Saturday, December 13th, 2008


mcbreed-bigballerfront

I know this late but unfortunately I was going through my own peoples passing. So, this post is dedicated to MC BREED! Enjoy the Freedom brah!

Bio:

One of the first rappers to come out the Midwest in the early ’90s, MC Breed experienced modest success while based in Flint, MI, before leaving the Midwest to work with the D.O.C. in L.A. and Too Short in Atlanta. Breed’s debut album, MC Breed & DFC (1991), was released on the tiny independent label SDEG and, on the back cover, pictures Breed and Da Flint Crew (DFC) in their b-boy stances, donning gaudy Detroit Tigers apparel. The album merged the East and West Coast sounds of the time, being both lyrical and funky; it also spawned a successful single, “Ain’t No Future in Yo’ Frontin’,” which was later sampled for Ice Cube’s “Wicked” and helped keep the album on Billboard’s R&B chart for a whopping 52 weeks. Following this initial success, unprecedented at the time for a Midwestern rap act, Breed adopted more of a West Coast gangsta sound. He began working with D.O.C., who helped write and produce some of the songs on Breed’s third album, The New Breed (1993). By this point, the Flint native had left the Midwest and DFC behind and was networking on all coasts. His efforts proved successful when his fourth album, Funkafied (1994), peaked at number nine on the Billboard R&B chart. However, Breed would never match the success of that album, and subsequent releases throughout the ’90s — many of them featuring Too Short, whom Breed became close with when the two relocated to Atlanta — didn’t chart nearly as well. Nonetheless, he remained prolific as an underground rapper, releasing generally an album a year and aligning himself with the Dirty South movement. ~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide

Yo flux, the joint with his crew is funny, the dolo joints he got is maybe maybe but introduce for Thug saturday at Binkis park Tubesteak and his peanut gallery

Tubesteak tells you DO NOT buy ALL THE RAGE!

This dude dunked his book on a sign, hahahhaha and you don’t even support the troops

TUBESTEAK BRINGS THE PAIN TO T-PAIN

TUBESTEAK BRINGS PAIN 2 T-PAIN PT. TOO

The t pain joints is classic. Some of the ish they saying you’ve heard your favorite hood rapper say