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James Brown dies at 73/78?


MaxFly

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Guest Guest_JumpinJack AJ_*

Man, i woke up 2 this news. As i waz growing up in the 80's and maturing in the 90's...i regularly watched James Brown do this thing on TV. He truely is an underrated legend.

Thanx for posting that Ted, i've always known MC Hammer waz one of his biggest fans so i knew Hammer had something 2 say about him. Infact i feel he waz obligated 2 say something. I think i'm gonna pop in my MC Hammer DVD 2nite..ha ha. I also remember Michael Jackon interviews where he talked about getting so mad when James Brown waz on TV and they camera man would zoom in on him while he waz dancing cuz MJ wanted 2 see his moves. James Brown is an influence 2 millions of artists. It'll be interesting 2 see how other artists respond 2 this newz.

I have a handful of songs from James Brown, but i've never actually picked up a complete James Brown LP. I'll be sure 2 do that this week.

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Well basically anybody that's a hip-hop fan has heard James Brown through sampling on their favorite songs, he's just influenced so many, the legacy he's left behind is mindblowing with generations of fans growing up on him, btw I found a list of all the artists that've sampled him:

http://www.the-breaks.com/perl/full.pl?genre=1&page=B

Brown, James

Night Train: (King 1961)

* “Night Train”

Carlito’s “Fame Game”

Kool Moe Dee’s “How Ya Like Me Now?”

Public Enemy’s “Night Train”

W.I.S.E Guyz’s “Do the Eygyptian”

West Coast Rap All Stars’s “We're All in the Same Gang”

Out of Sight: (King 1964)

* “Out of Sight”

Them’s “Out of Sight”

Papa's Got a Brand New Bag: (King 1965)

* “Papa's Got a Brand New Bag”

JAMS’s “Candyman”

Kool Moe Dee’s “How Ya Like Me Now?”

Kool Moe Dee’s “I'm a Player”

No Face’s “Stole My ****”

Pharcyde’s “I'm That Type of Nigga”

Salt-N-Pepa’s “Swift”

I Got You (I Feel Good): (King 1966)

* “I Got You (I Feel Good)”

GangStarr’s “Gotch U”

LeJuan Love’s “I Got You (I Feel Good)”

Public Enemy’s “Contract on the World Love Jam”

It's a Man's, Man's, Man's World: (King 1966)

* “It's a Man's, Man's, Man's World” (Intro)

Alicia Keys’s “Fallin'”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Mortal Combat”

Black Moon’s “Black Smif-N-Wessun”

Heavy D’s “You Ain't Heard Nuttin' Yet”

Ice Cube’s “Jackin' for Beats”

Ice Cube’s “This is a Man's World”

Luke’s “Arrest in Effect”

Nature’s “Man's World”

Tupac ft Dramacydal, C-Bo & Storm’s “Tradin War Stories”

Cold Sweat: (King 1967)

* “Cold Sweat”

3XDope’s “Straight Up”

Chubb Rock’s “What's the Word?”

Cookie Crew’s “Bad Girls (Rock the Spot)”

DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince’s “Takin' it to the Top”

Ice Cube’s “Jackin' for Beats”

King T’s “Bass”

Public Enemy’s “How to Kill a Radio Consultant”

Public Enemy’s “Prophets of Rage”

Public Enemy’s “Welcome to the Terrordome”

Sweet T’s “I Got the Feelin”

Terminator X’s “Juvenile Delinquintz”

UTFO’s “Wanna Rock”

James Brown Sings Raw Soul: (King 1967)

* “Bring it Up (Hipster's Avenue)”

Brothers Like Outlaw’s “Kickin' Jazz”

GangStarr’s “Manifest”

Kid 'N Play’s “Gittin' Funky”

UMC’s “See the Man on the Street”

* “Don't Be a Dropout”

Red Hot Lover Tone’s “Like a Virgin”

I Can't Stand Myself (When You Touch Me): (King 1968)

* “I Can't Stand Myself (When You Touch Me)”

Schoolly D’s “It's Like Dat”

Spacey B Experience’s “Run That Go-Power Thang”

Say it Loud, I'm Black and I'm Proud: (King 1969)

* “I'm Black and I'm Proud”

2 Live Crew’s “Ya Bad Self”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Long Live the Kane”

Blackstreet’s “Good Lovin'”

Brand Nubian’s “Dedication”

Cypress Hill’s “Insane in the Brain”

Divine Styler’s “It's a Black Thing”

EPMD’s “Brothers on My Jock”

Eric B and Rakim’s “Move the Crowd”

Intelligent Hoodlum’s “Black and Proud”

LL Cool J’s “Nitro”

Non Step’s “Keep 'em Steppin'”

Pete Rock & CL Smooth’s “T.R.O.Y.”

Real Roxanne’s “Her Bad Self”

Run-DMC’s “Naughty”

Salt-N-Pepa’s “Do You Really Want Me?”

Vanilla Ice’s “Ice Cold”

West Coast Rap All Stars’s “We're All in the Same Gang”

Ain't it Funky: (King 1969)

* “Ain't it Funky”

Beastie Boys’s “Hey Ladies”

Black Rock & Ron’s “My Hometown”

D-Nice’s “D-Nice Rocks the Spot”

Mysterme’s “Unsolved Mysterme”

* “Nose Job”

3XDope’s “No Words”

Boogie Down Productions’s “The Racist”

GangStarr’s “What You Want this Time?”

The Popcorn: (King 1969)

* “The Chicken”

2 Live Crew’s “I Ain't Bull****in'”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Calling Mr. Welfare”

CEO’s “Hit Me with the Beat”

Main Source’s “Think”

* “In the Middle”

Chubb Rock’s “Organizer”

* “Soul Pride”

Digable Planets’s “9th Wonder (Blackitolism)”

Mad Flava’s “Gotz ta Flow ta This”

Mr. X & Mr.Y’s “1956”

Peshay’s “Psychosis”

Peshay’s “Vocal Tune”

Roni Size’s “Hot Stuff”

* “Why Am I Treated So Bad”

The Associates’s “From the Ground Up”

It's a Mother: (King 1969)

* “Mother Popcorn”

Antoinette’s “Hit 'em with This”

Doug E Fresh’s “On the Strength”

Heavy D’s “Flexin'”

* “Popcorn with Feeling”

Brand Nubian’s “Who Can Get Busy Like this Man. . .”

Convicts’s “1-900-Dial a Crook”

Heavy D’s “Blue Funk”

Run-DMC’s “Bob Your Head”

* “I'm Shook”

C + C Music Factory’s “Things That Make You Go Hmm”

* “The Little Groove Maker Pt I”

De la Soul’s “Me, Myself and I”

single: (King 1969)

* “The Funky Drummer (Part 2)”

Boo-Yaa T.R.I.B.E.’s “Psyko Funk”

Its a New Day So Let a Man Come in and Do the Popcorn: (King 1970)

* “Let a Man Come in and Do the Popcorn”

Flavor Unit’s “Flavor Unit Assassination Squad”

* “It's a New Day”

DJ Magic Mike’s “Cause it's Funky”

EPMD’s “Gold Digger”

Mr. Lif’s “New Man Theme”

Overweight Pooch’s “Ace is a Spade”

YBT’s “Loud and Hard to Hit”

Sex Machine: (King 1970)

* “Get up I Feel Like Being a Sex Machine”

Biz Markie’s “Nobody Beats the Biz”

Illegal’s “Crumbsnatchers”

Jaz’s “Black Man in Charge”

Lord Finesse’s “Isn't He Something?”

Mistress & DJ Madame E’s “Get Pumped”

* “Brother Rapp”

X-Clan’s “Holy Rum Swig”

* “Give it up or Turnit a Loose”

2 Live Crew’s “Ya Bad Self”

Antoinette’s “Who's the Boss”

Jungle Brothers’s “Straight out the Jungle”

Schoolly D’s “It's Like Dat”

* “I Don't Want Nobody to Give Me Nothin' (Open up the Door. . .)”

Bobby Konders’s “Bad Boy Dance”

De la Soul’s “Ladies Nite Decision”

Guy’s “Gotta Be a Leader”

Ice T’s “Power”

K-Solo’s “K-Solo Rocks the House”

* “Licking Stick- Licking Stick”

Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five’s “Cold in Effect”

Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five’s “This is Where You. . .”

Queen Latifah’s “Fly Girl”

Roxanne Shante’s “Big Momma”

* “Lowdown Popcorn”

Organized Konfusion’s “Audience Pleasers”

* “Spinning Wheel”

Color Me Badd’s “Slow Motion”

* “There Was a Time”

Downtown Science’s “Keep it On”

* “Sex Machine”

A Tribe Called Quest’s “Money Maker”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Get Down”

CEO’s “Hit Me with the Beat”

Coldcut’s “Say Kids, What Time is It?”

