The funny thing is Dot-A-Rock and Whipper Whip were 2 of the original members of the Cold Crush. They left the group to join the Mighty Gestapo Crew, then ended up joining the Fantastic 5 MC's! Grandmaster Caz and JDL was a rap duo called the Notorious 2 then joined the Cold Crush to fill the vacancy.
That's so true. I hung out with Ruby D. He lived up the block from me on prospect avenue. He was one of the nicest people you would want to know. I knew them all Kevie Kev dated my friend Pumpkin that lived across the street from me on clay avenue, EZ AD dated my cousin Debra. I would get in the " garage" and " T Connection" for free hanging out with Ruby D. No violence just so much fun. Miss the good ole times. Also Kevie Kev's father was one of the intruders that sang " I'll always love my mama and sad girl". I loved the 80s❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
I live on 183rd and the concourse they filmed that in the park behind my building on 183rd and ryer that's how it use to look back then. now it's different I love this movie.
@@ninjastah Lisa Lee was my hang out partner. We all had long hair. We would use the hot comb, curl it up, Ruby D would pick me up to go to the club, Kevie Kev and my friend pumpkin was there, EZ AD was dating my cousin Debra and it was clean no violence and the best times. We would hang out so late sometimes we would go to one of their houses and cook for them. That's when our hair butts and breast were ours. A fun fact a lot of people don't know. Kevie Kev's father was one of the intruders that sang " I'll always love my mama and sad girl". This was everything!!!
I think Whipper Whip is very happy as a married nurse outside of NYC. I saw a GMC interview a few years back and he looked pretty healthy. But you’re right, so many greats are gone, but their Legacy lives on.
Well i'm the 'T' (Theodore) I'll dog my face and when i get'cha on the court i'll beat Charlie Chase (Cold Crush) Charlie Chase as cute as could be You sold ya' soul to the devil to play like me Well i'm the 'R' (Rubie Dee) and you got a lot of nerve When you play against me you know you gonna get served (Cold Crush) 'JDL' the lords of lords And Rubie Dee my man your shit is on the boards You all can't ball..You all can't ball..I'm the 'K' (Kevie Kev) And i'm not the fake You know i'll eat ya' ass up like a 'Steaky Take' (Cold Crush) You know 'The All' ,the game is legit And when we get on the court i'm gonna stick your shit The 'W' (Whipper Whip) and i'm here to say That i can rock your world like the 'Doctor J' (Cold Crush) Tony Tone known to be ill But everybody knows i can deal with the pill I'm the 'D' (Dota Rock) on this here court I've been 9 years old playing this here sport (Cold Crush) 'A.D' as highest degree I gotta better jump shot than 'Rick Barry' Well i'm the 'M' (Master Rob) like all the pretty girls I'll serve your monkey ass like Earl 'The Pearl' (Cold Crush) Grand Master Caz or 'GMC' I'm gonna stick it on the board man can't you see
Yes. The fantastic romantic 5 were my people. I knew them all. I hung out with Ruby D the most. We lived up the block from each other. He was so nice to me. Kevie K dated my friend pumpkin and EZ AD dated my cousin Debra. 🥹🥹
Co sign. I knew all of them. As I posted earlier some of them dated my friend and my cousin. Ruby D stayed at my house and I stayed at his. We lived 2 blocks away on prospect avenue. Ruby D was the nicest person on earth. # salute my black and Puerto Ricans, RESPECT!! Where are you Ruby D.
@@percyvolnar8010 you’re willing out. If you’re smart you’ll UA-cam breaking in the 70’s and 80’s or graffiti 70’s and 80’s or hip hop documentaries 70’s and 80’s.. or UA-cam NYC gangs 1970’s… you do realize hip hop spun off of NYC gang culture right… so UA-cam that and you’ll find tons of videos and documentaries made in the 70’s and 80’s and there my friend you’ll see….
I would love to hear some hip hop stories from this era. I came up looking up to rappers around Nas, Gang Starr, Black Moon era, so about 91-93 is when I first discovered hip hop in BK. By this time though, hip hop already changed alot. When I started to be part of the culture with DJing and making beats etc. It was already like 96+ and hip hop changed DRAMATICALLY at this point. I think 1996 was the last tome I felt hip hop stayed truly close to its roots. It exploded in popularity after that.
98/99 had Big Pun Capital punishment and DMX first two albums. After that it wasn't the same for me - for me those were classics ,but it was the last of that raw 90s that I remembered.
