This wasn't gangsta rap doe. This was hardcore/bragging-about-your-skillz rap. But yes "gangsta" can be used to say cool. "Beastin'" probably is a better word doe, along with "globetrottin'" cause this shit is globetrottin' shit. Rodney King-hating too. No true nigga likes that "can we all just get along" ass-kisser to incel "Friends"-watching whites.
🏆🏆🏆🏆🎤 🎧 🎼 🎹 🥁THIS IS LEGIT! Whoever this is TORE THE SHIT OUT THE BEAT... broke it over their knee like some WWE shit. LOVE RESPECT AND GRATITUDE.... yall true artists... ☠️THANKS FROM A COMBAT VET WHO LOVES THE CRAFT
Whenever I hear someone in a comment section say they don't make rap like this no more and they're in a Wu-Tang Tupac or biggie Channel I'm like you don't know nothing about Hip Hop for one and for 2 you must be new to this it's a shame how much talent went unnoticed because of three just mentioned
XD trumpets and brass in general is black sub-Saharan Episcopal choir music anyways. fuck you talking about nigga? It don't matter if it's G-funk, smoove rap or that grimy gritty NY rap. Son...
Causing mass hysteria in da takova. These niggaz ripped through Brooklyn and put dat damage on a rhyme, like Onyx. Real Brooklyn, Detroit - the gutter cities. New York and Flint is beastin but Brooklyn and Detroit got that shit to them.
Tha Lowa was a NYC based group from Alphabet City (Lillian Wald Housing) in the Lower East Side and was composed of Durty Rob, Da Uzi and Terra Devil. The crew was formed in 1993 and was also known under the name of L.E.S Niggas. Their first appearance was their demo on the ultra rare "Phat Flavor '93 Unsigned Hip Hop" tape. Da Uzi : "We all grew up together in the same project at the time we got started, we were all pretty much working on solo projects except for Terra he had a partner that went by the name of Bal short for Balance . I had a friend of mine that was for the most part managing me that went by the name of Big Shot and together we decided to form the Lowa. Terra was locked in a contract which initially stalled the union. I was able to run into Terra’s manager and through some let’s say persuasive dialogue was able to free Terra from the contract. We were all from the Lower East Side, just different parts, and were all involved in that Lower East Side music scene. Through mutual friends we all came together." Their EP was really a vinyl demo and was only used for promo not for sale at the time. Only about 500 copies were made, which lead to bootlegging in Japan in the late 2000's. It became sought after due to a mention in a book by Freddy Fresh as a classic 90's record. The rappers did a few demos after the record's release to the record pools and DJs but they were never to record again. The demos were supposed to be for an album that never happened. Unfortunately the masters were lost and DATs were destroyed. The reels may be in the possession of the executive producer "Big Shot" but he never officially confirmed. Their EP was the only release by Tha Lowa- after the release of the vinyl, one of the members had serious law problems and got locked up ... as a result the group ended.
Nah it don't got soul. It got juice. No diss to soul music, but that music is so Southern. I love my shit sub-Saharan as fuck. Meaning sub-Saharan Episcopal choir brass and brass instruments. I'm not thinking fried chicken, I'm thinking Big Macs, real gluttonous food, nigga. Music from the East Coast is literally just like music from Nigeria, Ghana, Chad, Mali, Cameroon, Central African Republic, South Afrika (and I mean the Zulus, not the white people - cause "Africa" is Latino and "Afrika" is clearly Danish), Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Kenya. And black people having non-black last names is only because when blacks came as free people to the flood harbors of New York City, they came from a time when sub-Saharia had no last name system like it does today. You were known as Semi of Accra (Ghana) or Ewu of Abuja (Nigeria) or some name like that. The adoption of surnames was to facilitate it for the majority population to understand. All immigrants from any non-last name system country did that, be they Chinese, Japanese, Indians, but black people we do it like beasts. A name like Daquan Washington sound beastin as fuck.
You may say Montell Jordan, Out of Eden, Silk, but I say Guy, Bell Biv Devoe, Keith Sweat, LL Cool J (yeah he borderline sings too), Ralph Tresvant, New Edition, Johnny Gill, SWV, Changing Faces. Real shit.
hell yeah!! i'm in love with the bassline
Coolest old-school shit. Love dat Boombap-sound.
What a trumpet...
