B-Real on Cypress Hill's Past Beef with Lighter Shade of Brown, RIP DTTX (Part 9)
Вставка
- Опубліковано 28 лип 2020
- Part 10: • B-Real: Our 1st Album ...
Part 8: • Vlad Blames Cypress Hi...
Part 1: • B-Real on His Mother E...
--------
In this clip, B-Real spoke about how much Cypress Hill was influenced by legendary groups such as Public Enemy and Run DMC. B-Real also spoke at length about Cypress Hill deciding not to brand themselves as a Latino rap group when they launched their careers. He said that the market for Latin hip-hop wasn't there but they found ways to imbue their music with Latino cultural influences and eventually created an entire Spanish-speaking album. - Розваги
He mentioned a minor beef for 5 secs and that’s the vid title vlad?!? Lol
Yeah, Vlad doesn't even ask about it. He doesn't say shit. Shady Vlad.
yall dont get the business lol
Click bait-!!!!
I watched this video to see what the beef was and he says damn near nothing about it!
I remember reading about it back then in Word up magazine. It was when Cypress second album dropped B Real was basically saying the same thing he is now about being both a latin hip hop artist but wanting a wider audience in hip hop. He didn’t like the fact that lighter shade of brown would market themselves as a “latin hip hop” group and they couldn’t rap in Spanish. He kept calling them “lighter shade of Biters”. and calling them fake and posers.
LSOB was a part of the real hip hop movement! You can’t count them out!
They dont get their credit. Besides Baby Bash there hasn't been a Mexican rapper or group to do it like that.
☝❤🙏
100% I agree!!
My Righteous
brother👑☝🙏
That's not what B Real is saying. They just wanted to be under the Hip Hop umbrella and not labeled Chicano Rap.
Lighter shade of brown - hey DJ is what made me get into hip hop when I was 10yrs old! It was my favourite song for a long time and a track that has great memories in my life I lived in Brisbane at that time. Respect from Australia 🙏
Me too dog🍻 B-Real is a fuckin hater LSOB dsnt get enough props
Nice!
Greetings amigo
That song was a cover kinda to an older 80s rap
Man I been listening to LSOB lately too. Underrated group. R.I.P. DTTX
Underrated? They had one song.
@@leslieloudermilk3876 One song! You don't know LSOB!
Agreed! I love LSOB!
DTTX was very underrated. Homie had a vicious flow. RIP
You're a real Class Act!
L.S.O.B. Sunday afternoon is a L.A. classic to this day
Produced by D.jJammin James Carter
Lighter shade of clown LoL
@@oscarvasquez6542 Who are you weirdo?
Latin Active still hits today
@@LIFELONGMUSIC your father
@@oscarvasquez6542 That's enough internet today for you kid
Temple of Boom is a classic album beginning to end.
No doubt . Black Sunday will always have a special place for me tho
Temples of Boom is crucial
FACTS
Locotes
Back when hip hop was 40ozs blunts and baggy clothes...
Being Latino in Canada, I was in grade 7 when Latin Lingo/Black Sunday came out. Not knowing what hip hop was and not many latinos in my school. I remember all the older grade 10 kids coming to me asking what the lyrics were about, I felt like the coolest kid in school. That was the day I feel in love with hip hop culture, a love to this day. Thank You Cypress Hill for representing us.
Shout-out to all my Latinos in Canada especially in the 604, I been there & it was firme to live there for a while. Fuck B-Real that's why Cube jacked your joint👈🏽
@abovethagamerollinz4776 He never gave LSOB their respect for our culture!
@@abovethagamerollinz4776ok jcat
A Lighter Shade Of Brown was repping. . . had that "Hey DJ" jam. Rest in peace Don't Try To Xerox.
Miss you Bobby! R.I.P DTTX. Learned so much from you brother
Cypress Hill III Temples Of Boom was one of my favorites, very dark sounding album almost creepy like, it had the perfect album cover to go with it.
That album cover and gatefold art was awesome. I remember looking and it was done by Pawn Shop Press, salutes. Fully gave a total sonic & visual experience few reached outside of Public Enemy and Wu-Tang Clan.
REST IN HEAVEN BOBBY DTTX LSOB
@Mr Happy Folger back at u buddy
@Mr Happy Folger tu eres un payaso, cara de carton🤣🤣
Kid Frost was dropping wax way back in 84 that was stright up hip hop
Thanks for keeping the cuss words in this interview, makes it more authentic
Yes editing the cuss words were just ruining some of the interviews.
he probably forgot to edit the videos. 😂
I think you tube does it automatically. I noticed many videos from other creators also contains bleeps. So it might be a creator setting upon publishing.