@@dynodin81 But I also remember the late 90s and 2000s was a renaissance for underground and independent scenes! Rawkus comes to mind with numerous amazing artists. It was when I was also the most active with hip hop events both local and even on college campuses. The culture was pretty alive underground. I am not sure how it is now days though, haven't checked. The music aspect is still alive and kicking in the underground though.
@@verdadduele7925 Yes, the black men who had been rapping and breakdamcing for AT LEAST 30 years prior, were kind enough to show Puerto Ricans what they were already doing, since NONE of it was present in Puerto Rican culture. "They lived in the same neighborhood" just means Puerto Ricans were the first to copy what they saw, just like Elvis did🤣
@@verdadduele7925 They dont count to Puerto Ricans because they demonstrate the organic evolution of hip hop from the Black American community🤣 To Black Americans, who created hip hop before Puerto Ricans could speak English, it is simply the truth😆
I was a teenager when this movie came out and to this day I still haven't seen it I had to go to church with my grandparents the day my crew when to see it 🤷🏿♂️
I remember beating whipper whip up. Ruby D was my friend. Whipper whip said something smart and I jumped on his back. I was a teenager weighing 110 pounds soaking wet. I was on his back and he said Ruby D get this crazy girl off me. Good ole days# blacksand Puertoricans. Respect!!!!
Yo facts this is the guys I grew up around use to walk to school with dota. Real talk yo it was crazy lit those r the sweat shirt we us to wear Roosevelt high was the school all facts.
I knew them all. Ruby D lived up the block from me on prospect avenue. I stayed at his house. It was the hang out spot. Kevie Kev dated my friend pumpkin that lived across the street from me on clay avenue, EZ AD dated my cousin Debra. Since I hung out with Ruby D I always got in the " garage" and " T connection". It was a time whereas rappers battle with their raps not guns. The good old days.
DJ Charlie Chase, Rudy Dee, and Prince Whipper Whip are perfect examples that Latinos have been in the emceein' / deejayin' games of Hip-Hop's 4 Elements since day one. And let's not get started on Latinos being active in the OG Graf and B-Boyin' games too.
@@SorneyJeffersonYes. I knew them all. I hung out with Ruby Dee a lot. No violence just fun. My friends and cousin dated some of them. That's when the blacks and Puerto Ricans stuck together. Ruby D would get me in the " garage" and T Connection for free. He was the nicest person in earth. We used go hang out in each other's houses. I miss the fun. Love my blacks and Puerto Rican. # RESPECT!!! ❤❤❤❤
Thank u bronx Ny if it wasn't for new York hip hop culture STL wouldn't never love and appreciate the music and the art of hip hop in my city ever gotta respect the originals peace to the hip hop gods in New York and the Almighty bronx ny.
Love the THICK NY ACCENTS FROM THE SISTAS!!❤️🤣🤣🤣
Here we are in 2021 & this still the Coldest rap battle ever 🔥 🔥 🔥
The core of hip-hop never will never fade away but for our luck just uplodaded from forgotten tapes.
yes bro
The ORIGINAL Versuz
Ruby D, where are you?
Teenage years... 16 years old. PEEPIN the birth of hip-hop was such a FLY-ASS time. We was CHILLIN' LIKE VILLAINS... (Notice the 1980's lingo!)
REAL HIP HOP TO THE FULLEST !!!
Who wrote the lyrics
I am so glad I was a teenager during this time in New York City.
SO lucky!
Me too
Must been nice
Wooow you lucky besides the beginning of drugs.
I wish I was I was born in 92 Brooklyn
The funny thing is Dot-A-Rock and Whipper Whip were 2 of the original members of the Cold Crush. They left the group to join the Mighty Gestapo Crew, then ended up joining the Fantastic 5 MC's! Grandmaster Caz and JDL was a rap duo called the Notorious 2 then joined the Cold Crush to fill the vacancy.
Wander what happen to Ruby Dee?
That's so true. I hung out with Ruby D. He lived up the block from me on prospect avenue. He was one of the nicest people you would want to know. I knew them all Kevie Kev dated my friend Pumpkin that lived across the street from me on clay avenue, EZ AD dated my cousin Debra. I would get in the " garage" and " T Connection" for free hanging out with Ruby D. No violence just so much fun. Miss the good ole times. Also Kevie Kev's father was one of the intruders that sang " I'll always love my mama and sad girl". I loved the 80s❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Nostalgia. This movie was the shit bk in the day. A real hip hop classic. The good old days . 💯💯👊🏾
I love the way the NY chicks talk...Lol.
You cant say that
Sounds like they got a lot of spit in your mouth
Me 2
Same here!
