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Here’s something awful from Chester The Molester and Otis. Can’t believe this is the same guy that once worked with Celine Dion.
{mp3}superman high{/mp3}
Props: X
305 unearthed vintage audio of Officer Ricky rhyming over T.I.’s “Doing My Job,” Talk about irony. Check out the back story:
“Here’s a song Ross recorded back in 2002, produced by Kanye West. It was actually recorded for the 2002 version of Port Of Miami over a beat that later became T.I.’s for his 2003 Trap Musik
album. From what I know, this is one of the reasons that sparked a
small beef between T.I. and Ross for a little while (I could be wrong
because that’s hearsay) because T.I. eventually ended up snatching the
beat. Either way, I remember this song got leaked on a DJ EFN mixtape
– and I remember that Slip-N-Slide was fuming and mad that the song
leaked a little prematurely. And also, you hear in the song “99 Jamz
show me some love.” This was at a time when Ross and 99 Jamz were at
odds and had a little bit of a scuffle over airplay issues and if I
remember correctly, 99 Jamz made it a point to NOT play any Ross
records at time. Later that changed as “Hustlin’”, Ross’ breakthrough
single, was debuted on 99 Jamz via DJ Khaled’s nightshow and the rest
is history.”
Ha! Here’s Wayne’s daddy, Birdman’s first single off his new album, Priceless. Call me crazy, but this doesn’t sound half bad.
{mp3}written on her feat. jay sean{/mp3}
Salutes: Team Supreme
Looks like Trey and Matt did their homework. The homie Broken Cool brought to my attention that Kanye dug fish sticks long before his South Park parody. On Jamie Foxx’s song, “Extravaganza,” Gay Fish spits:
“A fish stick nigga, now we messin’ with lobster/ We messin’ with Grammy’s/ We messin’ with Oscars.”
See, it was written!
John adds his vocals to Jeremih’s, “Birthday Sex.” Me no likey.
{mp3}01 birthday sex remix{/mp3}
Previously: It’s Your Birthday! Jeremih The Great x The Mystery Man of R&B
Props: X
[…] The music video for “Certified” pairs sleek cinematography with Café’s gritty bars, delivering a polished yet raw aesthetic. Set against an urban backdrop that reflects the rapper’s New York roots, the visuals capture the authenticity and charisma that have defined Red Café’s career. Each scene is a nod to the resilience and ambition that has kept him relevant in an ever-changing music landscape. […]