It has to be done from time to time or UA-cam wont pay for it
My favorite Muggs production is puppet master with B-Real & Dr. Dre and the video was something else! Absolut Classic!
The one he did with RZA was off the chain too.
@@dariog36th Yea. Puppet Master sounded like some Dre production. Third World sounded like a Rza track. It Could Happen To You sounded like a Havoc track. Because Muggs was lazy af. He was emulating the producers who normally made tracks for the artists who were featured. Muggs was all on everyone's d&^%$. His best ish were on the first 4 Cypress Hill albums. Especially the first one. That Soul Assassins album was good. But didnt sound ish like traditional Muggs tracks.
When the Fat Lady Sings and General Principles 💯
@@dianevrules STFU bitch dj Muggs is better than Dre Scott storch and day dillenger produced by for Dre
@@aim6613 Fat Lady, yeah I almost forgot about that one - dope as hell too.
Spanish fly dropped soy 18 with a bullet in 1989. There were others around.
Yup! Ese Rich Rock, Ese Daz and my homie DJ Tricks 100%
erbsone ese lil pendejo
Damn. I used to bang that shit hard
@@erbsone never heard of dj tricks
Spanish fly underrated asfc
I'm Mexican from San Diego California and I been listening to Hip Hop all my life! I was 12 years old back in 88 bumping N.W.A, Ice T, Too $hort, Eazy E etc... I was even listening to east coast hip hop like Public Enemy, B.D.P, Rakim,E.P.M.D, etc... Hip Hop was big back than and I went to a predominantly Mexican middle school! Everyone one was bumping west coast and east Coast Hip hop back than and even my older sister was listening to rap since the 80'! So B real, Mexicans been down with and listening to real Hip Hop way before they started to separate it into categories! 💯
619 stand up
At that time, Mexicans went crazy just to see Crazy Dee on the NWA and the Posse album and hear him say "I'm putting in your culo a 38 slug" on Dopeman!
@@Mrfatbelly 619
Southeast
North park locos??? Wtf foo fake ass hood they ain’t no hood name that from SD
Would love to see u interview Zach de la rocha from RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE
Lol Glad is apart of the MACHINE
Omg yes
@@dannyaumua106 naw vlad aint with that commie bulshit. As much as i think dude is corny, he aint no socialist
Some of those that work forces...
This needs to happen though
Self-awareness has more value than the NASDAQ.... You're listening to a general speak...Salute!!!
Dj muggs is a beast been a beast that work he did with the gza and roc marciano kaos album fire!
Kill Devil Hills was🔥🔥🔥 too.
ILL BILL is too underrated
Yep that GZA album was fire. And that planet Asia album also.
Dont forget sick jacken the mask and assasin flames.
@@randyj124 that album was sick.
I still prefer his old Cypress first 3 albums beats but that GZA is cool... That Sick Jacken had great beats on it too! I’ve gotta listen to more recent stuff I think...
great interview been waiting to hear more from this dude
I met B-Real in the LA airport right after the first album dropped. I walked by him at least 3 times before I said anything. I was looking real corporate in heels, a dress, trench coat and briefcase. Hey, it was back in the day! I came up to him and I said "are you?". Before I got it out he said "yeah". Talked for a few minutes. It had been storming for a few days in LA. Got on the plane. Bobo in front of me hollered at him. B-Real across. It stormed so bad everybody had to seatbelt in the entire flight. That plane was rocking! B-Real looked terrified. I am sure he wasn't the only one!
Yo Vlad!...I Wanna Thank You For Bringing In B-Real For This Interview! It's Great To See B-Real and Listening To His and Cypress Hill's Stories. I Grew Up Listening To Cypress Hill and Now At Age 39, I Still Do Listen To Them...Still A Big Fan and Still Keeping Their Previous Earlier Album Cd's In Mint Condition!! BIG SHOUT OUT TO B-REAL & CYPRESS HILL + VLADTV!!!! 🤘🏻😎🤘🏻
One of your best interviews !!!!
Cypress hill iconic group
You need to get ODM on Vlad
Radio legend
Vlad ain't down with Lexos and Hos smh
What a legend B-Real and Cypress Hill are. They were so far ahead of their time when they dropped and just continued to excel as they grew. Nothing but respect for that funky Cypress Hill shit. 🤘🏾
Cypress hill , house of Pain , funk doobiest , psycho realm , that whole click is what helped me get through some hard times ... hip hop definitely raised me !!!
“I gave greenthumb his doctorate degree” - TK
Growing up back then I can honestly say before the whole chicano rap movement NWA was the biggest influence for young latinos in the streets,but once la raza came out it was on like donkey kong from there!that jam put it on the map..
