vlad so cringe for changing the way he talks when he interviews these guys and trying to tell them what the life they lived is like when he got his information from wikipedia smh
Speaking of Wikipedia check his early life section of his wiki. It'll tell you all you need to about this dude and the degenerate agenda people like him push.
Back then people said the music was going to get worse and now look where we are. What BG Knocc out refused to do back then is what's standard now. Dissing your opps, dissing the dead, talking about real crimes and murders on record. It's crazy
Like I was telling somebody yesterday…it’s not hard to predict the future sometimes unfortunately. It’s not so much predicting the future but you can see what’s coming next based on behaviors. It’s not like they were just gonna put the guns down stop gang banging and hold hands. We lost a long time ago..once the poison got in our system it was here to stay
gang bangin is horrible for communities and needs to be wiped out of our youth's minds. nothing good comes from it . It's either except death or prison that's it.
young people really don’t have lots of choices if you think about it the person they look up to is the person they know which is a gang member kids aren’t just born knowing right from wrong
I love BG Knoccout interviews... That said, if you call yourself a fan of 90s Gangsta Rap and didn't bump Bangin on Wax in 93 that tells me you discovered this genre after the fact.. Piru Love is a gangsta rap classic.. The dudes (and females) on that album were who the rappers were pretending to be.
Even they were pretending.. If you sit up here and tell me Gangsta Rap was nothing but real G's then I know you will believe anything.. Even banging on Wax was a bit exaggerated..
@@therealityofitall4819 obviously that's true about nearly every gang banger who isn't a stone cold psycho. It's part of the game to boast and show of a hard ass persona. It's always been like that because you don't want to show any sign of weakness. Rappers today just like to act tough on the internet for clout but can't hang out there in the real life. Everyone who isn't a kid can see through it.
I listen to it everyday, I make clean versions of the songs, music videos of it in games, I try to make it as popular as I can but ur right, barely anybody talks about it even tho there's SO MUCH HISTORY in there
I think there needs to be a doc on that whole "bangin on wax" project. Who put it together, how they did. And a "where are they now" on all parties involved. As a kid ppl here (Louisiana) thought it was parody because nobody believed ppl would actually put out an album like that
As dope as I think that album was, I think it was a mistake to mix hip hop and gang banging together. We shouldn’t have popularized and monetized real life street violence.
That wasn’t real life violence. Inglewood Bloods ( the B side) were not really fighting Compton & Watts Crips( the C side). So the stuff they said they did. Their set didn’t really do at the time of release. Too far.
My cousin went to school with Redum and his brother CK at Morningside High in Inglewood. Funny story is that when I was in middle school in the summer of 93 we were traveling from Tacoma Washington to Compton on the Greyhound Bus and we met this goofy dude who said that Lil Stretch was his cousin. We laughed and when got to the bus station sure enough Lil Stretch was there to pick him up.
Here's the thing. Most of them died from normal gang violence. But those albums did put a different target on them because it Gave them status on top of street cred. So not only were they targeted from rival hoods. The rival hoods also wanted that name under they belt. Not only did you get a rival you got a rival that made a name for his self and hood on record. IF one of them was caught slippin. Most of the time it was no pass givin. The opp wanted that name. That bangin on wax name carried a big stripe IF you got one of em.
Yup, any gang member gets more shine status for offing a well known gang member and it carries weight in and out of prison. But it also puts a target on their back
Those Artists caught Hell in the Streets because of Their Rival Disses,but ALL of the Ones who were Killed were Killed because of STREET SITUATIONS and NOT because of Making a Bangin on Wax Album.
@@BraceInc his death was the result of a transactional dispute at a motel some 7-8 years later, way I read it. Saying they passed as a direct result is like saying Fatal and Kadafi went for being Pac supporters. When Vlad said the album came out in 88' 🤦♂ you know he was in the house and his only point of reference is online research.
Banging on Wax had a peace treaty between the artist themselves. The streets were a different beast tho. It was open season on those artist. Glad to see Knoccout alive by making the right choice and blessing us with this story.
I was in Compton when that album came out. Never liked it. Knew people who were in the video who are no longer here. Compton Crip on Compton Crip…. gang banging. Crip on Crip at that time was far worse than Crip on Piru. The wars that were going on before the truce are still going on today. Nutty Blocc is still beefing with Farms, Acacia, and Spooktown. Smoke from Nutty killed, Lil Jay from Spooktown killed. It’s terrible because at the end of the day, everybody involved is Black. 1950’s Blacks weren’t wanted in Compton…. 1980’s Blacks full on killing each other in Compton.
I had that BOW album. I remember the first time I heard Piru Love, it was on the radio. I went out and got the BOW tape. I unwrapped the plastic and took the tape out and it was blue on 1 side and red on the other. I also remember hearing the interview about how the cats out in LA felt that too many of these young Black males were constantly getting murdered over colors and this gangbang shit. So they decided that instead of killing one another for real, why don't we bang on each other in the studio with the music. I thought, that's not a bad idea. At the end of the day, everybody walks away, these guys go back home to their families, nobody gets hurt, nobody gets shot. And sadly, a lot of these guys still got murdered because of the music... which kills the whole point of even making the album. Smdh.
Me too lol I bought that in 93. When i opened the case it threw me off I thought there was just Bloods and Crips didn’t know they had all those individual sets😂
they got paid so little money, they were still in the street. It's not known if any of them ever got shot over their raps. Those where the circumstances are known, died over typical street shit not over raps
My group Organiz’d Crhyme was recording with Motown in LA at the time of the Banging on Wax 2 was being recorded… Our session was after theirs and a fight broke out and there was holes in the wall from the fighting that went on… We was happy that being from Pittsburgh Pa, none of them looked at us as enemies
@@johnnyswavehollywood3943 OC music was all produced by me and came out only on cassette tapes underground.. I have a unreleased album “Outta The Basement” that I may put out in the future… There are a couple live performances on the channel with us performing “Capital Punishment” and “A Day In The Life” but other than that the music is unavailable including the music that was recorded on Motown since they own the rights to that muisc
Bangin' On Wax was actually created in order to make peace. The concept was to get them to bang on wax instead of bangin' on the streets. Sin Loc who was Eazy-E's cousin was a big part of that first record and he has always stressed this. The '90s was just horrible in Compton. Just utter madness. I do get BG Knocc Out's point though. Him and Eazy did give props to certain sets though
Thats what they say but in reality it was just a way to profit off gang banging. The gang members might have been peaceful towards each other while they were recording but those albums influenced tons of young people around the country to become bloods or crips so in the end was it really a good thing?
