Tag Archives: 20th Anniversary

Today In Hip Hop History: The Source Magazine Remembers Big L 20 Years Later

On February 15, 1999, Hip Hop legend Lamont Coleman aka Big L was murdered at 45 West 139th Street in Harlem after being shot nine times in the face and chest in a drive-by shooting. Gerard Woodley, one of Big L’s friends who was shot in the head near the same street in 2016, was arrested three months later but was shortly released. The shooting was said to have been retaliation for something Big L’s older brother Lee Coleman did. Unfortunately, his murder case remains unsolved.

Big L began his career with the Hip Hop trio, Three the Hard Way. His first notable appearance came on Lord Finesse’s “Yes You May (Remix)”. He released his debut album, Lifestylez of da Poor & Dangerous, in 1995 and in 98′, he founded Flamboyant Entertainment, his own indie label, through which he released one of his most popular singles, “Ebonics”. His second studio album, The Big Picture, was put together by  his manager, Rich King, and released the year after his death. It went certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).

A documentary is in the works titled Street Struck: The Big L Story. Big L is buried at George Washington Memorial Park in Paramus, New Jersey.

#BigLRIP

The post Today In Hip Hop History: The Source Magazine Remembers Big L 20 Years Later appeared first on The Source.

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Today In Hip Hop History: RZA’s ‘Bobby Digital In Stereo’ Turns 20 Years Old!

On this day in Hip Hop history, the leader of the world renowned Wu Tang Clan released his first solo album Bobby Digital In Stereo.

This project came late in RZA’s career after the success of the Wu Tang Clan had been plentiful. Serving as a soundtrack to an unreleased blaxploitation martial arts film by RZA titled Bobby Digital: The Digital Bullet, the project featured a new experimental sound that was not like the usual edgy street vibe that Wu Tang solidified in the game.

The album went gold, selling 500,000 copies by 1999 and received mixed reviews from music critics. For this album RZA utilized a different production and vocal style. Instead of the sample heavy beats that made his production popular throughout the 90s on fellow Wu Tang Clan members’ projects, this project was composed of mostly keyboard-driven sounds which Bob Digi eloquently called the “Digital Orchestra”.

The inspiration for this album came from RZA’s love for comic book and yearning to live out his childhood dream of becoming a superhero in the projects. The lyrics of the project follow a loose storyline of RZA’s endeavors as Bobby Digital. His goal as Bobby Digital was to enlighten the people of the project to the poisons of the hood that surrounded them everyday.

He created Bobby Digital to personify his wild and crazy life before his musical success because during the growth of the Wu Tang Clan, RZA became a musical hermit and spent majority of his time perfecting his craft and not out enjoying the spoils of his lifestyle. Bobby Digital served as a sort of cathartic alter ego through whom RZA could unleash a side of himself that had laid dormant during his rise to fame and search for enlightenment.

The post Today In Hip Hop History: RZA’s ‘Bobby Digital In Stereo’ Turns 20 Years Old! appeared first on The Source.

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Twitter Celebrates 20th Anniversary Of Juvenile’s ‘400 Degreez’ LP #400Degreez

Legends of Hip Hop Concert - Atlanta

Source: Paras Griffin / Getty

Juvenile became the first artist signed to Cash Money Records in 1997 with his second studio album Solja Rags, but it was the following year that cemented him as a certified star. On this date 20 years ago, Juve’s third studio LP, 400 Degreez, hit the scene and Twitter fans are celebrating the milestone as expected.

Produced entirely by the legendary Mannie Fresh, 400 Degreez exploded onto the scene on the back of its still-catchy lead single “HA” and followed up by the certified booty shake anthem “Back Dat Azz Up” with Mannie and Lil Wayne on the help out. The former Hot Boys crew featuring B.G. and Turk were also featured and a remix of “HA” featuring Jay-Z.  The album remains Juvenile’s highest-selling project, with his next three projects doing 1 million and better.

Fans on Twitter are posting up their connection with the album, and we’ve collected the best responses we could find below.

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