I still have the first CD from 1991. I can remember putting it on repeat and listening to it all day and night. Then I would play Kid Frost for a bit. Brings back a lot of memories
That's crazy my first album I had I don't have anymore was paper boy the whole 9 yards
REST IN PEACE BOBBY FROM LSOB
Bless you for getting B-Real on VladTv
Crazy- I listened to both LSOB AND Cypress Hill as a kid. Never knew they had a beef.
Amongst the first hip hop songs that I can remember that was a hit and got put on repeat in my home was Hey DJ. In fact, the album "Layin in the Cut" never really left my rotation. Still listen to that every once in a while.
Cypress Hill was huge in my home as well. I discovered Cypress when Black Sunday came out.
Well said
Mad respect 2 Cypress hill 4 there 1st albums back wen I was breakin & bombing up Graffiti I was jamming there songs Everyday while I was getting down back in the mid 90s💯💪🏽🎨🖌
how was the graffiti scene back then?always wondered considering the scene is kinda dead nowadays
The first west coast album I remember that consistently was heard banging out of people's cars through the hood. Brooklyn and across the city. After that, it was the Chronic that I remember as the next west coast album that banged hard out in NYC on radio and in the hoods. Cypress Hills opened that door before DeathRow and better than Ruthless did. Facts.
You are a fool to say before Ruthless and Death Row. Ruthless opened the doors for mainstream West Coast street hip-hop, period. Dre brought that same vibe to Death Row. I'm a fan of Cypress Hill's first 4 albums and the Revamped EP. But they couldnt f%$# with Ruthless artists like NWA, Above The Law, The D.O.C., Ren, Eazy, Bone. GTFOH bih!
Ya idiots please learn how to read. Nah, actually really read what I wrote, then examin how stupid your responses sound.
Gerald Wilkison Stop simpin’
Diane V Dude is right. He’s clearly talking about influence on the East Coast. You have no idea what you’re saying, bih.
You sir are correct.
THAT FULL SPANISH ALBUM WAS DOPE AF
Vlad didn't even know Cypress Hill had beef with Lighter Shade of Brown until B mentioned it on his own. SMH I wonder if he'll ask about the beef with Kid Frost, Chubb Rock, The Source, XXL, and House of Pain. Not holding my breath.
i didnt know about it either... what a dope interview.
Ice cube
@@azyuma1 Get over it. Been talked about to nauseam. Go back to Vlad's first interview with B-Real or Beef 2.
Strictly Hip Hop chill my brother nothing for me to get over✌🏽
I didn't know that either lol but as far as the beef with Kid Frost they both squashed it long time ago👊🏼
Cypress had beef with LSOB and Kid Frost. They really don’t discuss where all that stemmed from.
Was wicked minds song brown pride song a diss for B Real
LSOB till this day still be the best Chicano, Mexican-American Rap music that you will ever hear.. RIP Bobby
Vlad should interview Chicano rapper Conejo. He was on the run from the law for many years and released 20+ albums while he was on the run. He’s got a crazy story. How many other rappers can say the same?
That would be cool…thing. Most of us never heard of him. So why bother interviewing him
B Real is Latin with African Blood. He looked Black with his Afro on The Thicker than water movie
What about frank v from proper dos
Muggz is one of the best producers easy!!!
Tres equis was my favorite joint on that first album. Played it so much I popped two tapes in the same place
Salute B-Real 💯
Freddy Cutlass "Im Puerto Rico!!" was out, as well as The Beatnutz
None of them really mattered the way Cypress Did. Thats evident as Cypress was the first 'Latino' hip hop group to go Platinum.
Beatnutz, song called watch out now. That's my favorite beat ever.
Beatnuts came out in '93.
First Cypress Hill album is legendary. Wore the paint off that cassette tape
They made up for it though with their spanish translation songs. They did a dope job!
Vlad you gotta interview ODM. That would be dope
Brownside Ruthless Records!!
Toker was a abc rapper yeah homie putting in work ese LoL
Sick jacken b real big Duke
Vatos in the barrio was hanging
CRIMINAL KEPT IT ONE HUNDRED..I APPLAUD B FOR ADMITTING IT MOST WOULD OF LIED
Lol you watched that bullshit lol
@@dirtkills YA IF U CALL IT BULLSHIT
Shouts to him for apparently highlighting the difference without disrespect. Cypress Hill could say 'n---a' because they were Afro-LatinX of Cuban descent. Mr. Criminal said that was not his lane to go that way.