What the WHITE Exects told them and what The BLACK Staff and Rappers thought,Purpose and Mission was. Truth is the WHITE EXECTS Real Purpose was to Spread Gangbanging through the Music and make it look Cool. Blacks Never Figure out Bamboozle and Reverse Physcology from Whites until its too late. THINK ABOUT THIS. How in the Hell are You Influencing GANG BANGERS to Bang on Wax?? 1.Gang Banging is connected to Thuggery,Gangsterism,Fighting Territory and Turf Controlling which is STREET STUFF which has NOTHING to do with making no Damn MUSIC. Gang Banging is a Form of Art,Hobby, Sport,and Activity within Itself. 2. There were Hundreds Thousands to Millions of Crips and Bloods at the Time of The Bangin on Wax, How in the Hell are You Influencing Them to RAP BANG when Only about 30% Max of them Could Rap and had a Desire to Be a Rapper ?? Last but Not Least No Blood or Crip Rapper would Succeed Being a GANG BANGER RAPPER Only.
It makes zero sense to make a record intended on “kEePiNg tHe pEaCe” with songs intentionally dissing your enemies. Banging on wax was just another company capitalizing on gang violence
The idea of the project was to get gang members 'Banging on Wax' instead of banging on the street and causing casualties. With people like OYG Redrum and Battlecat behind the scenes, the idea was not to pit the two groups against each other as it may seem.
That was just BS to justify it. So you got a handful of rapping gang members off the street for a few seconds, while thousands of gang members are still on the street and now listening to gang bangin music. Make it make sense.
Bangin on Wax was literally a Black on Black crime album. Gladly the direction of the relationship changed between Bloods and Crips with the contribution of duets like: 1. Dub C and Mack 10 2. The Game and Snoop Dogg 3. Nipsey Hussle and YG To help break that "crip vs blood" cycle. There should be a 2023 version of Bangin On Wax featuring different rap artists from different sets. Name brand and off brand artists and everybody showing respect to the opposite side while promoting Black racial unity
Sounds good and its a nice sentiment, but the title of that album would be 'how to get banned from the set.' Too much blood has been spilled for a project like that to be received well by the targeted audience. Gang culture is inherently negative. The only gang members I've seen make a positive impact are those who've stepped down and renounced their former lifes. In Snoops autobiography he details how his own set was out to get him and thats what inspired him to commit to rap.
@@fernandosantiago1679 Game and Snoop they did several songs together: - Gangbangin 101 - Fly Like An Eagle - Whatcha Drinkin On - Trading Places - Westside Story remix - etc Those collaborations significantly helped to squash a lot of tension between Crips and Bloods in the mid 2000s so they deserve a lot of credit.
@@JKorver A lot of them dudes on the B.O.W album probably were cool but you have to think of all the viewers and listeners who weren't rappers but still gangbangin that didn't appreciate the opposite sides disrespect and all the street violence as a result of it. Back in the 90s when B.O.W released their weren't many Crips and Bloods ridin together. Rappers that derived from various sets were cool but didn't translate into the streets. Street level Bloods and Crips didn't finally become cool like they are today until the late 2000s way later from B.O.W. At the time of that album it was straight beef between the red side and blue side no matter what was goin on in the music business.
I remember seeing this album on the shelf at the bx when I was in the military and stationed in Cali back in 99 and I was like who the hell wanna hear somebody rapping about gangbanging. Now look at rap.😂😂😂
Rest Easy Bloody Mary, Green Eyes, B-Brazy, Fo Clips, Peanut I & II, Mad Eyez, Spider, Batman, Tweedy Bird Loc, and the rest of the lost members of Bangin on Wax
@@chrispage919 Yeah. I know Bloody Mary died in a motorcycle crash and Redrum died of cancer. But even the ones who were murdered, I figured it was for other reasons.
You're right bro. Green Eyez died from health conditions I believe. Some did get shot and killed, but I don't think it was strictly behind that album, them dudes was just still in the streets.
You are 100% right, they were gang Banging in the 90’s if I recall they dissed crips and bloods in general but not specific sets or rival sets. They were already in deep regardless of the music
How can Vlad not be up to date with Bangin on Wax? Man I bump those tracks all the time still till this day and trip out on how big freeze is one of my favorites from that project he was fire! Domino aka genuine draft, Battlecat, Sin Loc worked with Digital underground and The relativez are the only ones who made it more mainstream.