This is mad love. Saw this in the theater.."bring ya skills and bring ya rhymes"
Last dude had me rollin. "That's why we winning 18 to nothing"
Classic battle
PIONEERS OF HIP HOP NY. BLESSED. RESPECT 💯
2023 hip hop don’t stop 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
This takes me way back when hip-hop was fun and creative
THIS IS HIP-HOP AT ITS BEST DAMN!
I can't watch this without tearing up. Gawd 😢😥😪
I used to play the Defender video game with Dot-a-Rock
BIG! Never forget this source of hip-hop.
Gil 180 BX this is a classic scene and my favorite group of all time the Cold Crush Brothers 💯🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷💯💪🏼😎💪🏼
I live on 183rd and the concourse they filmed that in the park behind my building on 183rd and ryer that's how it use to look back then. now it's different I love this movie.
You are so lucky!
What year was this
A perfect time piece thats actually a masterpiece. #ShoutOutToTheColdCrush
This is real hip-hop
This park is on 183rd St Valentine Ave in the Bronx. I use to watch GMC play basketball as a kid, he was always at the park playing bball.
Yo that’s crazy!
whoa my mom lived there in the 90s!
What year was this
@@zerozero6265 mid to late 70’s
@professorFG thx
I love this entire movie, but this scene is certainly one of the funniest.
“That’s why we’re winnin’ 18 to nothin’.”
Those girls are so 80s New York!!
Indeed ...no weaves in those days
@@benHodah no lip jobs, no butt jobs, barely any makeup if at all, just young and free!! Beautiful to see!
@@ninjastah
yes sir, back when sistas' was SISTAS' !!!! , miss those days
@@ninjastah Lisa Lee was my hang out partner. We all had long hair. We would use the hot comb, curl it up, Ruby D would pick me up to go to the club, Kevie Kev and my friend pumpkin was there, EZ AD was dating my cousin Debra and it was clean no violence and the best times. We would hang out so late sometimes we would go to one of their houses and cook for them. That's when our hair butts and breast were ours. A fun fact a lot of people don't know. Kevie Kev's father was one of the intruders that sang " I'll always love my mama and sad girl". This was everything!!!
lucky you ruby D was finee lol
This is so awesome.
Pure Hip Hop!!!!!🔥💯💯💪🏾💪🏾💙 IMAGINE THIS UPDATED!!!
It's sad because a lot of these guys are dead and most people don't even know it.
The only one I know for sure that died is Money Ray. Who else died?
@@maire454 money Ray DJ outlaw and dot a rock are dead
@@kareemsupremet.v.5189 shit, that really sux hard. Damn. When? What happened?
They got to shine for HipHop and it’s timeless .. Rest their souls 🙏🏾
I think Whipper Whip is very happy as a married nurse outside of NYC. I saw a GMC interview a few years back and he looked pretty healthy. But you’re right, so many greats are gone, but their Legacy lives on.
This is the scene that inspired the NBA players in the Sprite commercial.
A good rivalry only brings good things to the public. What an emblematic scene.
There is no such thing as a 'good rivalry'. lol.
CLASSIC!!!!
The Beastie Boys have watched this film over 1000 times, love this fact. :)
Well not only did I just stumble upon one of the best battles I've ever seen, but also a sample to The Go Team's Ladyflash
Well i'm the 'T' (Theodore)
I'll dog my face and when i get'cha on the court i'll beat Charlie Chase
(Cold Crush) Charlie Chase as cute as could be
You sold ya' soul to the devil to play like me
Well i'm the 'R' (Rubie Dee) and you got a lot of nerve
When you play against me you know you gonna get served
(Cold Crush) 'JDL' the lords of lords
And Rubie Dee my man your shit is on the boards
You all can't ball..You all can't ball..I'm the 'K' (Kevie Kev)
And i'm not the fake
You know i'll eat ya' ass up like a 'Steaky Take'
(Cold Crush) You know 'The All' ,the game is legit
And when we get on the court i'm gonna stick your shit
The 'W' (Whipper Whip) and i'm here to say
That i can rock your world like the 'Doctor J'
(Cold Crush) Tony Tone known to be ill
But everybody knows i can deal with the pill
I'm the 'D' (Dota Rock) on this here court
I've been 9 years old playing this here sport
(Cold Crush) 'A.D' as highest degree
I gotta better jump shot than 'Rick Barry'
Well i'm the 'M' (Master Rob) like all the pretty girls
I'll serve your monkey ass like Earl 'The Pearl'
(Cold Crush) Grand Master Caz or 'GMC'
I'm gonna stick it on the board man can't you see
That camerawork is impeccable
THE LEGENDARY COLD CRUSH!! THIS IS MY ERA!! 💯👊🏽🤜🏾🤛🏾
Yes. The fantastic romantic 5 were my people. I knew them all. I hung out with Ruby D the most. We lived up the block from each other. He was so nice to me. Kevie K dated my friend pumpkin and EZ AD dated my cousin Debra. 🥹🥹
@@June-y7y6k that's what I'm talking about!! You are a part of hip-hop legacy and hip-hop culture!! ❤️🖤💚👊🏽🫵🏾
YOU KNOW YOU GONNA GET SERVED!!!