@@reimourrpower9357 Yeah Sen Dog and Mellow And Sen Dog is a Blood but B Real is Mexican and Muggs is Italian. They really had no business saying the N word.
What does he wave the Mexican flag
💥💥💥Legendary shit 💯. I remember first hearing them on the Juice soundtrack, bumping that everywhere💪💪...then I found out they're Latino. 💥💥💥
‘’Step back punk cause I’m a Latino’’
Ask b real how he discovered big duke & sick Jacken of the psycho realm !!!
I heard they where performing at la plazaita olvera or some shit like that when b real was walking by eating a Whopper they cought his attention and he signed them to sony I believe also when b real heard the stone garden beat he loved it so much he decided to join the psycho realm
@@oscarvasquez6542 stone garden my favorite pyscho song that beat is crazy glod
@@sickfoo5506 hell yeah
Muggs' early Cypress production was like if the Bomb Squad had produced '3 Feet High & Rising' or Prince Paul had produced 'It Takes a Nation of Millions'. It had that De La sample aesthetic but the Bomb Squad "wall of noise" production technique. The debut LP is really one of those records that is unparalleled production wise and is emblematic of what Hip-Hop is SUPPOSED to sound like.
Well all FAM1LYS are Proud of u Real Niggas want to See u Shine Blood Real.
To Cypress Hill's credit: they saluted their *Afro-Latino Cuban* roots and Mexican lineage. Props Mr. Criminal for apparently not using 'n----a' because he's not 'Black', Cypress Hill (excluding Muggs, Italian/Nordic) were Black LatinX artists. CH also opened the door for Piru Bloods, cannabis and heavy metal imagery in Rap. Salutes Cypress Hill & Soul Assassins.
Don't call em "Latinx"
LatinX -🤡
Don't Try To Xerox RIP
Dammm y’all could have talked about DTTX a lil more, don’t diss him like that
He sucked though
I remember chillin with Muggs listening to NWA in 1988 he was like im gonna be bigger than them,me and my.cousin were like .speechless lol
Definitely Legends
Nobody REMEMBERs Prince from POWER RULE(smooth was the shxt)!?!.
dj muggz is from NY thats why their beats are so eastcoast . and I love them for that
DAMN! I never knew DJ Muggz was from NY! No wonder the beats were so New York POPPING. thanks for the info!
OG B-REAL#1
RIP 😢😢😢 Bobby from lsob
Awesome duo
Hey guest when Vlad says yeah while you all are talkin it means he's trying to interrupt you
He does that ALL THE TIME!🤦🏽♂️
Black Sunday
Funkdoobiest
house of pain
DJ muggs should be held up there with dr dre , rza and dj quik
Cypress 1st album is timeless and ahead of their time.. classic..original..etc etc..!! nobody had beats and lyrical flows in a different style.. speaking on chronic and what not... !! the lady and i O can spit all the lyrics to that album !!! Lol as well as the second album !!
@Mr Happy Folger that must be the most ignorant thing said here.. B_real didn't become famous by crying about his mommy and baby mommy like a lil bitch made ass..lol eminem is supa wack ...go back and listen to that album bud ... nobody was gabbin about the streets like that.. B_real and cypress are dOpeness !
@Mr Happy Folger you forgot to add the S (4 Folgers Coffee) on your last name DUMB ASS!!!! As good/great Eminem is - he had a couple duds too but that being said Dude paid homage to B-Real/Cypress on one of his singles recently so Real Recognizes Real!
O_fficial1 - 1000% AGREED!!!!!! As good as Black Sunday is/was - to this day i can't understand why 1st album (a Source magazine (familiar with them?) 5 mics classic IMO!) doesn't get the recognition it deserves and everyone gives Black Sunday it's flowers (record sales #'s i guess).....without the 1st album Black Sunday and rest of catalog would've probably never existed. CYPRESS HILL 4 LIFE!
@@iz5924 yes sir brother, just as good but i failed to mention BlackSunday as well.. another my lady and i flow along word for word with them !! lOl.. nothing like they were doing back then.i have both album on vinyl... cypress definitely didn't get the recognition they deserved..i remember the Source and the b.s. mics. Real heads know whats up ! ..long live cypress foshO !
Truest shit. Puerto Rican’s didn’t buy Latin hip hop in the late 80s and 90s except for the Reggaeton. Many also played Freestyle and salsa. Then you had the ones who contributed to hip hop since day one.
This was in the Bronx.
True. I be having arguments with these cats. Puerto Ricans in Bronx were part of the invention of rap in 1970s, NOT the Puerto Ricans in Puerto Rico, though. But, at the same time, A lot Puerto Ricans left hip-hop scene....or...just followed Salsa Music, and freestyle music, and no hip-hop....