Double D & Steinski’s “Lesson 2”

Everlast’s “Syndication”

Fat Boys’s “Sex Machine”

Hammer’s “They Put Me in the Mix”

Heavy D’s “Big Tyme”

Kurtis Blow’s “Still on the Scene”

Mr. Lee’s “Pump That Body”

Redman’s “Jam 4 U”

Slum Village’s “I Don't Know”

* “Soul Power-Live”

Schoolly D’s “It's Like Dat”

Super Bad: (King 1971)

* “Super Bad”

3XDope’s “I Got It”

Color Me Badd’s “Color Me Badd”

Hammer’s “Here Comes the Hammer”

Kool Moe Dee’s “I Go to Work”

Kurtis Blow’s “I'm True to This”

Sho is Funky Down Here: (King 1971)

* “Just Enough Room for Storage”

A Tribe Called Quest’s “Lyrics to Go”

Tony Touch ft Pete Rock, Masta Ace & Large Professor’s “Out Da Box (Intro)”

* “Can Mind”

Brand Nubian’s “All for One”

Skoolbeats’s “All for One”

Terminator X’s “Juvenile Delinquintz”

* “You Mother You”

Main Source’s “Just a Friendly Game of Baseball”

* “Sho is Funky Down Here”

KC Da Rockee’s “Got that Thing”

Hot Pants: (Polydor 1971)

* “Hot Pants” ('Original JBs' press)

Compton's Most Wanted’s “The Final Chapter”

DJ Magic Mike’s “I Ain't Finished Yet”

EPMD’s “Hit Squad Heist”

Eric B and Rakim’s “Paid in Full”

Eric B and Rakim’s “Paid in Full”

Fokus’s “On Line”

GangStarr’s “2 Steps Ahead”

Heavy D’s “Gyrlz, They Love Me”

Insane Poetry’s “Angel of Death”

Kool Moe Dee’s “Funke Wisdom”

Marley Marl’s “The Rebel”

Nookie’s “Moments in Space”

Professor Griff’s “Pawns in the Game”

Tragedy’s “The Rebel”

* “Blues and Pants”

Cypress Hill’s “The Phuncky Feel One”

DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince’s “2 Damn Hype”

Geto Boys’s “Scarface”

Grand Daddy IU’s “Dominoes”

Ice T’s “New Jack Hustler”

Masta Ace’s “Ain't You Da Masta”

Notorious BIG’s “Dreams”

Pete Rock & CL Smooth’s “If it Ain't Rough, It Ain't Right”

S Lover C’s “Do the James”

Soul II Soul’s “Get a Life”

Soul IV Real’s “Love You So”

Steady B’s “Anyway You Want It”

Super Cat’s “Ghetto Red Hot”

Terminator X ft the Interrogators’s “Back to the Scene of the Bass”

TLC’s “Friends”

* “Escape-ism”

Afrika Bambaataa ft Family’s “Mind, Body and Soul”

Audio Two’s “What More Can I Say?”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Raw”

Craig Mack’s “Get Down”

Cypress Hill’s “How I Could Just Kill a Man”

Freddie Foxx’s “The Ladies Jam”

Heavy D’s “The Overweight Lovers in the House”

Hip-Hop against Apartheid’s “Free South Africa”

Ice T’s “Home of the Bodybag”

Ice T’s “Street Killer”

Illegal’s “Crumbsnatchers”

Kool Moe Dee’s “Deathblow”

Kool Moe Dee’s “Here We Go Again”

Kris Kross’s “Warm it Up”

Lords of the Underground’s “Psycho”

Masta Ace’s “Ace Iz Wild”

MC Shan’s “Freedom”

Mellow Man Ace’s “River Cubano”

Onyx’s “Throw Ya Gunz”

Paris’s “The Days of Old”

Pete Rock & CL Smooth’s “Escapism”

Public Enemy’s “Don't Believe the Hype”

Run-DMC’s “Back from Hell”

TLC’s “Ain't 2 Proud 2 Beg”

Wascals’s “Hard Rhymes”

Wee Papa Girls’s “You've Got the Beat”

Revolution of the Mind: (Polydor 1971)

* “Album Intro”

Pete Rock ft Inspectah Deck & Kurupt’s “Tru Master”

* “It's a New Day” (Live)

Artifacts’s “Dynamite Soul”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Calling Mr. Welfare”

Big Daddy Kane’s “The House that Cee Built”

Black Moon’s “Enta Da Stage”

DOC’s “Funky Enough”

Doug E Fresh’s “World's Greatest Entertainer”

Lord Finesse’s “Isn't He Something?”

Public Enemy’s “Who Stole the Soul?”

Youngstas’s “Iz U Wit Me”

Soul Classics: (Polydor 1972)

* “Soul Power Pt I”

Audio Two’s “Build up Back Up”

Boogie Down Productions’s “Poetry”

Das EFX’s “Mic Checka”

Das EFX’s “Undaground Rappa”

Demon Boyz’s “Rougher than an Animal”

EPMD’s “Total Kaos”

Hip-Hop against Apartheid’s “Free South Africa”

Kool Moe Dee’s “Let's Get Serious”

Kurtis Blow’s “Suckers in the Place”

Overweight Pooch’s “Ace is a Spade”

Public Enemy’s “Caught, Can We Get a Witness?”

Public Enemy’s “Night of the Living Baseheads”

Public Enemy’s “What Kind of Power We Got?”

Scarface’s “Body Snatchers”

Stetsasonic’s “Speaking of a Girl Named Suzy”

Two Kings in a Cipher’s “Daffy Wuz a Black Man”

There it Is: (Polydor 1972)

* “Talkin Loud and Sayin' Nothing”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Keep'em on the Floor”

Brothers Like Outlaw’s “Trapped into Darkness”

De la Soul’s “Down Syndrome”

Divine Styler’s “Ain't Sayin' Nothin'”

Everlast’s “Syndication”

Geto Boys’s “Talkin' Loud Ain't Sayin' Nothing”

Leaders of the New School’s “Sobb Story”

Masta Ace’s “I Got Ta”

MC Tee & Lord Tasheem’s “Talkin' Loud”

Rebel MC’s “Black Meaning Good”

Run-DMC’s “Beats to the Rhyme”

* “There it Is”

CEO’s “Hit Me with the Beat”

Ice Cube’s “AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted”

Jungle Brothers’s “J. Beez Comin' Through”

Masta Ace’s “Simon Says”

Prince’s “Gett Off”

Public Enemy’s “Anti-Nigger Machine”

Sister Souljah’s “State of Accomodation”

Terminator X ft the GodFather of Threatt’s “Sticka”

Zhigge’s “No Time to Fess”

* “Make it Funky”

A Tribe Called Quest’s “What Really Goes On”

Audio Two’s “Make it Funky”

Coolio’s “Geto High Lites”

Craig G’s “Droppin' Science”

DJ Magic Mike’s “Magic Mike Cuts the Record”

Double D & Steinski’s “Lesson 2”

Ice T’s “Make it Funky”

Kool Moe Dee’s “Funke Wisdom”

Public Enemy’s “Who Stole the Soul?”

Rebel MC’s “Cockney Rhythm”

Slum Village’s “I Don't Know”

* “Public Enemy No. 1”

Brand Nubian’s “Punks Jump up to Get Beat Down”

* “I Need Help”

Eric B and Rakim’s “No Omega”

LL Cool J’s “Why Do They Call it Dope?”

* “Never Can Say Goodbye”

DJ Shadow’s “In/Flux”

Massive Attack’s “Better Things”

Get on the Good Foot: (Polydor 1972)

* “Get on the Good Foot”

2 Live Crew’s “Break it on Down”

3XDope’s “From Da Giddy Up”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Mister Cee's Master Plan”

Boogie Down Productions’s “Jack of Spades”

Buckshot LeFonque’s “Breakfast at Denny's”

CEO’s “Hit Me with the Beat”

Classic Two’s “New Generation”

De la Soul’s “Freedom of Speak”

Derek B’s “Derek B's Got. . .”

DJ Magic Mike’s “Exile Via Freestyle”

EPMD’s “Jane 3”

Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five’s “Gold”

Hammer’s “Pump it Up”

Kool Moe Dee’s “Deathblow”

Kool Moe Dee’s “Gangsta Boogie”

Kool Moe Dee’s “They Want Money”

Leaders of the New School’s “Shining Star”

Mr. Lee’s “Pump That Body”

Original Flavor’s “Grip Da Mic Tight”

South Central Cartel’s “Neighborhood Jacka”

Stetsasonic’s “The Hip Hop Band”

Stetsasonic’s “To Whom it May Concern”

Ten Tray’s “Raise Your Fist to. . .”