Shout out to NYC...all 5 boroughs 💯
This is 1st Generation of hip hop and 2 or 3 brothers was Puerto rican in this scene of Wild Style the movie Thats proof they was down day 1......
Is the southerner and Tariq nasheed from Los Angeles who are trying to rewrite hip hop history.
Charlie Chase , Ruby-Dee , & Whippa Whip are Puerto Ricans
Bs
Ignorance is a MF so sad !!
@Kendu 1 that's what I thought when I read your comment
I remember this from the movie “ WildStyle”, 83-84 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Ruby D was my baby back then. He was so good to me. Love you Ruby D ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼😉😘
Gotta love the Go! team sampling @1:52
This is Hip Hop.
Drake ain't Hip Hop, he's just a black Justin Bieber.
Co sign. I knew all of them. As I posted earlier some of them dated my friend and my cousin. Ruby D stayed at my house and I stayed at his. We lived 2 blocks away on prospect avenue. Ruby D was the nicest person on earth. # salute my black and Puerto Ricans, RESPECT!! Where are you Ruby D.
Seen the video today on instagram and now I have to do my research on both groups ✊✊🔥🔥🔥🙏
We came a long way❤
Blacks and NYricans created hiphop
Big up Charlie Chase one of the pioneers 🇵🇷💪🏾
blacks and Ricans united
"The crowds were all black; I didn't see any latinos at the jams" - Ruby D (1st Latin MC 1977)
@@percyvolnar8010 you’re willing out. If you’re smart you’ll UA-cam breaking in the 70’s and 80’s or graffiti 70’s and 80’s or hip hop documentaries 70’s and 80’s.. or UA-cam NYC gangs 1970’s… you do realize hip hop spun off of NYC gang culture right… so UA-cam that and you’ll find tons of videos and documentaries made in the 70’s and 80’s and there my friend you’ll see….
@@percyvolnar8010 You see the video, right here, and yet you must be blind too, how do you do it?
@@frankrodman6133 "The crowds were all black; I didn't see any latinos at the jams" - Ruby D (1st Latin MC 1977) Wild style came out in 1983, clown.
@@percyvolnar8010 Who's the quote from? Ruby D. ...moron.
this is hip hop!
Changed the world🙏🏻💯
LEGENDARY !!!!!!! WTF BOOYYYEEE!!!!
I grew up with most of these guys. The first rapper I ever saw/heard was Prince Whippa Whip
I would love to hear some hip hop stories from this era. I came up looking up to rappers around Nas, Gang Starr, Black Moon era, so about 91-93 is when I first discovered hip hop in BK. By this time though, hip hop already changed alot. When I started to be part of the culture with DJing and making beats etc. It was already like 96+ and hip hop changed DRAMATICALLY at this point. I think 1996 was the last tome I felt hip hop stayed truly close to its roots. It exploded in popularity after that.
@@timsohn7057100% agree. It was around 99 when I felt Hip Hop changed for the worse. Hip Hop/Rap started to become Pop music for the dummies.
98/99 had Big Pun Capital punishment and DMX first two albums. After that it wasn't the same for me - for me those were classics ,but it was the last of that raw 90s that I remembered.
@@dynodin81 But I also remember the late 90s and 2000s was a renaissance for underground and independent scenes! Rawkus comes to mind with numerous amazing artists. It was when I was also the most active with hip hop events both local and even on college campuses. The culture was pretty alive underground. I am not sure how it is now days though, haven't checked. The music aspect is still alive and kicking in the underground though.
who had the last line, jdl?
#CLASSICHIPHOP BABY?! Had to be in this Era to REALLY FEEL IT. OMG!!🤣🤣👌👌
How many takes for that line up rap at the start 😂
What movie?
I wish pro basketball was more like this.
3 Puerto Ricans 🇵🇷 but some say we just showed in the 90s. 😆
Yall did show up 5-10 years after those brothas showed you how to rap and dance.
@@QuatMan they showed them how to rap and dance on a college campus. Its well documented. Your foolish. They lived in the same community.