The production on Pac's strictly for my N had the same style of production
Cypress hills first album was the first album I ever bought as a kid.
What was that hit that lighter shade had? I have forgotten it has been so long.
B-Real forgets that a lot of these labels were put on these artist they didn’t choose it
They decided to run with the title or label they got because a lot of people didn’t want to open the doors for them and still do they don’t want to see our people shine in Hip-Hop
DJ Muggs & Premier, I favorites for 30 years now.
B-Real just gets sexier every year!
Sometimes a real can't B real, Lighter Shade Of Brown all them day let's all keep in mind it took more then two artist to make Cypress like Cube said the B in B- Real must stand for, Bitch!
Shout-out to ODM r.i.p Bobby " DTTX " Ramirez, this for u king thank you for the early 90's, rest in heaven pimp,☝✌
BIG PUN !
Temple of Doom album bangin!
Interview The Last Emperor. He was signed to Aftermath. Check his tracks, Hustler's Theme, Do you Really Care, Jungle Cats, Charlie Brown, and more.
Public Enemy was ahead of their time ✊🏾
Since day 1... I said DJ MUGGS has an East Coast sound (he's originally from Queens btw). Then the jointz he did with House Of Pain and GZA solidified my point. MUGGS is a great one.
Should get ODM on
B-real Meteor Man
@5:05 The Beatnuts were also starting to make noise on the east coast
From The Bay. Cypress Hill has always been poppin up this way. They did it smart being your non basic ass Latino rap group. Ahead of their time with the braids, gold grills, lingo, To the southern Latins since they try to separate themselves from that it’s bad. But to us up North is apart of our culture. We definitely have our cholo roots but put a Northern style on it that’s Sic Wid It. LSOB “On a Sunday Afternoon” is a classic up here too.
What about Frost he formed latino velvet which had:baby bash,n2deep aka jay tee,Don Cisco also collabed with funky aztecs made a unity track on Latin alliance album, plus he had braids
Do a spanish fly interview with dj trickz and ese daz
The Xylophone that Cypress Hill sound Illusions
Damn I didnt know about LSOB beef
Check out Chino Grande s " Vatos remix " " Between you and snoop I can hardly tell the diffrence "
You have to get Sondoobie on Vlad!
DJ Muggs is a living legend!! Need to have him on Vlad!!
Public Enemy #1✊🏾
Lighter shade of brown Spanish fly kid frost and dark room familia all came out before them.,I love Cypresshill but they always seem like they tried to separate themselves from Chicanos until they needed Skeena for their beef with cube. They always gave shout outs and features to everyone but the Chicano rappers Other than Psycho realm and delinquent habits and there was a bunch of good ones that came out around the same time too the Mexakinz, proper Dos, s.p.m.,Brownside, Little rob and the brown crowd and total devastation...
I didn’t realize they where from LA until the mid 90’s when they got in to it with Cube. Before that all their movie cameos and soundtrack features was all East Coast themed films even Judgement Night they where in Chicago and when they did MTV they was always in NYC. Like B Real said uh the interview they where influences by Public Enemy and sounded like it. Plus B Real had the blowout fro so I thought they was Ricans from NY up until the Cube beef.
They needed to make a song with the BEATNUTTS
Ay yo muggs, make it ruff!
High pitch Sick Jack and low pitch Big Duke
What was the beef with LSOB? I remember Mellow dissing them in a magazine.
What did Mellow say about them?? I know Cypress Hill disses them on their 3rd album "Looking for a fatboy and a Lighter shade of brown" and also "Insane in the Brain" was a direct diss to Kid Frost
@@Betoven81 Actually, B-Real stated that "Insane in the brain" was a diss track towards Chubb Rock...although they did have some issues with Kid Frost too.
Lion de Noier Na bro that’s a kid Frost diss... even the intro “who u getting crazy with ese, don’t u know I’m loco” is mocking southsider slang. Sen Dog even mentions his name “I don’t take Arturo, likely. Punks just jealous that he can’t outwrite me”
@@Betoven81 What's up man! If I recall this correctly (after 20+ years, I'm wondering if I got it twisted and that it was actually an interview with Frost instead of Ace), the interviewer asked about Lighter Shade, and Ace didn't want to talk about them. He didn't go into details but he seemed pretty dismissive. Not sure if he was offended because he had a genuine beef, or if he was just angry to be asked about other rappers during an interview that was supposed to be about him.
I'm looking for a fat boy and a lighter shade of brown
Title is misleading. Why didn't Vlad ask about it? B Real doesn't give any detail.
Cypress hill.. much respect