* “I Got Ants in My Pants”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Get Down”

Black Rock & Ron’s “Getting Large”

Cypress Hill’s “How I Could Just Kill a Man”

Double D & Steinski’s “Lesson 2”

Father MC’s “Dance 4 Me”

Public Enemy’s “Don't Believe the Hype”

Public Enemy’s “How to Kill a Radio Consultant”

Rappinstine’s “Scream”

Black Caesar: (Polydor 1973)

* “Down and out in New York City”

Eastern Conference’s “All in Together”

Masta Ace’s “The Count”

Mr. Complex ft L Fudge’s “New York Minute”

Rakim’s “New York (Ya Out There)”

* “Blind Man Can See It”

Blackstreet’s “No Diggity”

Coolio’s “Sticky Fingaz”

Das EFX’s “They Want EFX”

Eric B and Rakim’s “?”

Larry Larr’s “My Own Style”

Lord Finesse’s “Funky Technician”

MC Mell 'O’s “A Total Eclipse of the Art”

Mellow Man Ace’s “Hypest from Cypress”

Peanut Butter Wolf’s “I Will Always Love H.E.R.”

Punch & Words’s “Da Cipher”

Snoop Dogg’s “The Vapors”

Steady B’s “Use Me Again”

Sting ft Puff Daddy and Pras’s “Roxanne 97”

* “The Sporting Life”

Scarface’s “The Pimp”

* “The Boss”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Niggaz Never Learn”

Das EFX’s “Undaground Rappa”

Ice T’s “You Played Yourself”

Lord Finesse’s “Bad Mutha”

Mr. Bigg’s “Black Cesar”

Nas’s “Get Down”

Penthouse Players Clique’s “Undaground Boss”

Poor Righteous Teachers’s “Word to the Wise”

ShowBiz & A.G.’s “Giant in the Mental”

Willie D’s “Kick that ****”

Young Black Teenagers’s “Proud to Be Black”

Youngstas’s “Who's the Mic Wrecka”

Zhigge’s “?”

* “Make it Good to Yourself”

CPO’s “Somethin' Like Dis”

Kool G Rap’s “Play it Again, Polo”

Public Enemy’s “1 Million Bottlebags”

Redhead Kingpen’s “Scram!”

Sons of Bazerk’s “Part One”

Ultramagnetic MCs’s “You Ain't Real”

* “White Lightnin' (I Mean Moonshine)”

GangStarr’s “I'm the Man”

Grand Daddy IU’s “I Kick Ass”

Leaders of the New School’s “Sobb Story”

* “Chase”

Run-DMC’s “Back from Hell”

Run-DMC’s “The Ave”

Slaughter's Big Rip Off: (Polydor 1973)

* “Slaughter's Theme”

Ice T’s “This One's for Me”

Lord Finesse’s “Isn't He Something?”

Real Live’s “Pop the Trunk”

* “Transmograpfication”

Afros’s “This Jam's for You”

The Payback: (Polydor 1974)

* “Take Some. . . Leave Some”

2 Bad Mice’s “2 Bad Mice”

Crusaders for Real Hip-Hop’s “Real Rhymers”

D-Nice’s “Send this Out”

EPMD’s “Mr. Bozack”

Ice Cube’s “A Bird in the Hand”

Lord Finesse’s “Funky on the Fast Tip”

Lord Finesse’s “Here I Come”

Master Ace’s “Letter to the Better”

Pete Rock & CL Smooth’s “All the Places”

Salt-N-Pepa’s “Solo Power (Syncopated Soul)”

Soul IV Real’s “You Just Don't Know”

* “The Payback” (Intro)

Alkaholiks’s “Last Call”

Almighty RSO’s “Badd Boyz”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Just Rhymin' with Biz”

Black Moon ft Smif N Wessun’s “Headz Ain't Redee”

Bonny & Clyde’s “Homey Don't Play Dat”

Boss’s “Born Gangsta”

Brandy ft MC Lyte, Yo-Yo and Queen Latifah’s “I Wanna Be Down”

Chi-Ali’s “Shorty Said Nah”

Common’s “Payback is a Grandmother”

Compton's Most Wanted’s “The Final Chapter”

Coolio’s “Sticky Fingaz”

Criminal Nation’s “Mission of Murder”

Da Lench Mob’s “Guerillas in the Mist”

Das EFX’s “Brooklyn to T-Neck”

Das EFX’s “Hard Like a Criminal”

Das EFX’s “Mic Checka”

Das EFX’s “They Want EFX”

Das EFX’s “Wontu”

Def Squad ft Biz Markie’s “Rhymin' wit' Biz”

En Vogue’s “(My Lovin') You're Never Gonna Get It”

En Vogue’s “Hold On”

EPMD’s “Boon Dox”

EPMD’s “I'm Mad”

EPMD’s “Mr. Bozack”

EPMD’s “The Big Payback”

Erick Sermon’s “Safe Sex”

Greyson & Jayson’s “Livin' Like a Troopa”

Heavy D’s “Black Coffee”

Ice Cube’s “Jackin' for Beats”

Ice Cube’s “The Wrong Nigga to **** Wit”

Jodeci’s “In the Meanwhile”

Karyn White’s “Hunger”

King T’s “Payback's a Mutha”

Knuckleheadz’s “Hed Rush”

Kool Moe Dee’s “Mo' Better”

LL Cool J’s “Boomin' System”

LL Cool J’s “Straight from Queens”

Low Profile’s “Comin' Straight. . .”

Mary J. Blige’s “Everything”

Massive Attack’s “Protection”

MC Lyte’s “Ruffneck”

MC Ren’s “Mr. **** Up”

MC Shan’s “Go for Yours ('Cause I'm Gonna Get Mine)”

Me Phi Me’s “Keep it Going”

Mr. Lee’s “Pump That Body”

NWA’s “Sa Prize, Pt 2”

Pete Rock & CL Smooth’s “For Pete's Sake”

Po Broke & Lonely’s “The Sex is On”

Professor X’s “The Definition of a Sissy”

Queen Latifah’s “If You Don't Know”

R Kelly’s “Hump Bounce”

Redhead Kingpen’s “A Shade of Red”

Redman’s “A Day of Sooperman Lover”

Redman’s “Blow Your Mind”

Redman’s “Tonight's da Night”

Shaq’s “I'm Outstanding”

Silk’s “Happy Days”

Slick Rick’s “Slick Rick - The Ruler”

Terminator X’s “Buck Whylin'”

Total ft Notorious BIG’s “Can't You See?”

Tupac’s “Souljah's Revenge”

Ultramagnetic MCs’s “Chorus Line”

Ultramagnetic MCs’s “Yo! Black”

Wreckx-N-Effect’s “Wreckx Shop”

Yo-Yo’s “Put a Lid on It”

* “Stoned to the Bone”

3rd Bass’s “Steppin' to the A.M.”

Del’s “Mistadobalina”

DOC’s “It's Gettin' Funky”

Finesse & Synquis’s “Soft but Deadly”

MC Ren’s “Same Old ****”

NWA’s “Alwayz into Somethin'”

Super Lover Cee & Casanova Rud’s “I Got a Good Thing”

Terminator X’s “Homey Don't Play Dat”

Whodini’s “Day to Day”

* “Mind Power”

Black Rock & Ron’s “Stop the World”

Brother Alphonzo Greer’s “Situation Realistic”

Christopher Williams’s “Every Little Thing You Do”

D-Nice’s “And it Don't Stop”

D-Nice’s “Kick the Science”

D-Nice’s “Send this Out”

De la Soul’s “Stakes is High”

Ice T’s “Mind over Matter”

K-9 Posse’s “Turn That Down”

Kool Moe Dee’s “To the Beat”

Lady of Rage’s “Breakdown”

Lil' Shawn’s “Hickeys on Your Chest”

LL Cool J’s “Illegal Search”

Pete Rock & CL Smooth’s “All the Places”

Slick Rick’s “Get a Job”

Soul IV Real’s “Stay”

Terminator X’s “Back to the Scene of the Bass”

WC & the Maad Circle’s “U Don't Work, U Don't Eat”

Yo-Yo’s “Put a Lid on It”

* “Shoot Your Shot”

Pete Rock & CL Smooth’s “All Souled Out”

Public Enemy’s “Night Train”

Hell: (Polydor 1974)

* “Coldblooded”

Lord Finesse’s “Baby, You Nasty”

Notorious BIG’s “Gimme the Loot”

Schoolly D’s “Who's Schoolin' Who?”