@@verdadduele7925 Yes, the black men who had been rapping and breakdamcing for AT LEAST 30 years prior, were kind enough to show Puerto Ricans what they were already doing, since NONE of it was present in Puerto Rican culture. "They lived in the same neighborhood" just means Puerto Ricans were the first to copy what they saw, just like Elvis did🤣
@@QuatMan 30 years my ass. Those corny southern raps dont count.
@@verdadduele7925 They dont count to Puerto Ricans because they demonstrate the organic evolution of hip hop from the Black American community🤣 To Black Americans, who created hip hop before Puerto Ricans could speak English, it is simply the truth😆
We came here to rock the microphone...
Dope clip , brings back a lot of memories, I was 16 selling loose joints in that park EBB 183 Ryer ave
That was 🔥🔥🔥🔥
I was a teenager when this movie came out and to this day I still haven't seen it I had to go to church with my grandparents the day my crew when to see it 🤷🏿♂️
I got chills.....man hip hop in a pure form
Classic baby!!
I miss when the Bronx was like this
Classic pure fckn Hip Hop
🔊🎶💨
That was an intense basketball game.
***LEGENDARY***
I WISH THIS HOW BROTHERS COULD SETTLE THEIR BEEF TODAY
I remember beating whipper whip up. Ruby D was my friend. Whipper whip said something smart and I jumped on his back. I was a teenager weighing 110 pounds soaking wet. I was on his back and he said Ruby D get this crazy girl off me. Good ole days# blacksand Puertoricans. Respect!!!!
Yo facts this is the guys I grew up around use to walk to school with dota. Real talk yo it was crazy lit those r the sweat shirt we us to wear Roosevelt high was the school all facts.
This is so FRESH
I knew them all. Ruby D lived up the block from me on prospect avenue. I stayed at his house. It was the hang out spot. Kevie Kev dated my friend pumpkin that lived across the street from me on clay avenue, EZ AD dated my cousin Debra. Since I hung out with Ruby D I always got in the " garage" and " T connection". It was a time whereas rappers battle with their raps not guns. The good old days.
Those were the good old days when you can Rap and have fun with others
the real hip-hop 🙏✌🔥💣👊🎤🎙🎼
This was hip hop that had sold out.... Hip hop forked from here.
proper old skool
that's wassup!
C
L
A
S
S
I
C
"If it wasnt for me, you'd still be rapping like The Treacherous 3"
that’s 183 and ryer ave in the bronx
Nice😆👍✨
Well I went to the hat store and I got myself a hat! A hey,hey,hey! Lmfao...
Cold!!!! 🫡🫡💯
DJ Charlie Chase, Rudy Dee, and Prince Whipper Whip are perfect examples that Latinos have been in the emceein' / deejayin' games of Hip-Hop's 4 Elements since day one.
And let's not get started on Latinos being active in the OG Graf and B-Boyin' games too.
This is NOT Day one. This is 2nd generation 1977-1984
@@SorneyJefferson Ok
Doesn't change the fact about Latinos being in the graf game since the late 60s - early 70s though
@@SorneyJeffersonYes. I knew them all. I hung out with Ruby Dee a lot. No violence just fun. My friends and cousin dated some of them. That's when the blacks and Puerto Ricans stuck together. Ruby D would get me in the " garage" and T Connection for free. He was the nicest person in earth. We used go hang out in each other's houses. I miss the fun. Love my blacks and Puerto Rican. # RESPECT!!! ❤❤❤❤
Love you RUBY D.🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🤲🏻🎤🎤🎤🌹🌹😚
How you turn talking shit on the court into a rap contest this is too funny but classic
Love this big time oh yes 😎
1:06 some better not tell that this dude on the left doesn't look like Terry Crews.
ah shit some real hiphop history right here
Thank u bronx Ny if it wasn't for new York hip hop culture STL wouldn't never love and appreciate the music and the art of hip hop in my city ever gotta respect the originals peace to the hip hop gods in New York and the Almighty bronx ny.
Nothing but classic things going on
2:01, a lot of Black Americans in NY had these features like the 2 girls in the front... now that's gone too because they moved to the south
Facts they left New York
What 😭 what are you saying like black people?
Legendary
This is hiphop!
@jcarrasq2002 Woow just imagine missin out on this...
What's the word 183 Bronx Love
JUST LöööV iT! =)
wladimír dal líp :D
Moving on to Ricky ladies!
thats on the one!
@youtubin222 Yeah...
FRESH
This is so damn due for a voice over soon
what do you mean, why?
@@kiko12000 why not?
@@djrakman3909 i think the audio quality is real good, why would it need a voiceover?