Cause his a culture vulture. I like how he tries to tell bg what year it was after bg already said he was there lol bg so young those 4 or 5 years vlad gets it wrong by is huge to b.g
The guy who put it together was ronnie Phillip's he passed away in 03 that I don't know of. He was a solid dude. I have the bangin on wax cd it still hits to this day in 2022
That first Bangin On Wax Album was Nutz from a visual and sound perspective. Two words, Piru Love. Timeless Song. The beat, down to the voices were matched up perfectly for that song. Made you feel like you were in a oldschool with switches with jerry curl juice drippin on ya dickies and chucks while loading up the guns to go put in some work at 11:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. The Shock Value of the Album cover alone was kind of crazy, even compared to today's Drill rappers. All of these Drill Rappers wear skinny jeans with all black hoodies pull over s to cover their face. No matter if you have 100 bodies, dressing in dark low colors and being skinny and short is not intimidating from a visual standpoint. On that BOW Album cover, you had tall big cats, and even females wearing them loud @$$ Blue and Red bandanas over there faces, leather gloves, Bats, All Blue and Red outfits, no faces were shown. And to top it all off they had one of the Crip Homies in a Freddie Kruger Mask (as a teen we were like they on some other ish lol) rumor is that was BattleCat in that Mask (longtime Snoop and Dogg Pound Producer, alongside Daz) He also produced the majority of Domino's first album, who was also on that album, Classic songs = Here We Go and Sweet Potatoe Pie. I remember my crip cousins from L.A. back then telling me that album wasn't a good look because it made everybody on that album way more of being targets from their rivals because of the spotlight that they got from it. Heard rumors of it being a collateral damage/deaths on a few peoples family members and friends by just being associated. Alot of people on that album didn't die violently, but alot of them did. Don't get it twisted, i remember an old interview that they did after the album was out for awhile, and they said that they were marked and targeted way harder after doing that album. B.G. made the right decision back then. The shock value of that album at the time was over the top in my opinion.
That was Sin Loc from Rollin 60s with the Mask on. Despite going at it with each other on wax, there still was a Element of positivity in the Lyrics. “Sin Loc will pill any Sucka at his on will /But it’s time for BLACK FOLK to take a Chill Pill/ and Going against the Grain with Each Other/ Cuz, worst than Dread, I can’t stand to See a DEAD BROTHA”. Sin Loc - Steady Dippin
Vlad: How are you cringing more than halfway through the video about an album track listing you should've known about before you started asking questions?
I always wondered what happened to those rappers from those albums. I got chills when Vlad started to read the name of the tracks. Wild shit straight suicide mission from Dangerous Records.
Big wy,g len ,lil stretch still alive..lil hawk yg been in prison since the early 2000s..damn near everybody else done passed give or take a few..idk bout the crip side..the songs was weak af
@@pboissie yea u right mary died in motorcyle like around 05 or 06 sin loc still alive and well. Not alot of ppl I heard died when that album got released. Maybe I think 1 or 2 people but that's it. The rest that were on the records they died of somthing difffent and not relatable to the album at all.
Not gone lie I’m glad this got brought up cause that was real underrated gangsta rap from tracks like “Wish you were here” and “Slob bko” and always wanted to kno how that album came about having both sides in there
This portion of this interview put a lot of things into perspective. Labels don’t want a Jay Z or Rick Ross who will buy their masters back or try to control the narrative. They want a Tupac who will crash out and then they can make money off of them forever and immortalize because they’re dead.
Jay Z and Rick Ross were wild as well when they were young. They just survived their worst moments. And yes they do profit of the young the live fast and "crash out" as you say but that's beyond music.
Part of that is true about making money of someone’s name because of death is true, Puffy did it for years after Notorious BIG died. The Part about labels “wanting a Tupac” is false, the last thing the want is another Tupac. Shit, they probably celebrated when he died smh.
Banging on Wax is prolific. My brother was a Crip, I can still remember seeing that album for the first time like what?! Bloods and Crips on the same album dissing each other?! Insane
Smart man right here. This confirms these records labels, who probably give 2 fs about the artist or music period, will trick these artists 2 jail or the grave 4 profit. These record labels more gangster than the gangsters. Yikes
When that cd came out..my cuzzin who is like 3 yrs older than me was beefin wit the bloods in my neighborhood..him and his boys went and shot up a well known blood member house up…they went to dude house and knocked on the door Sumbody stuck they head out a window on the side of the house and said that my cousin was outside..him and his friends start shootin up the house..after that we couldnt go to school no more…me and his brother in the 7th grade and it was plenty drama from then on…we eventually went back to school but all thru highschool even after we got out if school it was still drama from time to time…I remember when that cd came out and me and my family basically had to hide out every car that rolled down the street was playin that piru love..i was in the 7th grade in 92-93
Their beats were the most significant for the whole vibe of southern cali gang culture back then. Your favourite real life movie with the best soundtrack. That was the peak time of music.
@@paulwidit3792 Shouldve Been B Dog is the best beat on that album. It was so great that they used it for the 2nd Bangin On Wax album, Gs & Locs. Hard af. I swear. DJ Battlecat put it down on that s&^^
Bangin On Wax was an insane concept. It's a guilty pleasure, you know it's deadass wrong but it bumps. If they had kept the specific dissin out & just repped their sections it could have been less tragic. More of them would have had success afterwards too.
I remember seeing that CD/TAPE in my local record store in VA NOT one damn person bought that garbage I know this for a fact because I knew the owner of the store and he told me so. He stated to me a few years later he regretted even selling that BS and threw every single cd/tape in the garbage about a month after trying to sell it. It is obvious the powers that be (non blacks) created this to further the destruction of black people and guess what, IT worked and is still working. We black folks are the most manipulated group of people on planet Earth FACTS!!
Maybe it's regional cause when it first came out it got airplay here in Dallas until the stations realized what they were talking about. Their videos were the most requested on a video channel down here where you pay to have a video shown. And when I would go and see my cousin who lived in Compton back in 98' everyone knew about those guys. That was gangsta rap music in the 90's, it just was what it was.
@@Anthony-jd8pg definitely regional. East Coast niggas used to hate on the West same as they hate on the south. And VA which is really the South are the biggest NY dycc riders in the country.
“Rollin thrubthe neighborhood stopped at big time, gotta bag of chips and a dollar wine”…dat shit was hard asf tho my bro use to bump dat shit back in the day befo he passed i remember it like it was yesterday lol…They forgot to mention Big Wy tho, he had a nice run tho outta after that album too
The craziest part about this interview,is that the Labels we’re pushing for Beef on the streets.
That is the moral of the story....and still doing it
That was my first thought....who was running this label and pushing this idea?
But that’s half of it tho there was always beef between the crips and blood since the late70s
So yall still dont know the labels own the jails ? I should start my own college i guess
@@royzrollz4465 I don't. Inform me please.