Ultramagnetic MCs’s “Chorus Line Pt 2”

WC & the Maad Circle’s “A Crazy Break”

* “My Thang”

DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince’s “Brand New Funk”

DJ Magic Mike’s “Def and Direct”

Downtown Science’s “If I Was”

EPMD’s “Gold Digger”

Heavy D’s “We Got Our Own Thang”

Jeru’s “Thoughts of a Frustrated Nigga”

Kool Moe Dee’s “I'm a Player”

LL Cool J’s “Murdergram (Live at Rapmania)”

Lords of the Underground’s “Funky Child”

Slum Village’s “I Don't Know”

Ultramagnetic MCs’s “Poppa Large”

* “I Can't Stand It (76)”

DJ Mark the 45 King’s “?”

Everlast’s “Pass it On”

Lord Finesse’s “Funky on the Fast Tip”

Schoolly D’s “D is For”

Schoolly D’s “Your Worst Nightmare”

WC & the Maad Circle’s “?”

* “Sayin' it and Doin' It”

Schoolly D’s “Who's Schoolin' Who?”

* “Don't Tell a Lie about Me and I Won't Tell the Truth on You”

Low Profile’s “Easy Money”

* “Papa Don't Take No Mess”

7A3’s “Mad Mad World”

Biz Markie’s “The Vapors”

Choice MC’s “HIV Positive”

Downtown Science’s “If I Was”

Eric B and Rakim’s “Move the Crowd”

Janet Jackson’s “That's the Way Love Goes”

KAM’s “Stereotype”

Kool Moe Dee’s “How Kool Can One Black Man Be?”

Kool Moe Dee’s “I'm a Player”

Mary J. Blige’s “You Don't Have to Worry”

New Kids on the Block’s “Dirty Dawg”

Snoop Dogg’s “The Vapors”

Reality: (Polydor 1975)

* “Funky President”

2 Live Crew’s “So Funky”

2nd II None’s “More than a Player”

A Tribe Called Quest’s “Oh My God”

A Tribe Called Quest’s “Show Business”

Akinyele’s “Exercise”

Beastie Boys’s “Hey Ladies”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Give it to Me”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Word to the Mother (Land)”

Brand Nubian’s “All for One”

Brand Nubian’s “To the Right”

Capitol Tax’s “Mista Wonka”

Cash Money & Marvelous’s “The Mighty Hard Rocker”

Cash Money & Marvelous’s “The Music Maker”

Craig G’s “Duck Alert”

Da King & I’s “What's up Doc”

Dan the Automator’s “Get Down to the Funky Sound”

Dan the Automator’s “Music to be Murdered By”

Dana Dane’s “Little Bit of Dane”

Das EFX’s “East Coast”

Das EFX’s “Looseys”

Das EFX’s “They Want EFX”

De la Soul’s “Brain-Washed Follower”

DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince’s “Jazzy's n the House”

DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince’s “Who Stole My Car?”

Eric B and Rakim’s “Eric B is President”

Eric B and Rakim’s “Eric B Made My Day”

Eric B and Rakim’s “The Rhyme Goes On”

Fam-Lee’s “She's So Real”

Funkmaster Flex’s “Live from the Palladium”

GangStarr’s “Gotta Get Over”

GangStarr’s “Knowledge”

Geto Boys’s “Read These Nikes”

Ghostface Killah’s “Deck's Beat”

Ghostface Killah’s “Mighty Healthy”

Grand Daddy IU’s “Sugar Free”

Group Home’s “Supa Star”

Guru’s “Take a Look (At Yourself)”

Guru’s “Trust Me”

Heavy D’s “Gyrlz, They Love Me”

Heavy D’s “We Got Our Own Thang”

Hip-Hop against Apartheid’s “Free South Africa”

Ice Cube’s “Horny Lil' Devil”

Ice Cube’s “I Wanna Kill Sam”

Ice Cube’s “Jackin' for Beats”

Jazzy Grooves’s “Scat Jam”

Jimmy Z’s “Funky Flute”

Joint Ventures’s “Interview”

Kid 'N Play’s “Ain't Gonna Hurt Nobody”

Kid 'N Play’s “Friendz”

Kid 'N Play’s “Last Night”

King Just’s “Warriors Drum”

King T’s “E Get Swift”

KRS-One’s “Outta Here”

Kurtis Blow’s “Still on the Scene”

Large Professor’s “I Juswannachill”

LL Cool J’s “6 Minutes of Pleasure”

LL Cool J’s “Ain't No Stoppin' This”

LL Cool J’s “Fast Peg”

LL Cool J’s “To Da Break of Dawn”

Lord Finesse’s “Hey! Look at Shorty”

Low Profile’s “Easy Money”

Marley Marl’s “Duck Alert”

MC Breed’s “Gotta Get Mine”

Mica Paris’s “More Love”

Michel'le’s “Nicety”

Mistress & DJ Madame E’s “Get Pumped”

Naughty by Nature’s “Guard Your Grill”

Naughty by Nature’s “Hip Hop Hooray”

Nice & Smooth’s “Sex, Sex, Sex”

NWA’s “**** tha Police”

P-King’s “Wicked and Nasty”

Pete Rock & CL Smooth’s “Anger in the Nation”

Pete Rock & CL Smooth’s “Da Two”

Pete Rock & CL Smooth’s “Skinz”

Pete Rock & CL Smooth’s “Tell Me”

Poor Righteous Teachers’s “Rock Dis Funky Joint”

Public Enemy’s “Fight the Power”

Rebel MC’s “Black Meaning Good”

Rebel MC’s “Culture”

Red Hot Lover Tone’s “Da Gigolow”

Red Hot Lover Tone’s “Wanna Make Moves”

Richie Rich’s “Rockin' on the GoGo Scene”

Rumpletilskinz’s “Hudz”

Run-DMC’s “Not Just Another Groove”

Salt-N-Pepa ft E.U.’s “Shake Your Thing”

Schoolly D’s “Sometimes It's Got”

Shabaam Sahdeeq’s “Soundclash”

Silk X Leather’s “The Woman in Me”

Slick Rick’s “Why, Why, Why”

Spoonie Gee’s “Spoonie is Back”

Stetsasonic’s “Uda Man”

Ten Tray’s “I Convey!”

Terminator X’s “Homey Don't Play Dat”

Terminator X’s “Vendetta. . . the Big Getback”

The Gyrlz’s “Jam Jam If You Can”

Trends of Culture’s “Mad Flavor Mad Style”

Tupac ft Richie Rich’s “Lie to Kick It”

Ultramagnetic MCs’s “I Like Your Style”

UMC’s “One to Grow On”

Wee Papa Girls’s “You've Got the Beat”

* “All for One”

Brand Nubian’s “All for One”

* “I'm Broken Hearted”

Slick Rick’s “Mistakes of a Woman in Love with Other Men”

* “Reality”

RRA’s “That's My Nigger”

Everybody's Doin' the Hustle and Dead on the Double Bump: (Polydor 1975)

* “Your Love”

Boogie Down Productions’s “The Kenny Parker Show”

Ed OG’s “Let Me Tickle Your Fancy”

Queen Pen’s “Man Behind the Music”

Hot!: (Polydor 1976)

* “Hot (I Need to Be Love, Love Loved)”

Above the Law’s “Livin' Like Hustlers”

Downtown Science’s “Fat Shout”

Ice Cube’s “Alive on Arrival”

MC Lyte’s “When in Love”

Steady B’s “Attitude Problem”

Get up Offa That Thing: (Polydor 1976)

* “Get up Offa That Thing”

Beck’s “Diskobox”

Boogie Down Productions’s “South Bronx”

CEO’s “Here We Go Again”

Double D & Steinski’s “Lesson 2”

Hengee & Evil E’s “Lil Trig Fat Mix”

Ice T’s “Killing Fields”

Masta Ace’s “Can't Stop the Bumrush”

Public Enemy’s “Rebel Without a Pause”

Schoolly D’s “How a Black Man Feels”

WC & the Maad Circle’s “Get on up on That Funk”

Body Heat: (Polydor 1976)

* “Don't Tell It”

Akinyele’s “30 Days”

Boogie Down Productions’s “Poetry”

Eric B and Rakim’s “Move the Crowd”

Kool G Rap ft DJ Polo’s “Money in the Bank”

* “Body Heat”

Greg Osby’s “Flow to the Underground”

Sons of Bazerk’s “Part One”

Mutha's Nature: (Polydor 1977)

* “Give Me Some Skin”

South Central Cartel’s “Pops Was a Rolla”

Jam 1980's: (Polydor 1978)

* “The Spank”

Tupac’s “Trapped”

Take a Look at Those Cakes: (Polydor 1978)

* “For Goodness Sakes, Look at Those Cakes”

De la Soul’s “Afro Connections at a Hi 5 (In the Eyes of a Hoodlum)”

In the Jungle Groove: (Polydor 1986)

* “Give it up or Turnit a Loose” (Remix)

Black Rock & Ron’s “Act Like You Know”

CEO’s “House Time, Any Time”

Def Jef’s “Poet with Soul”

Doug E Fresh’s “Guess Who?”

