





The most sensual and romantic of all Max B songs, "Sexy Love" lifts a stellar 9thWonder loop from Destiny Child's "Is She The Reason." Showing a more sensitive side to his complex personality Max offers to beat the hell out of the man who dicking down his love interest… or ho… or bottom bitch… or whatever. Singing his heart out he urges his distant lover to "Bring that pussy home like ya used to do." One of the most beloved songs from his extensive catalog, the impact can still be felt through an extremely rare YouTube video where Max performs this underground hit to a throng of adoring female fans. Word for word they sing along and shower the people's champion in roses and champagne. Amazing





A song filled with regret and sorrow, "Quarantine" is something any guy who has been caught cheating on his main can relate to. Nothing to deep or complex about this one, just a simple sincere apology from a person who knows he fucked up something good. Beautiful and pure, "Quarantine" is the a rap love ballad "November Rain





A classic electropop beat provided by legendary producer Dame Grease. Max sounds like Prince floating on a cloud of funk and new wave rhythms. I would be inclined to call this one a left field selection of a beat, but nothing Bigga did was really conventional now was it? If anything this shows his versatility and writing chops and proves he would have been able to cut it as a top level writer of any sorts. It doesn't matter if it was funk, soul, EDM or pop, Max had the chops to write any style, and this up tempo '80s hipster jam solidifies that





Recorded and released for Public Domain 6, "Moving Out" is a smoked out groove that sounds more like an incomplete sketch than that of a fully realized portrait. The run-on beat and continuing loop of a hook only leads to my suspicion that this rough song was a rush job. Still, there is something so soulful about the way the hook is layered. The listener is even blessed with a special Max B falsetto when he belts out, "Im moving on out the door…owwww





As passionate and emotionally introspective as Max was, one could not forget that at his core he was a nasty pimp with a fierce knack for flipping bitches. "Porno Muzik" is a joint that completely lives up to the song title. Weather rapping about getting his balls gripped or fucking a woman on top of the kitchen cabinet, here we get Max at his most perverted. Play this song with a freaky girl and watch her go down down
 
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Funny thing is alot of people riding the wave cant even name one Max B. song.....

Alot of these cats are just stans who think it's trendy to big him up.. :smh:
 
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