Bangin on Wax is a certified classic!!! The music is westcoast history.
Memorable.... but hard for me to call it a classic
Just bumping South Circle recently too
vlad so cringe for changing the way he talks when he interviews these guys and trying to tell them what the life they lived is like when he got his information from wikipedia smh
lol…he’s codeswitching😂you know how black ppl got a street voice vs business voice ? Well Vlad got a “black” voice 😭
Speaking of Wikipedia check his early life section of his wiki. It'll tell you all you need to about this dude and the degenerate agenda people like him push.
@@YoungYahtz94 I don’t blame him cuz Ik I how I talk around certain white folks is differnt
I stg 😩
@@909bkaby sell out
Back then people said the music was going to get worse and now look where we are. What BG Knocc out refused to do back then is what's standard now. Dissing your opps, dissing the dead, talking about real crimes and murders on record. It's crazy
Like I was telling somebody yesterday…it’s not hard to predict the future sometimes unfortunately. It’s not so much predicting the future but you can see what’s coming next based on behaviors. It’s not like they were just gonna put the guns down stop gang banging and hold hands. We lost a long time ago..once the poison got in our system it was here to stay
And it's really sad on anybody that joins the never ending cycle with a predictable bad result.
that is predominantly a chicago thing now
@@jeredlandreth4235 nah is everywhere
@@jeredlandreth4235 every rapper from a hood doing that
wheres TK kirkland fake account
F&^^ that clown
😆
They still sleeping it was a long night 🤣😂
Vlad’s channel probably blocked him, hope not but he’s literally in everywhere else comment section tho
Lol 😁
Whenever Vlad is wrong he gets hella loud to correct himself after he’s called out.
In other words, every seven minutes of a hour long interview
He’s really 14 years old.
Lol I noticed that and I hate that shit
Every.single.time
🤣 facts. He make assumptions ALOT.
gang bangin is horrible for communities and needs to be wiped out of our youth's minds. nothing good comes from it . It's either except death or prison that's it.
young people really don’t have lots of choices if you think about it the person they look up to is the person they know which is a gang member kids aren’t just born knowing right from wrong
God I wish we never had to rap...
Look how many rappers have died man ..
Cmon yall!
Chill out uts just music.
Facts
@@SVGIN It not Entertainment it's Indoctrination into the victim mentality.
@@NateThaGreat187 we all know right from wrong it’s just people nowadays think the cool thing is the wrong thing
I love BG Knoccout interviews... That said, if you call yourself a fan of 90s Gangsta Rap and didn't bump Bangin on Wax in 93 that tells me you discovered this genre after the fact.. Piru Love is a gangsta rap classic.. The dudes (and females) on that album were who the rappers were pretending to be.
Even they were pretending.. If you sit up here and tell me Gangsta Rap was nothing but real G's then I know you will believe anything.. Even banging on Wax was a bit exaggerated..
@@therealityofitall4819 obviously.. its entertainment.. not a factual documentary lol
yup. couldnt say better....
@@therealityofitall4819 yeah for sure i mean who does not....
@@therealityofitall4819 obviously that's true about nearly every gang banger who isn't a stone cold psycho. It's part of the game to boast and show of a hard ass persona. It's always been like that because you don't want to show any sign of weakness.
Rappers today just like to act tough on the internet for clout but can't hang out there in the real life. Everyone who isn't a kid can see through it.
Finally a perspective on the banging on wax album I swear its a part of LA hip hop that’s almost next to never mentioned
Bro foreal. It’s classic songs on those projects
I was jammin that shit the other night that shit was raw as fuck I see y niggas died
Some good songs in there.. but it was pretty wild. Probably better to keep it buried.
I listen to it everyday, I make clean versions of the songs, music videos of it in games, I try to make it as popular as I can but ur right, barely anybody talks about it even tho there's SO MUCH HISTORY in there
Facts that album need to be mentioned
The first one went hard. No lie Piru Love still slaps
👎
The second one was better tho
Slob 187 and bk all day and steady dippin and mafia lane too lol
There’s so many crips that love the fuk outta Piru Luv that’s crazy af 😂
Classic never here’d nothing like that tell this day
I think there needs to be a doc on that whole "bangin on wax" project. Who put it together, how they did. And a "where are they now" on all parties involved. As a kid ppl here (Louisiana) thought it was parody because nobody believed ppl would actually put out an album like that
is on youtube a guy name ronnie ron started it
@@shreem108 preciate it 🙏🏾
Love BG interviews. Real informative cat
Banging on wax is a damn classic. Nationwide Rip Ridaz is a classic
Facts
There WAS DEFINITELY more than 4 dudes who was killed on the bangin on wax album,
Lil Lunch meat Crenshaw Mafia was one of em shit is sad
name them
@@datniggaeazye.5968watch I wish you were here video 💯 it probably been way more since then I believe
Vlad; I remember seeing Bangin On Wax on the shelves in 89’.
2 minutes later amazed by song titles 🤣🤣🤣
😂😂real shit!! What a f***in cornball
As dope as I think that album was, I think it was a mistake to mix hip hop and gang banging together. We shouldn’t have popularized and monetized real life street violence.
It's apart of the same game👁️
Blood side was fire Crips side was trash.Bloody Mary R.I.P went crazy
“We” ?
Who is we?? When you said
That wasn’t real life violence. Inglewood Bloods ( the B side) were not really fighting Compton & Watts Crips( the C side). So the stuff they said they did. Their set didn’t really do at the time of release. Too far.
Vlad west the deal when the Gilligan Slayer’s interview gone happen
"Don't do the crime if you can't do the time" - Sammy Davis Jr
*OJ Simpson 😂
My cousin went to school with Redum and his brother CK at Morningside High in Inglewood. Funny story is that when I was in middle school in the summer of 93 we were traveling from Tacoma Washington to Compton on the Greyhound Bus and we met this goofy dude who said that Lil Stretch was his cousin. We laughed and when got to the bus station sure enough Lil Stretch was there to pick him up.