Everlast’s “Syndicate Soldier”

Freddie Foxx’s “The Master”

GangStarr’s “Gotch U”

Ice T’s “Power”

Intelligent Hoodlum’s “Keep Striving”

Kurtis Blow’s “Back by Popular Demand”

Miles Davis’s “Blow”

NWA’s “100 Miles and Runnin'”

Paris’s “Wretched”

Professor Griff’s “Pass the Ammo”

Public Enemy’s “Burn Hollywood Burn”

Public Enemy’s “Welcome to the Terrordome”

Rah Digga’s “What They Call Me”

Rob Base’s “Creation”

Schoolly D’s “Who's Schoolin' Who?”

Sister Souljah’s “The Hate That Hate Produced”

Special Ed’s “Come On, Let's Move”

Steady B’s “Let the Hustlers Play”

Tone Loc’s “Freaky Behavior”

Trey Lewd’s “Hoodlums Hoo Ride”

Twin Hype’s “Tales of the Twins”

Ultramagnetic MCs’s “Give the Drummer Some”

Willie D’s “**** Rodney King”

YBT’s “Loud and Hard to Hit”

* “I Got to Move”

Cypress Hill’s “How I Could Just Kill a Man”

Double XX Posse’s “Headcracker”

Hard Knocks’s “Strictly from the Bronx”

ShowBiz & A.G.’s “Diggin' in the Crates”

* “Funky Drummer” (Drums)

2 Live Crew’s “Coolin'”

808 State’s “Pacific 202”

A Tribe Called Quest’s “Seperate / Together”

Above the Law’s “Murder Rap”

Above the Law’s “Untouchables”

Above the Law’s “What Cha Can Prove”

Allison Williams’s “Sleep Talk”

Awesome Dre’s “Frankly Speaking”

Beastie Boys’s “Shadrach”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Mortal Combat”

Biz Markie’s “Spring Again”

Black Rock & Ron’s “Stop the World”

Breeze’s “Great Big Freak”

BWP’s “A Different Category”

Cash Money & Marvelous’s “Drawers”

Choice MC’s “Bad A-s Bitch”

Chubb Rock’s “Bump the Floor”

Chubb Rock’s “Talkin' Loud, Ain't Sayin' Jack”

Coldcut’s “Say Kids, What Time is It?”

Compton's Most Wanted’s “The Final Chapter”

Compton's Most Wanted’s “Wanted”

Convicts’s “I Like Boning”

CPO’s “Flow to the Rhythm”

Criminal Nation’s “I'm Rollin'”

Criminal Nation’s “Insane”

Criminal Nation’s “It's a Black Thing”

Criminal Nation’s “The Right Crowd”

De la Soul’s “Oodles of O's”

Deep Forest’s “Deep Forest”

Depeche Mode’s “My Joy”

Derek B’s “Get Down”

Derek B’s “Human Time Bomb”

Digable Planets’s “Where I'm From”

DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince’s “2 Damn Hype”

DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince’s “Hip Hop Dancer's Theme”

DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince’s “Jazzy's Groove”

DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince’s “Magnificent Jazzy Jeff”

DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince’s “Pump up the Bass”

DJ Mark the 45 King ft Lakim Shabazz’s “When a Wise Man Speaks”

DJ Master T’s “Wind Me Up”

DOC’s “Let the Bass Go”

Domination’s “Back at it Again”

Dr. Dre’s “Let Me Ride”

Eazy-E’s “We Want Eazy”

Enigma’s “Carly's Song”

Eric B and Rakim’s “Lyrics of Fury”

Eric B and Rakim’s “Relax with Pep”

Father MC’s “Ain't it Funky”

Fine Young Cannibals’s “I'm Not the Man I Used to Be”

Freddie Foxx’s “F. F. is Here”

Fresh 4’s “Wishing on a Star”

GangStarr’s “2 Deep”

George Michael’s “Waiting for That Day/You Can't Always Get. . .”

Geto Boys’s “Mind of a Lunatic”

Geto Boys’s “Read These Nikes”

Goats’s “TV Cops”

Gus Gus’s “Purple”

Guy’s “I Like”

Hard Knocks’s “A Blow to the Head”

Heavy D’s “Peaceful Journey”

Heavy D’s “We Got Our Own Thang”

Hi-C’s “Take a Ride”

HWA’s “Trick is a Trick”

Ice Cube’s “Endangered Species”

Ice Cube’s “Jackin' for Beats”

Ice T’s “I Ain't New Ta This”

Ice T’s “Original Gangster”

Ice T’s “Radio Suckers”

James Brown’s “She Looks All Types A' Good”

Jaz’s “The Originators”

Kid 'N Play’s “Foreplay”

Kid 'N Play’s “Slippin'”

Kid Sensation’s “Emergency”

King Sun’s “King Sun with the Sword”

Kool G Rap’s “It's a Demo”

Kool G Rap’s “The Butcher Shop”

Kool Moe Dee’s “Bad, Bad, Bad”

Kool Moe Dee’s “I'm Blowing Up”

Kool Moe Dee’s “Knowledge is King”

Korn & the Dust Brothers’s “Kick the P.A.”

Kris Kross’s “Jump”

Kris Kross’s “Lil' Boys in Da Hood”

Kwame’s “The Rhythm”

Lakim Shabazz’s “Black is Back”

Leaders of the New School’s “Sobb Story”

Leaders of the New School’s “Teachers, Don't Teach Us Nonsense”

LL Cool J’s “Boomin' System”

LL Cool J’s “Fast Peg”

LL Cool J’s “Mama Said Knock You Out”

LL Cool J’s “Nitro”

LL Cool J’s “Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?”

Low Profile’s “Make Room for. . .”

Maestro Fresh Wes’s “Let Your Backbone Slide”

Mantronix’s “Fresh is the Word”

Mantronix ft Wondress’s “Got to Have Your Love”

Marky Mark’s “Good Vibrations”

Masters at Work’s “Jus' a Lil' Dope”

MC Lyte’s “Brooklyn”

MC Shan’s “So Def”

MC Shan’s “So Fresh”

MC Smooth’s “Blow the Whistle”

Mellow Man Ace’s “Hypest from Cypress”

Mellow Man Ace’s “River Cubano”

Michel'le’s “No More Lies”

Michie Mee’s “Jamaican Funk Canadian Style”

Ministere Amer’s “Traitres”

Mistress & DJ Madame E’s “Hypergroove”

Mistress & DJ Madame E’s “Show 'em How We Play”

MMG’s “Only the Strong Survive”

Mobb Deep’s “Flavor for the Non-Believes”

Nas’s “Get Down”

Naughty by Nature’s “Hot Potato”

Naughty by Nature’s “Ready for Dem”

New Order’s “Ruined in a Day”

Nikki D’s “Freak Accident”

Nikki D’s “Gotta up the Ante for the Panties”

Nine Inch Nails’s “Piggy (Nothing Can Stop Me Now)”

No Face’s “Half”

NWA’s “**** tha Police”

NWA’s “Quiet on tha Set”

P-Funk All Stars’s “Dope Dogs”

Paperboy’s “The Nine Yards”

Paris’s “I Call Him Mad”

Paris’s “On the Prowl”

Paris’s “The Devil Made Me Do It”

Pete Rock & CL Smooth’s “Go with the Flow”

Pharcyde’s “Officer”

Prince’s “Gangster Glam”

Prince’s “Gett Off”

Prince’s “My Name is Prince”

Prince Johnny C’s “Comin' to Get Ya”

Prince Johnny C’s “Kevey Kev is a Dancer with Soul”

Public Enemy’s “Bring the Noise”

Public Enemy’s “Bring the Noise”

Public Enemy’s “Fight the Power”

Public Enemy’s “Hazy Shade of Criminal”

Public Enemy’s “Rebel Without a Pause”

Public Enemy’s “She Watch Channel Zero”

Public Enemy’s “Terminator X to the Edge of Panic”

Public Enemy’s “The Enemy Assault Vehicle Mixx”

Queen’s “We Are the Champions”

Redman’s “Rated R”

Roxanne Shante’s “Have a Nice Day”