EARGASMUS!!!
Ohrgasmus gar nicht schlecht 😅
You know real Hip Hop when you hear it 🧐
Anyone else notice 1994 was the peak of hip hop/rap. Back when gangster rap was still music. Man these guys were genius brilliant masters of style.
more like 1996, i will say
This wasn't gangsta rap doe. This was hardcore/bragging-about-your-skillz rap. But yes "gangsta" can be used to say cool. "Beastin'" probably is a better word doe, along with "globetrottin'" cause this shit is globetrottin' shit. Rodney King-hating too. No true nigga likes that "can we all just get along" ass-kisser to incel "Friends"-watching whites.
@@CMC-23check the underground, i’d say the bell curve peaked in the middle of 1993-1996
Replaying again again and again.. 🔥 🔊
This is one of those tracks, where u instantly know its gonna be a bomb!
Thanks for all the love y’all appreciate it.
What happend to the other guys? I been on these tracks and your other one don't give up since 2017
@@dixonskidd4252 Two of them are currently active and occasioanlly work in aliance and the other has persued other endeavors.
Your channel got me back into hip hop. Mad respect!
ORIGINAL HIP HOP UNDERGROUND!!!!
Dope af
As soon as you hear that hook you know for 100% sure that this is New York rap. That hook sounds like it belongs in a Big L track.
Or an MOP, Black Moon, Tim Dog, Gang Starr, Big Daddy Kane track son.
🏆🏆🏆🏆🎤 🎧 🎼 🎹 🥁THIS IS LEGIT! Whoever this is TORE THE SHIT OUT THE BEAT... broke it over their knee like some WWE shit.
LOVE RESPECT AND GRATITUDE.... yall true artists... ☠️THANKS FROM A COMBAT VET WHO LOVES THE CRAFT
Boom Bap!! At 1:19 it sounded like RZA
So underrated.
Sleigh Bells and Horns, straight up rap ahit!!!
Old is Rare 🔥🔥🔥🔥
Los buenos temas de Tha Lowa nunca mueren
Yeaaaaaaa, this is indeed real music.
DEM HORNS IS DOPE LUV THIS SHIT THIS ABOUT MY MILLIONTH TIME PLAYIN IT LOL!!!!!!
JINGLE BELLS, JINGLE BELLS, ALL THE WAY, ALL THE DAY!
90s demos were the best!
Haha yes i still love the sleigh bell tracks
Here we go ¡
I like the music hip hop
Its fireee its arsonits like candlee🔥
still dope!!!
The logo looks like "Thai Lowa" to me... :-D dope beat anywho~
Straight up.
Bassline is ( I think ) from " The Stars That Play With Laughing Sam's Dice " - Jimi Hendrix
awesome!
shivers
93' in spirit
Dopeeeeeee, perfecto beat 9/10*
11/10*
Fuegoo🔥🔥dopeeeee
BOMB !!!!!
Oh shit I remember this one
dope af. 1:19 reminds me of RZA
Joseph Ford really doe
Yeah can kinda see what you mean
Nice profile pic ;)
@@devastation5936 This is an album cover for a death metal band called Cryptopsy
@@Monfa55 I know.
Dope!!!!! So nice man!!
Crazy
Whenever I hear someone in a comment section say they don't make rap like this no more and they're in a Wu-Tang Tupac or biggie Channel I'm like you don't know nothing about Hip Hop for one and for 2 you must be new to this it's a shame how much talent went unnoticed because of three just mentioned
3 Hotz N a Cot ha
dope.
yeeeeeeeeee
More lovely rare horrorcore..... Nice
THE TITLE RHYMES
Coyhaique Chile 🇨🇱 🍻 🍻 🍻 🍻 fin del mundo.
💪🇨🇱😊👊✌️✌️🔫⚰️💐👌🍺👽✌️
Hendrix in the back !!!
2020
4 years later wyd
the real
let em have it
"At Large"- Intelligent Hoodlum (aka Tragedy) uses the same sample. Fuck what ya heard and act like ya know!Both tracks are fuckin' dope.
damn damn DAMN!!!!
straight to the gut.
This can't be done, far out
🔥🔥🔥
this is type ILL
harddancing
❤
flava soyoso.!!
Fire
shit is mad real
BRAHHHHHH BRAHHHHH !!!!!!