RIP Red Rum 🙏
RIP bloody mary
When I lived in LA back then, Crips were bumping Quik, and even saying his songs with the TT part, with admiration that he did that shit
RIP Big Freeze and AWOL those 2 had the hardest verses on BoW and Nation wide RIP Ridaz and lil Hawk and B-Brazy was the coldest on the red side
Lil Hawk in jail n B Brazy dead
AWOL on K’s Up went hard
Nah bloody Loc was nice 2… From Westside nutty blocc piru
Don’t forget Troll Loc
Bloody Mary was cold aswell
I’m from Virginia and I was listening to bangin on wax when I was 13 LOL . Great body of work . RIP to all the people who passed .
"I wish you were here" is a serious tune
Here's the thing. Most of them died from normal gang violence. But those albums did put a different target on them because it Gave them status on top of street cred. So not only were they targeted from rival hoods. The rival hoods also wanted that name under they belt. Not only did you get a rival you got a rival that made a name for his self and hood on record. IF one of them was caught slippin. Most of the time it was no pass givin. The opp wanted that name. That bangin on wax name carried a big stripe IF you got one of em.
it put a target on they back...now thousands of ppl seen u on TV...
@@anatorres-ym8ke yup
Exactly
Pretty much
Yup, any gang member gets more shine status for offing a well known gang member and it carries weight in and out of prison. But it also puts a target on their back
Vlad love hearing gang stories from back in the day.
Typical white dude from the burbs.
Obsessed with black culture.
Let those stories be a warning to stay put of that life
Piru Love..............Classic
One of my favorite records Respectfully
On Mommas!
Gang banging in itself is suicide, being on record doesn’t make it any better or worse.
Bangin on wax slaps to this day tho.
Fr facts I still got the cd. RIP a crab and piru love, ck ride nice joints
Slob 187, crip 4 life, sent that crab off to die, all bangers
Nah, being on record makes it way worse
@@justinwarren8222 nah, it doesn’t.
You’re right. Gang banging is GENOCIDE.
Those Artists caught Hell in the Streets because of Their Rival Disses,but ALL of the Ones who were Killed were Killed because of STREET SITUATIONS and NOT because of Making a Bangin on Wax Album.
Yeah B-Brazy was not killed because of that album
Exactly they were gang affiliated to say they died strictly cause of that album is ignorant
@@BraceInc his death was the result of a transactional dispute at a motel some 7-8 years later, way I read it. Saying they passed as a direct result is like saying Fatal and Kadafi went for being Pac supporters. When Vlad said the album came out in 88' 🤦♂ you know he was in the house and his only point of reference is online research.
@@n8vmob613 vlad his Hip Hop history knowledge is terribly off.
@Mike Ball What do you mean? I was there too, back in 93 when I was 21. I’m that white boy Pac was talking about being his only white friend.
The crazy part was the banging on wax album was presented as a “come together “ “unity” project lol and Rip a crab in half was hard 🔥
This was a brilliant interview ..RAPPERS THIS IS Food for THOUGHT.. THEY NEED to play this in schools ...
Eastside rip riders and Piru Luv with the Rodger Trotman sample straight from Dayton Ohio!
Banging on Wax had a peace treaty between the artist themselves. The streets were a different beast tho. It was open season on those artist. Glad to see Knoccout alive by making the right choice and blessing us with this story.
Big Freeze was on one of my favorite B's & C's songs "Crip 4 Life" crazy that BG Knoccout knew him
I was in Compton when that album came out. Never liked it. Knew people who were in the video who are no longer here. Compton Crip on Compton Crip…. gang banging. Crip on Crip at that time was far worse than Crip on Piru. The wars that were going on before the truce are still going on today. Nutty Blocc is still beefing with Farms, Acacia, and Spooktown. Smoke from Nutty killed, Lil Jay from Spooktown killed. It’s terrible because at the end of the day, everybody involved is Black. 1950’s Blacks weren’t wanted in Compton…. 1980’s Blacks full on killing each other in Compton.
I had that BOW album. I remember the first time I heard Piru Love, it was on the radio. I went out and got the BOW tape. I unwrapped the plastic and took the tape out and it was blue on 1 side and red on the other. I also remember hearing the interview about how the cats out in LA felt that too many of these young Black males were constantly getting murdered over colors and this gangbang shit. So they decided that instead of killing one another for real, why don't we bang on each other in the studio with the music. I thought, that's not a bad idea. At the end of the day, everybody walks away, these guys go back home to their families, nobody gets hurt, nobody gets shot. And sadly, a lot of these guys still got murdered because of the music... which kills the whole point of even making the album. Smdh.
The first BOW was a clear tape …they started using more colors on Pt 2 or 3 …1 cassette was red the other blue
Me too lol I bought that in 93. When i opened the case it threw me off I thought there was just Bloods and Crips didn’t know they had all those individual sets😂
Yeap that was the point of the album to bang on wax not on the streets it was around the time of the peace treaty
Some songs were coo and just reppin, but the causing problems for no reason part... lol
they got paid so little money, they were still in the street. It's not known if any of them ever got shot over their raps. Those where the circumstances are known, died over typical street shit not over raps
My group Organiz’d Crhyme was recording with Motown in LA at the time of the Banging on Wax 2 was being recorded… Our session was after theirs and a fight broke out and there was holes in the wall from the fighting that went on… We was happy that being from Pittsburgh Pa, none of them looked at us as enemies
You got any music on UA-cam?