Run-DMC’s “Back from Hell”

Run-DMC’s “Beats to the Rhyme”

Run-DMC’s “Run's House”

Run-DMC’s “Word is Born”

Salt-N-Pepa’s “Let the Rhythm Run”

Scarface’s “Born Killer”

Sinead O'Connor’s “I Am Stretched on Your Grave”

Sir Mix-A-Lot’s “No Holds Barred”

Slayer & Atari Teenage Riot’s “No Remorse (I Wanna Die)”

Slick Rick’s “The Moment I Feared”

Smooth Ice’s “I'm Coming”

Smooth Ice’s “Without a Pause”

Sons of Bazerk’s “One Time for the Rebel”

South Central Cartel’s “Neighborhood Jacka”

Stetsasonic’s “DBC Let the Music Play”

Stetsasonic’s “Sally”

Stetsasonic’s “Speaking of a Girl Named Suzy”

Stetsasonic’s “The Hip Hop Band”

Stop the Violence Movement’s “Self-Destruction”

Style’s “Victim to the Vinyl”

Sublime’s “Scarlet Begonias”

Super Lover Cee & Casanova Rud’s “Do the James”

Super Lover Cee & Casanova Rud’s “Let the Drummer Get Ill”

Sweet T’s “My Beat”

Tim Dog’s “Goin Wild in the Penile”

Tim Dog’s “Low Down Nigga”

TLC’s “Shock Dat Monkey”

True Mathematics’s “For the Lover in You”

Tung Twista’s “No Peace Sign”

Tupac ft Richie Rich’s “Lie to Kick It”

Ultramagnetic MCs’s “Give the Drummer Some”

Ultramagnetic MCs’s “Moe Love on the One & Two”

Vanilla Ice’s “Stop That Train”

Wagon Christ’s “Filthy Drummer”

WC & the Maad Circle’s “Ghetto Serenade”

Yomo & Maulkie’s “Mockingbird”

YZ’s “Return of the Holy One”

Z-Trip’s “Rockstar”

Z-Trip’s “Rockstar 2”

* “Get Up, Get into It, Get Involved” (First appearance on album)

2 Live Crew’s “Do the Bart”

2 Live Crew’s “Drop the Bomb”

3XDope’s “No Words”

Arabian Prince’s “Get On Up”

Beastie Boys’s “Sounds of Science”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Get into It”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Raw '91”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Set it Off”

Biz Markie’s “The Gator (Dance)”

Black Rock & Ron’s “Getting Large”

Boogie Down Productions’s “South Bronx”

Coco Lee’s “So Crazy”

Def Jef’s “On the Real Tip”

DJ Magic Mike’s “The Dynamic Duo”

GangStarr’s “Gotch U”

Heavy D’s “Flexin'”

Ice T’s “Home Invasion”

Joe Public’s “Live and Learn”

Joint Ventures’s “**** What Ya Heard”

Jon Spencer Blues Explosion’s “Talk About the Blues”

Kid Capri’s “At the Apollo”

Kool G Rap’s “Poison”

Kurtis Blow’s “Get on Up”

Leaders of the New School’s “Connections”

LL Cool J’s “Mr. Goodbar”

Looptroop’s “In the Place to Be”

MC Shan’s “Juice Crew Law”

Neneh Cherry ft Guru’s “Sassy”

Organized Konfusion’s “Maintain”

Original Concept’s “Can U Feel It?”

Pras Michel ft ODB & Mya’s “Ghetto Supastar”

Prince Johnny C’s “Kevey Kev is a Dancer with Soul”

Professor Griff’s “Pawns in the Game”

Public Enemy’s “Brothers Gonna Work it Out”

Public Enemy’s “Can't Truss It”

Public Enemy’s “Night of the Living Baseheads”

Public Enemy’s “Night Train”

Public Enemy’s “Party for Your Right to Fight”

Public Enemy’s “Shut 'em Down”

Public Enemy’s “Terminator X to the Edge of Panic”

Public Enemy’s “Welcome to the Terrordome”

Rebel MC’s “Culture”

Rebel MC’s “Set Yourself Free”

Redhead Kingpen’s “Superbad, Superslick”

Rob Base & DJ EZ Rock’s “Make it Hot”

Salt-N-Pepa’s “Doper than Dope”

Schoolly D’s “Get Off Your A-s and Get Involved”

Schoolly D’s “Godfather of Funk”

Schoolly D’s “Peace to the Nation”

ShowBiz & A.G.’s “Giant in the Mental”

Special Ed’s “Come On, Let's Move”

Stezo’s “Jimmy's Gettin' Funky”

Stezo’s “Put Your Body into It”

Terminator X’s “Vendetta. . . the Big Getback”

Tim Dog’s “**** Compton”

Tony Scott’s “Get Into It”

UB40’s “Can't Help Falling in Love”

Ultramagnetic MCs’s “Blast from Our Past”

Yvette Michelle’s “Crazy”

Motherlode: (Polygram 1988)

* “You Got to Have a Mother for Me”

DJ Quik’s “Tear it Off”

LL Cool J’s “Why Do They Call it Dope?”

Schoolly D’s “Gangster Boogie”

* “Untitled Instumental”

Scarface’s “Murder by Reason of Insanity”

Schoolly D’s “Godfather of Funk”

West Coast Rap All Stars’s “We're All in the Same Gang”

* “Can I Get Some Help”

Ice T’s “Freedom of Speech”

Kool G Rap ft DJ Polo’s “Play it Kool”

Schoolly D’s “Peace to the Nation”

Shyheim’s “Here Come the Hits”

Tim Dog’s “**** Compton”

* “Baby, Here I Come”

EPMD’s “The Big Payback”

Insane Poetry’s “Angel of Death”

Red Hot Lover Tone’s “I Like”

single: (Tommy Boy 1984)

* “Unity” (ft Afrika Bambaata)

Beastie Boys’s “Shake Your Rump”

Fresh Gordan’s “Feelin' James”

?: (? ?)

* “Can I Get Some”

Stetsasonic’s “Getto is the. . .”

* “Maybe the Last Time”

Pharcyde’s “I'm That Type of Nigga”

* “Honky Tonk Popcorn”

Beatnuts’s “Are You Ready?”

Big Daddy Kane’s “Mortal Combat”

* “Please Please Me”

Ice Cube’s “Horny Lil' Devil”

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Chuck D just came on the Public Enemy site with a special terrordome dedicated to James Brown, I turn on Hot 97 quite a bit today to see if they'd play any James Browen songs or James Brown songs that were sampled by rappers but they ain't playing nothing, it really is sad, James Brown paved the way for black music, I guess if they don't play James Brown's music on the day he died then I guess we'll never hear a Will Smith song on black radio, if the hip-hop industry don't respond after James Brown died then I guess Nas is just right, it's actually fitting that thwe hip-hop is dead album came out the same week that the #1 soul brother left us:

Here's Chuck D's terrordome:

http://www.publicenemy.com/index.php?page=page3

Mr James Brown; May God Rest His Funky Soul

December 25, 2006

Got the news Christmas eve from Davey D on the Westside of the country; we'd just left there. Thus at 3AM in the East, it's too early and too late to call anybody like my man KYLE JASON who, together with me, did our damnedest to catch his tour three years back. I had heard things like Mr. Brown was pushing it real hard, defying gravity and time itself. I myself saw a seventy year old man wear an Atlanta stage out, as well as the crowd. It was good to see some black folks in the audience for a change, checking out our classic creator of funky soul himself. Now this news. It makes one really understand that time is God itself. Thus we shall praise God and cherish the time. James Brown is somewhat woven into my professional and entertainment regimen. In my travels on the tour bus from Sacramento to Spokane, I'd just picked up yet another JB CD; this one from Universal Millennium MASTERS 'JAMES BROWN and FRIENDS' for my drive time groove pleasure, in the hotel the BLUES BROTHERS were on AMC where JB did that scorching preacher scene in the church backed by the JAMES CLEVELAND CHOIR. While everybody seemed to relish in the now of comedian KATT WILLIAMS on the long bus ride, I locked my DVD player and headphones to Mr. Brown's classic SOULTRAIN and PARIS performances. When talking music, JB was/is just part of the day, thank God for recordings. As a 70's B-boy I recall panic on the floors of hip hop while GIVE IT UP TURN IT LOOSE roasted off the 1969 SEX MACHINE LIVE LP transfixing the forming rap nation ten years later, as if it were a discovered oil well. While the rest of the disco and rock country had not a clue.