Damn! This is hard as fuck
hermoso
hard ass upload powwiN!
Dopest
🔥🔥🔥🔥
This hook is fire anyone know ones as good . God damn
Is this vinyl available anywhere ?? Can't find it .. Dope shit!
niiiice
Vern Viaduct
hou coool
D🎺PE✨
nice shit
Dope aF
w0w
🎼🔥🔥🔥💣💣💣💨
Opium..
Fino
yeah! can i download in mp3?
Don't crossover
Aye ,big up ogdoninja..got da-uzi's solo project?
I do
Nice
real hardcore rappers sample trumpets
XD trumpets and brass in general is black sub-Saharan Episcopal choir music anyways. fuck you talking about nigga? It don't matter if it's G-funk, smoove rap or that grimy gritty NY rap. Son...
@@robjackson5245 I don't think he meant it sarcasticly
He was being serious
@@robjackson5245 Did you mean Jazz?
Causing mass hysteria in da takova. These niggaz ripped through Brooklyn and put dat damage on a rhyme, like Onyx. Real Brooklyn, Detroit - the gutter cities. New York and Flint is beastin but Brooklyn and Detroit got that shit to them.
da shit !
Want the instrumental bad
Coming soon…
kinda sounds like pumpkin hill
LOL frank zappa reference?
Anybody have any info on tha lowa?
Tha Lowa was a NYC based group from Alphabet City (Lillian Wald Housing) in the Lower East Side and was composed of Durty Rob, Da Uzi and Terra Devil. The crew was formed in 1993 and was also known under the name of L.E.S Niggas.
Their first appearance was their demo on the ultra rare "Phat Flavor '93 Unsigned Hip Hop" tape.
Da Uzi : "We all grew up together in the same project at the time we got started, we were all pretty much working on solo projects except for Terra he had a partner that went by the name of Bal short for Balance . I had a friend of mine that was for the most part managing me that went by the name of Big Shot and together we decided to form the Lowa. Terra was locked in a contract which initially stalled the union. I was able to run into Terra’s manager and through some let’s say persuasive dialogue was able to free Terra from the contract. We were all from the Lower East Side, just different parts, and were all involved in that Lower East Side music scene. Through mutual friends we all came together."
Their EP was really a vinyl demo and was only used for promo not for sale at the time. Only about 500 copies were made, which lead to bootlegging in Japan in the late 2000's. It became sought after due to a mention in a book by Freddy Fresh as a classic 90's record.
The rappers did a few demos after the record's release to the record pools and DJs but they were never to record again. The demos were supposed to be for an album that never happened. Unfortunately the masters were lost and DATs were destroyed. The reels may be in the possession of the executive producer "Big Shot" but he never officially confirmed.
Their EP was the only release by Tha Lowa- after the release of the vinyl, one of the members had serious law problems and got locked up ... as a result the group ended.
90% of this info is correct.
I’m one of the producers of this project.
Danielle Pines
uh ohhh here comes the devil ;)
no clones
wackness in the comment section just be quiet
East coast rap got more soul in it than the west.
Nah it don't got soul. It got juice. No diss to soul music, but that music is so Southern. I love my shit sub-Saharan as fuck. Meaning sub-Saharan Episcopal choir brass and brass instruments. I'm not thinking fried chicken, I'm thinking Big Macs, real gluttonous food, nigga. Music from the East Coast is literally just like music from Nigeria, Ghana, Chad, Mali, Cameroon, Central African Republic, South Afrika (and I mean the Zulus, not the white people - cause "Africa" is Latino and "Afrika" is clearly Danish), Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Kenya. And black people having non-black last names is only because when blacks came as free people to the flood harbors of New York City, they came from a time when sub-Saharia had no last name system like it does today. You were known as Semi of Accra (Ghana) or Ewu of Abuja (Nigeria) or some name like that. The adoption of surnames was to facilitate it for the majority population to understand. All immigrants from any non-last name system country did that, be they Chinese, Japanese, Indians, but black people we do it like beasts. A name like Daquan Washington sound beastin as fuck.
You may say Montell Jordan, Out of Eden, Silk, but I say Guy, Bell Biv Devoe, Keith Sweat, LL Cool J (yeah he borderline sings too), Ralph Tresvant, New Edition, Johnny Gill, SWV, Changing Faces. Real shit.
dope..
Nice