@@johnnyswavehollywood3943 yes check out the RebelutionaryMusic channel.. Ishmael Muhammad aka Mel, appreciate ya time
@@RebelutionaryMusic Cool but what about the Organiz'd Crhyme music? I wanna hear how that shit sounded
@@johnnyswavehollywood3943 OC music was all produced by me and came out only on cassette tapes underground.. I have a unreleased album “Outta The Basement” that I may put out in the future… There are a couple live performances on the channel with us performing “Capital Punishment” and “A Day In The Life” but other than that the music is unavailable including the music that was recorded on Motown since they own the rights to that muisc
@@RebelutionaryMusic did you ever run across or see any of them banging on wax dudes
Bangin' On Wax was actually created in order to make peace. The concept was to get them to bang on wax instead of bangin' on the streets. Sin Loc who was Eazy-E's cousin was a big part of that first record and he has always stressed this. The '90s was just horrible in Compton. Just utter madness. I do get BG Knocc Out's point though. Him and Eazy did give props to certain sets though
Thats what they say but in reality it was just a way to profit off gang banging. The gang members might have been peaceful towards each other while they were recording but those albums influenced tons of young people around the country to become bloods or crips so in the end was it really a good thing?
What the WHITE Exects told them and what The BLACK Staff and Rappers thought,Purpose and Mission was.
Truth is the WHITE EXECTS Real Purpose was to Spread Gangbanging through the Music and make it look Cool.
Blacks Never Figure out Bamboozle
and Reverse Physcology from Whites until its too late. THINK ABOUT THIS.
How in the Hell are You Influencing
GANG BANGERS to Bang on Wax??
1.Gang Banging is connected to Thuggery,Gangsterism,Fighting
Territory and Turf Controlling which is STREET STUFF which has NOTHING to do with making no Damn MUSIC.
Gang Banging is a Form of Art,Hobby,
Sport,and Activity within Itself.
2. There were Hundreds Thousands to Millions of Crips and Bloods at the Time of The Bangin on Wax, How in the Hell are You Influencing Them to RAP BANG when Only about 30% Max of them Could Rap and had a Desire to Be a Rapper ??
Last but Not Least No Blood or Crip Rapper would Succeed Being a GANG
BANGER RAPPER Only.
It makes zero sense to make a record intended on “kEePiNg tHe pEaCe” with songs intentionally dissing your enemies. Banging on wax was just another company capitalizing on gang violence
@@kansascitychief4965 it sounded dope though
Sin Loc a legend
How didn't you know about Bangin on Wax??? Piru Luv on there was crazy with the computer love sample.
It's a hit underground not mainstream
@@mrkilo-g8794 no nationally cause Texas had that album
Shit still bangin 😃
Its was very national, we were bumping that shit in Gary, & with immunity cause no B or C’s ever been here
@@mrkilo-g8794 nah that was a hit nationwide
“Nationwide rip ridaz”
The idea of the project was to get gang members 'Banging on Wax' instead of banging on the street and causing casualties. With people like OYG Redrum and Battlecat behind the scenes, the idea was not to pit the two groups against each other as it may seem.
True. MTV had a segment on this while they filming one of the videos.
That was just BS to justify it. So you got a handful of rapping gang members off the street for a few seconds, while thousands of gang members are still on the street and now listening to gang bangin music. Make it make sense.
@@robj2027 Not really, the whole point of the album is literally in the title.
I had NO CLUE Domino was on that album and I listen to that album all the time! 😳
He went by Genuine Draft
He was the 1st one rappin on the single bangin on wax
you probably don't listen to it that much cause how tf would you not know
I said the same thing
But I never listen to domino after his first album
Ive been waiting for somebody to talk about Bangin on wax
Out of all the years vlad been out interviewing so many different people....I'm shocked this is his QST time covering the topic of banging on wax
Bangin on Wax was literally a Black on Black crime album.
Gladly the direction of the relationship changed between Bloods and Crips with the contribution of duets like:
1. Dub C and Mack 10
2. The Game and Snoop Dogg
3. Nipsey Hussle and YG
To help break that "crip vs blood" cycle.
There should be a 2023 version of Bangin On Wax featuring different rap artists from different sets.
Name brand and off brand artists and everybody showing respect to the opposite side while promoting Black racial unity
Sounds good and its a nice sentiment, but the title of that album would be 'how to get banned from the set.' Too much blood has been spilled for a project like that to be received well by the targeted audience. Gang culture is inherently negative. The only gang members I've seen make a positive impact are those who've stepped down and renounced their former lifes. In Snoops autobiography he details how his own set was out to get him and thats what inspired him to commit to rap.
The game and snoop huh? Foh
@@n8vmob613 blood was spilled when banging on wax came out , niggas been dying, tf are you talkin about
@@fernandosantiago1679
Game and Snoop they did several songs together:
- Gangbangin 101
- Fly Like An Eagle
- Whatcha Drinkin On
- Trading Places
- Westside Story remix
- etc
Those collaborations significantly helped to squash a lot of tension between Crips and Bloods in the mid 2000s so they deserve a lot of credit.
@@JKorver
A lot of them dudes on the B.O.W album probably were cool but you have to think of all the viewers and listeners who weren't rappers but still gangbangin that didn't appreciate the opposite sides disrespect and all the street violence as a result of it.
Back in the 90s when B.O.W released their weren't many Crips and Bloods ridin together.
Rappers that derived from various sets were cool but didn't translate into the streets.
Street level Bloods and Crips didn't finally become cool like they are today until the late 2000s way later from B.O.W.
At the time of that album it was straight beef between the red side and blue side no matter what was goin on in the music business.
L.A. went thru already what Chicago seeing...L.A. did drill in 90s
big FACTZ 💯
Chicago was going through the same shit back then also, we didn't have a rap scene, just gang banging
@@societyraized yall use to listen to that house music back than
I remember seeing this album on the shelf at the bx when I was in the military and stationed in Cali back in 99 and I was like who the hell wanna hear somebody rapping about gangbanging. Now look at rap.😂😂😂
Lol it's a shame
Banging on wax was the first tape/album I ever got in life. I was 12 or 13. Still remember lyrics from every song from BOTH sides. 👌🏾
Damn how old are you?
@@timoaksproductions do the math fool. 👆🤓
Ronnie Ron was the main person who wasn’t mentioned from Dangerous Music
A genuine OG. Respect to BG.