As barely a social hum registered at the recent passings of ATLANTIC RECORDS founder AHMET ERTEGAN and ATLANTIC RECORDS star R&B artist RUTH BROWN, I as a music student felt those losses. Good peer and buddy GERALD LEVERTS passing was a shock and largely just black folk's pain at the loss, like a family member ... nationally only a few sentences because an Anglo-nation couldn't possibly understand. Now MR. JAMES BROWN is entirely another magnitude, a seismic passing - the level of a KING, the Cincinnati record label he recorded on or a very funky president, the title of his 1975 political hit. Recently I covered some ground being interviewed for a movie documentary his latest wife TAMI RAYE was producing. I myself felt extremely honored to have been asked to be interviewed for that and his prior SOUL SURVIVOR special and DVD. I promised myself to reach and do all I can when the legends callout. I missed out on MR. RAY CHARLES, wanting to catch any show during 2002, then I heard he got sick. The founders of rock and roll are still doing gigs - LITTLE RICHARD, CHUCK BERRY, BO DIDDLEY, and we almost lost FATS DOMINO to Katrina. JERRY LEE LEWIS just released a new album, and IKE and TINA TURNER continue to defy time. Still MR. JB is it for me. I have yet to meet MR. MUHAMMAD ALI, and only met RICHARD PRYOR one brief two minute period at the 2000 BET AWARDS in LAS VEGAS. I met MR. JAMES BROWN. Backstage in the concocted green room looking at the screens - just me and another gentleman were checking it out. I was behind this man dressed in a bluish suit, but I could tell it was James Brown. Reading everything about the man beforehand I knew to address him as MR. BROWN. I tapped him on the shoulder and said "Hello, er, MR. BROWN" and introduced myself. He asked my name again and when I answered it must've registered, because he let out a "Whoa", and smiled with a hug. I didn't have a damn camera and asked him to hold on. When I came back a minute later he was gone, on stage doing his thing with singer GINUWINE. Off stage he left through another way.... and that was the one time for me. Man, no lie, whenever I see a frozen pond, I take myself to 1967 when us kids did the James Brown I Feel Good dance on any patch of ice. Global warming has somehow produced fewer patches of ice, just as soul loses a bit of itself every ten years. The sheer magnitude of SAY IT LOUD I'M BLACK AND I'M PROUD was an implanted, soundtracked theme into understanding that our minds, bodies, and souls were black and beautiful. ALI, PRYOR and JB were our snap, crackle and pop from the transcendent, previously silenced black male in 60's-70's Amerikkka. It ain't never left me. Never will. This is why spreading the word is our jobs as modern day griots. I've had phone conversations with HUEY NEWTON before he passed, KWAME TURE respected my works of words, and Minister Farrakhan and the Nation Of Islam have introduced PE to parts of the darker earth where few like us had gone before. Yes time is God indeed, and all of our words and deeds are in passing, but the passing down and forward is so important. My children know MR. JAMES BROWN's music, as well as LEVI STUBBS of the FOUR TOPS and REVEREND AL GREEN (whereas it was a trip at the SCREAM TOUR 5 in Madison Square Garden NYC hearing 16,000, mostly young black girl, teenagers finishing off singing LETS STAY TOGETHER during YOUNG JOCs DJ set as if it was a clear channel hit).

In the fifty years of MR. BROWN's recorded music, since his 1956 hit PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE; we PUBLIC ENEMY head into our 20th year of existence with full dedicated honor to the fabric MR. James Brown provided for hip hop's co-founders AFRIKA BAMBAATAA, KOOL DJ HERC, and GRANDMASTER FLASH to weave. Expect the utmost respect for the architect. Again I expect the executive asses of the record industry ashes to say little, and do less. The radio stations are eerie in their silence , proving there ain't no such thing as black radio, just robot fuel from white corporations who continue to argue that race ain't an issue. And in the end there will be folks who will dedicate and play 50 years of soul, that realize that black is important to say it loud and proud because amerikka continues to discredit it and strip it away But this should make us realize how lucky many of us are to have witnessed, experienced, and infused the work and pride ethics of the godfather of soul into our daily lives. For that alone we are all better for it. Probably the hardest working man in heaven right now ...but may his funky soul R.I.P ... Mr. Dynamite ......JAAAAMES BROWWWWN

mistachuck@rapstation.com

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Legendary Singer James Brown Dies, President Bush, Various Rappers React

By Nolan Strong

Date: 12/25/2006 10:54 am

Pioneering R&B legend James "The Godfather of Soul" Brown died early today (Dec. 25) from an unknown illness in Atlanta, GA.

According to his representatives, Brown, 73, was admitted to Emory Crawford Long Hospital on Sunday, suffering from pneumonia.

He died around 1:45 a.m. with manager Charles Bobbitt by his side.

"We really don't know at this point what he died of," Brown's agent Frank Copsidas told the Associated Press.

Rapper Nas, who incorporated a portion of Brown's song "Get Up, Get Into It, Get Involved" on the song "Where Are They Now" from his latest album Hip-Hop Is Dead, was lucky enough to meet Brown before his passing.

"I spoke in front of hundreds in his honor," Nas told AllHipHop.com in a statement today (Dec. 25). "I looked directly at him. He smiled while I told him how I used his music with mine and how much he's done for us and how I love him. I'm lucky to have had that moment, shook his hand. He was pure greatness."

The news of Brown's death evoked a statement from United States president George W. Bush Jr.

"Laura and I are saddened by the death of James Brown," Bush said in a statement. "For half a century, the innovative talent of the "Godfather of Soul" enriched our culture and influenced generations of musicians. An American original, his fans came from all walks of life and backgrounds. James Brown's family and friends are in our thoughts and prayers this Christmas."

Rapper Snoop Dogg labeled Brown his "soul inspiration."

"I am hurt. That's my Godfather," Snoop Dogg said. "The hardest working man in show business of all time. He'll be missed, but his music and his legacy will live on through me, in everyway you can imagine."

Rapper Ice Cube acknowledged Brown's iconic status within the Hip-Hop industry as well, as he influenced nearly every rapper or producer that participates in the craft.

"James Brown was the first solo singer that I loved as a kid," Ice Cube admitted. "He was not only the Godfather of Soul, but the Godfather of Funk and Rap. Music will never be the same."

Like many rappers, Brown's story is one of triumph, as the singer was born in extreme poverty in 1933 in Augusta, GA.

In the late 1940's, Brown was arrested for armed robbery.

He gained parole with the help of Bobby Byrd and formed a gospel group.

After unsuccessful stints as a baseball player and a boxer, Brown joined Byrd's group The Avons.

The pair later went on to form their famed group, The Famous Flames in Macon, Georgia in 1955.

Brown and The Famous Flames released a number of seminal records as artists on Syd Nathan's historic Cincinnati, Ohio based label, King Records.

In the 1950's, Brown rode the charts with singles like "Please, Please, Please," "Try Me" and others.

In 1963, Brown released what many consider the most important record in his career - Live at the Apollo.

The album captured the live energy of a James Brown concert and reached #2 on the charts.

Live at the Apollo was the start of Brown's fight for artistic control over his music career.

In 1964 he released the hit single "Out of Sight" for Smash Records, while he was still under contract to King Records.

A following lawsuit prevented Brown from recording until King finally capitulated and granted Brown more artistic freedom.

The result was a spate of hit records, including crossover hits like "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag," "I Got You (I Feel Good)," "I Got the Feelin," "It's A Man's World," "Licking Stick-Licking Stick" "Funky Drummer," "Say It Loud - I'm Black and I'm Proud" and others.

In 1969, Brown's band walked out on him due to his demanding nature as a bandleader.

Brown recruited a young group from Cincinnati named the Pacemakers, which featured Catfish Collins and legendary bassist Bootsy Collins, who became members of the Parliament/Funkadelic collective.

Brown has had over 100 hits throughout his career in the United States. He also embraced Hip-Hop music early in the genre's evolution.

His records have been incorporated into the fabric of Hip-Hop music since the genre's inception in 1973.

Since then, Brown's has been sampled countless times.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dlst1n7z4Xk

He teamed with Hip-Hop pioneer Afrika Bambaataa to release the hit single "Unity" in 1984 and in 1988, Brown teamed with R&B/Hip-Hop group Full Force to release "Static, Pts. 1 & 2."

Brown was also an entrepreneur, as the owner of several publishing companies, radio stations and record labels, including the legendary People imprint, which included acts like The JB's, Maceo [Parker] & The Macks and Lyn 'The Female Preacher' Collins, who's James Brown produced single "Think (About It)" was turned into a Hip-Hop classic titled "It Takes Two" by Rob Base and DJ EZ Rock.

In 1998, Brown sold $100 million in "James Brown" bonds to undisclosed insurance companies with the help of securities company The Pullman Group.

The bonds were secured against Brown's 750-song catalog, allowing him to use his works as collateral to help feed the poor and to finance the production of his Christmas album, Christmas for the Millennium & Forever.

Brown became a pioneer of digital music with the release of Christmas for the Millennium & Forever.

The album was released via an exclusive deal with Emusic.com in 1999.

Emusic.com licensed the album from Brown and sold the songs as digital downloads exclusively online, while Brown retained the master recordings and publishers and writer's rights.

http://www.allhiphop.com/hiphopnews/?ID=6538

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James Brown Remembered Around the World

By HARRY R. WEBER

Associated Press Writer

ATLANTA - "Godfather of Soul" James Brown remained the hardest working man in show business to the end, telling friends from his hospital bed that he'd be in Times Square on New Year's Eve, even though he had pneumonia.

His heart gave out a few hours later, on Christmas morning.

All Christmas day, famous fans from Mick Jagger to Snoop Dogg to the Rev. Al Sharpton shared memories of their mentor and idol, while lesser known fans left candles on Brown's Hollywood Walk of Fame star in Los Angeles and streamed to his statue in his boyhood hometown of Augusta, piling mementos and flowers at its base.

"Y'all lost the Godfather of Soul, but I lost my father. I know the whole world loved him just as much as we loved him, so we're not mourning by ourselves," Brown's daughter Venisha Brown told The Augusta Chornicle as she stood near the statue, fighting back tears.

The 73-year-old pompadoured dynamo, whose classic singles include "Papa's Got A Brand New Bag" and "I Got You (I Feel Good)," died of heart failure less than two days after he had been hospitalized with pneumonia and only three days after leading his annual holiday toy giveaway in Augusta.

"I ain't got the same energy," Brown had told the New York Post a week earlier as he discussed his planned concert tour, "but I'm sharper."

"Father Time, knowledge and prayer - I pray a lot," Brown had said. He described himself as "like Will Rogers: I love everybody. So this is not a hard job for me."

The entertainer with the rough-edged voice and flashy footwork also had diabetes and prostate cancer that was in remission. But he initially seemed fine at the hospital and talked about his New Year's Eve show at B.B. King Blues Club in New York, Copsidas said.

"Last night, he said 'I'm going to be there. I'm the hardest working man in show business,'" Copsidas said Monday.

Brown was himself to the end, at one point saying, "I'm going away tonight," said friend Charles Bobbit, who was with Brown when he died.

"I didn't want to believe him," he said.

A short time later, Brown sighed quietly, closed his eyes and died, Bobbit said.

"His thing was 'I never saw a person that I didn't love.' He was a true humanitarian who loved his country," Bobbit said.

One of the major musical influences of the past 50 years, James Brown was to rhythm and dance music what Bob Dylan was to lyrics.

From Jagger to Michael Jackson, David Bowie to Public Enemy, his rapid-footed dancing, hard-charging beats and heartfelt yet often unintelligible vocals changed the musical landscape.

"He was a whirlwind of energy and precision, and he was always very generous and supportive to me in the early days of the Stones," Jagger said. "His passing is a huge loss to music."

Rapper Snoop Dogg called him "my soul inspiration."

Brown was one of the first artists inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, along with Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry and other founding fathers.

"He made soul music a world music," said Sharpton, who toured with Brown in the 1970s and imitates his hairstyle to this day. "What James Brown was to music in terms of soul and hip-hop, rap, all of that, is what Bach was to classical music. This is a guy who literally changed the music industry. He put everybody on a different beat, a different style of music. He pioneered it."

Sharpton will officiate at Brown's funeral service, details of which were still incomplete, Copsidas said.

Brown's daughter-in-law Diane Dean Rouse told The Augusta Chronicle she hoped the funeral would be open to the people of Augusta.

"He would want it open because he would want everybody to get there and because that's who he loved," she said.

Brown won a Grammy for lifetime achievement in 1992, as well as Grammys in 1965 for "Papa's Got a Brand New Bag" (best R&B recording) and for "Living In America" in 1987 (best R&B vocal performance, male.) He had a brief but memorable role on the big screen as a manic preacher in the 1980's movie "The Blues Brothers."

Brown, who lived in Beech Island, S.C., near the Georgia line, also had a turbulent personal life that included charges of abusing drugs and alcohol. After a widely publicized, drug-fueled confrontation with police in 1988 that ended in an interstate car chase, Brown spent 15 months in a South Carolina prison and 10 months in a work release program.

From the 1950s, when Brown had his first R&B hit, "Please, Please, Please" in 1956, through the mid-1970s, Brown went on a frenzy of cross-country tours, concerts and new songs. He earned the nickname "The Hardest Working Man in Show Business" and often tried to prove it to his fans, said Jay Ross, his lawyer of 15 years.

Brown's stage act was as memorable, and as imitated, as his records, with his twirls and spins and flowing cape, his repeated faints to the floor at the end.

With his tight pants, eye makeup and outrageous hair, Brown set the stage for younger stars such as Jackson and Prince. And the early rap generation overwhelmingly sampled his music and voice as they laid the foundation of hip-hop culture.

His trademark moment of each performance was at the end: A weary, spent Brown begins to leave the stage, a cape thrown over his shoulders, then suddenly stops, shakes the cape off and rushes back to grab the microphone, his voice and feet moving at top speed all over again.

"Disco is James Brown, hip-hop is James Brown, rap is James Brown; you know what I'm saying? You hear all the rappers, 90 percent of their music is me," Brown told The AP in 2003.

Brown was born in poverty in Barnwell, S.C., in 1933, and abandoned as a 4 year old to the care of relatives and friends. He grew up in Augusta in an "ill-repute area," as he once called it, learning how to hustle to survive.

By the eighth grade in 1949, Brown had served 3 1/2 years in reform school for breaking into cars. While there, he met Bobby Byrd, whose family took Brown into their home. Byrd also took Brown into his group, the Gospel Starlighters. Soon they changed their name to the Famous Flames and their style to hard R&B.

"He was dramatic to the end - dying on Christmas Day," said the Rev. Jesse Jackson, a friend of Brown's since 1955. "Almost a dramatic, poetic moment. He'll be all over the news all over the world today. He would have it no other way."

Brown is survived by his partner, Tomi Rae Hynie, one of his backup singers, and at least four children - two daughters and sons Daryl and James Brown II, Copsidas said.

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Guest Guest_bigted_*

I found this post on the Public Enemy board made by Ginuwine's brother:

I recorded a video of my brother Ginuwine speaking on James Brown. I shot it right after we found out about his passing the same day of his passing.

Probably not a lotta Ginuwine fans here but i thought some of you might be interested to see one of the newer R&B cats giving it up to the Godfather.

I was fortunate enough to see my brother perform with James Brown for the 20th Anniversary BET special. I was front row with our mom (GOD rest her soul) and that's something that will always be special to me.

Imagine seeing your brother performing on stage with one of your moms favorite artist that she grew up on. That's the highlight of my brothers career to me.

Peace and Blessings to James Brown.

Here's the link to the video i shot...its on you tube and i included the BET performance as well.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbRJGwTMfqg

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http://mchammer.blogspot.com/

Hammer posting pics of the viewing, it says there that he was born in 1928 so that'd made him 78 years old then?? Hammer even wrote a lil' tribute rap to James:

James Brown: It's Time To Go Home

Determined to make it,

His dance a threat,

His voice a power,

Combined,

A Cold Sweat,

It's Time To Go Home

His face was stone,

His hair was whipped,

Jaw line was bold,

His heart,

A warm morning mist,

It's Time To Go Home

Gifted to touch,

He gave so much,

Every show,

Each night,

And never lost his touch,

It's Time To Go Home

The pain of the struggle,

was etched in his face,

but the words from his mouth,

reflected God's grace,

It's Time To Go Home

Please Don't Go,

Master of the show,

Brothers gotta work it out,

We free but won't go

It's Time To Go Home

Say It Loud,

We need a theme,

Brothers killing Brothers,

We still Proud,

but we have no hope,

No dreams,

It's Time To Go Home

Dream young man,

Dream young girl,

Be like The GodFather Of Soul,

And conquer this man's world,

It's Time To Go Home

It official he was prophetic,

Hardest working man in show business,

proclaimed and vetted,

It's Time To Go Home

Now be still, sleep and rest,

prepare to minister your music,

on the highest level yet,

It's Time To Go Home

The author of melody has required your soul,

God knew when he made you,

Soul Brother Number One

you too cold!

It's Time To Go Home

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  • 7 years later...

I'm bumping this up since today would've been his 81st/86th birthday? Man these posts bring back memories, JB is the ultimate performer!

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