Rest Easy Bloody Mary, Green Eyes, B-Brazy, Fo Clips, Peanut I & II, Mad Eyez, Spider, Batman, Tweedy Bird Loc, and the rest of the lost members of Bangin on Wax
RIP Baby Shadow as well! SBCC
Awol
I was under the impression that most of the people on Bangin' On Wax who died, had died from other reasons. Not because of those albums.
You are correct. APIP Bloody Mary and OYGRedrum781
@@chrispage919 Yeah. I know Bloody Mary died in a motorcycle crash and Redrum died of cancer. But even the ones who were murdered, I figured it was for other reasons.
bg scarface from the crips killed himself in 2011
You're right bro. Green Eyez died from health conditions I believe. Some did get shot and killed, but I don't think it was strictly behind that album, them dudes was just still in the streets.
You are 100% right, they were gang Banging in the 90’s if I recall they dissed crips and bloods in general but not specific sets or rival sets. They were already in deep regardless of the music
Been waiting on another Knoccout interview for the longest!
Piru love was dope, even the crips were playing it 😂
LOL, FACTS.
They weren't real
A crip is singing the hook
@@kingq6631 yessir
That album was Dope! Would definitely be a good documentary about the making of that album!
How can Vlad not be up to date with Bangin on Wax? Man I bump those tracks all the time still till this day and trip out on how big freeze is one of my favorites from that project he was fire! Domino aka genuine draft, Battlecat, Sin Loc worked with Digital underground and The relativez are the only ones who made it more mainstream.
💯% FACTS!!! R.I.P. BIG FREEZE
Exactly
Cause his a culture vulture. I like how he tries to tell bg what year it was after bg already said he was there lol bg so young those 4 or 5 years vlad gets it wrong by is huge to b.g
Sin Loc (the dude with the freddy kruger mask) is still around. He has some recent videos up
The guy who put it together was ronnie Phillip's he passed away in 03 that I don't know of. He was a solid dude. I have the bangin on wax cd it still hits to this day in 2022
He wasn't because he screwed them out of money.
Thank you! I was about to say...
So happy to see BG knocc out back, was praying for vlad to interview him🙂
You really “prayed” for it?🤔 Ppl use that word so loosely these days smh
What if he really did bro ?
@@rednirabkriv5376 😂🤣
That first Bangin On Wax Album was Nutz from a visual and sound perspective. Two words, Piru Love. Timeless Song. The beat, down to the voices were matched up perfectly for that song. Made you feel like you were in a oldschool with switches with jerry curl juice drippin on ya dickies and chucks while loading up the guns to go put in some work at 11:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. The Shock Value of the Album cover alone was kind of crazy, even compared to today's Drill rappers. All of these Drill Rappers wear skinny jeans with all black hoodies pull over s to cover their face. No matter if you have 100 bodies, dressing in dark low colors and being skinny and short is not intimidating from a visual standpoint. On that BOW Album cover, you had tall big cats, and even females wearing them loud @$$ Blue and Red bandanas over there faces, leather gloves, Bats, All Blue and Red outfits, no faces were shown. And to top it all off they had one of the Crip Homies in a Freddie Kruger Mask (as a teen we were like they on some other ish lol) rumor is that was BattleCat in that Mask (longtime Snoop and Dogg Pound Producer, alongside Daz) He also produced the majority of Domino's first album, who was also on that album, Classic songs = Here We Go and Sweet Potatoe Pie. I remember my crip cousins from L.A. back then telling me that album wasn't a good look because it made everybody on that album way more of being targets from their rivals because of the spotlight that they got from it. Heard rumors of it being a collateral damage/deaths on a few peoples family members and friends by just being associated. Alot of people on that album didn't die violently, but alot of them did. Don't get it twisted, i remember an old interview that they did after the album was out for awhile, and they said that they were marked and targeted way harder after doing that album. B.G. made the right decision back then. The shock value of that album at the time was over the top in my opinion.
Nope 👎 Sin locc is the one in the Freddy k mask … Battle cat is the dude with the mr c rider shirt and stick with red rag burning 🔥
Crab is the meat on the menu
This nerd wrote a whole novel in the comments 😂
Nigga what's wrong with skinny jeans I'll blow your face off in a clean pair with my new retro fire red 3s on tf🤣🤣🤣🤡
That was Sin Loc from Rollin 60s with the Mask on. Despite going at it with each other on wax, there still was a Element of positivity in the Lyrics. “Sin Loc will pill any Sucka at his on will /But it’s time for BLACK FOLK to take a Chill Pill/ and Going against the Grain with Each Other/ Cuz, worst than Dread, I can’t stand to See a DEAD BROTHA”. Sin Loc - Steady Dippin
DJ Quik even admitted he was the first to Bangin on Wax on "Dollaz+Sense"
My home boy AWOL died after banging on wax so he's definitely right about that.
Vlad: How are you cringing more than halfway through the video about an album track listing you should've known about before you started asking questions?
BG always been that real one 💯
Was sat here wondering "Wonder if BG has been back on Vlad..."
What a nice surprise!
I always wondered what happened to those rappers from those albums. I got chills when Vlad started to read the name of the tracks. Wild shit straight suicide mission from Dangerous Records.
Most are dead and died by the 2000s
I know bloody mary from song “piru love” died in a motorcycle accident. Sin loc from “steady dippin” still alive too i think.
Big wy,g len ,lil stretch still alive..lil hawk yg been in prison since the early 2000s..damn near everybody else done passed give or take a few..idk bout the crip side..the songs was weak af
@@pboissie yea u right mary died in motorcyle like around 05 or 06 sin loc still alive and well. Not alot of ppl I heard died when that album got released. Maybe I think 1 or 2 people but that's it. The rest that were on the records they died of somthing difffent and not relatable to the album at all.
@@IGStrangDaKang another slob bites the dust on the crip side was hard. So was crip crip crip a remix verison of r&b track I forgot the name of
All of a sudden everybody has these stories about amazing things that happened
I’m still slappin Bangin on Wax till this day!
-manager at McDonalds
Honestly, I remember going down Crenshaw being afraid to listen to most of the song list too loud because of all the dissing..
Not gone lie I’m glad this got brought up cause that was real underrated gangsta rap from tracks like “Wish you were here” and “Slob bko” and always wanted to kno how that album came about having both sides in there
This portion of this interview put a lot of things into perspective. Labels don’t want a Jay Z or Rick Ross who will buy their masters back or try to control the narrative. They want a Tupac who will crash out and then they can make money off of them forever and immortalize because they’re dead.
Jay Z and Rick Ross were wild as well when they were young. They just survived their worst moments. And yes they do profit of the young the live fast and "crash out" as you say but that's beyond music.
@@jhragins96 seriously, Rick Ross? He was a wild correctional officer?😂
Part of that is true about making money of someone’s name because of death is true, Puffy did it for years after Notorious BIG died. The Part about labels “wanting a Tupac” is false, the last thing the want is another Tupac. Shit, they probably celebrated when he died smh.
@@peterthegreat100 they want another Tupac ‘so that he can die’. The artist dying in a dramatic way is part of what they want.
@@Juswub80 not really…because a person makes more money alive than dead.
Banging on Wax is prolific. My brother was a Crip, I can still remember seeing that album for the first time like what?! Bloods and Crips on the same album dissing each other?! Insane
It’s not like they were hanging out in the studio together 😂
Love when B.G Knock out comes on here. He has some sense.
*Fr*
The B side was slappin’
👎
That album is Classic 🔥🔥🔥
Big Freeze was my favorite from "Banging On Wax." I hate he passed.
I am you and we are here and we are all together, Vlad.
Smart man right here. This confirms these records labels, who probably give 2 fs about the artist or music period, will trick these artists 2 jail or the grave 4 profit. These record labels more gangster than the gangsters. Yikes
I got nostalgic the other day and pulled this album up on YT music and banged it for a day. Now, YT put this interview on my feed😂
When that cd came out..my cuzzin who is like 3 yrs older than me was beefin wit the bloods in my neighborhood..him and his boys went and shot up a well known blood member house up…they went to dude house and knocked on the door Sumbody stuck they head out a window on the side of the house and said that my cousin was outside..him and his friends start shootin up the house..after that we couldnt go to school no more…me and his brother in the 7th grade and it was plenty drama from then on…we eventually went back to school but all thru highschool even after we got out if school it was still drama from time to time…I remember when that cd came out and me and my family basically had to hide out every car that rolled down the street was playin that piru love..i was in the 7th grade in 92-93
Their beats were the most significant for the whole vibe of southern cali gang culture back then. Your favourite real life movie with the best soundtrack. That was the peak time of music.
4:00 damn this the original DRILL ALBUM,, lol its a whole 90s album of Fbg Duck-Dead Bitches lol
domino “sweet potato pie” and “getto jam” are classics
Which part will BG start to wipe his eye
Bangin on wax album was awesome
I have that cd it hits hard on the 12'
The beats are underrated West Coast Rap wise
Rip a crap in half that hits
BK all day was a good one
@@paulwidit3792 Shouldve Been B Dog is the best beat on that album. It was so great that they used it for the 2nd Bangin On Wax album, Gs & Locs. Hard af. I swear. DJ Battlecat put it down on that s&^^
The Bangin on Wax albums are amazing. It was one of my favourite albums growing up as a kid and I live in England lol
Can still remember playing “slob 187”riding around
Bangin On Wax was an insane concept. It's a guilty pleasure, you know it's deadass wrong but it bumps. If they had kept the specific dissin out & just repped their sections it could have been less tragic. More of them would have had success afterwards too.
Good interview
Blood side was fire, song-wise
Need a bangin on wax interview
LV from south central cartel was on there too and he has a Grammy.
It’s so funny hearing vlad pronounce those titles 😂
Vlad went to school with me in high school crazy now you got your own show
Was he rat then?
"claim what chu gone claim"
vlad, stop it lmfao
Steady Dippin & of course Piru Love were straight Westcoast classic.
👎
I remember seeing that CD/TAPE in my local record store in VA NOT one damn person bought that garbage I know this for a fact because I knew the owner of the store and he told me so. He stated to me a few years later he regretted even selling that BS and threw every single cd/tape in the garbage about a month after trying to sell it. It is obvious the powers that be (non blacks) created this to further the destruction of black people and guess what, IT worked and is still working. We black folks are the most manipulated group of people on planet Earth FACTS!!
Maybe it's regional cause when it first came out it got airplay here in Dallas until the stations realized what they were talking about. Their videos were the most requested on a video channel down here where you pay to have a video shown. And when I would go and see my cousin who lived in Compton back in 98' everyone knew about those guys. That was gangsta rap music in the 90's, it just was what it was.
@@Anthony-jd8pg definitely regional. East Coast niggas used to hate on the West same as they hate on the south. And VA which is really the South are the biggest NY dycc riders in the country.
greedy black people created it to fill their pockets, because they knew the controversy would create cash
@@space_dogg You're exactly right bro.
Rip big freeze and all the fallen bangers from banging on wax I still bump the shit to this day very influencial
VLAD , start interviewing the Bangin on Wax rappers ! The stories are craaaaazy af
Not only did most of the rappers die on those albums banging on wax …. But imagine all the blood shed it caused to gang members who listened to it
“Rollin thrubthe neighborhood stopped at big time, gotta bag of chips and a dollar wine”…dat shit was hard asf tho my bro use to bump dat shit back in the day befo he passed i remember it like it was yesterday lol…They forgot to mention Big Wy tho, he had a nice run tho outta after that album too
Maaan you ain't lyin
And the dude in the Freddy mask was crazy gangsta!
@@reellife989 that was Sin Loc.
The chick went the hardest on that song, Ms C Note
And makin cash money steady dippin
Lived through that Era in Daygo City and it was a real time fasholy