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Welke van de 2 is zijn beste album, welke is aan te raden?

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Relax
zijn eerste natuurlijk
Zijn 2de is niet echt officieel door hem gemaakt want het is na zijn dood uitgebracht.

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eazyfan
en dat kan je toch ook zien, de ene scoort hoger en heeft meer stemmen, dan moet je toch geen 2 keer nadenken .

avatar van Steez
Duidelijk zijn 1e cd. Jammer genoeg dat L zo vroeg gestorven is. Had graag meer van hem gehoord.... Maar gelukkig hebben we z'n lines nog

Im makin Rap hits, I snap flicks and mack chicks
Just the slim ones ....You won't see L with no fat bitch


My style is harder than strong lumba, cute chicks get the dick, ugly bitches get the wrong numba


You aint make A Hit yet, You Flop In a Split Sec,
In The Showers the Only Time you get your Dick Wet


I knocked out so many teeth the tooth fairy went bankrupt


The Big L smash stress, cause hell is my address
I'm on some satanic shit, strictly, little kids be wakin up cryin, yellin, "Mommy Big L is comin to get me!"


My girls are like boomernags, no matter how i throw them they keep coming back


Fuckin punk, you aint a leader what? nobody follow-ed you.
You was never shit, your mother shoulda swallowed you


Turn your tux red, Im far from broke, got enough bread
And mad hoes, ask beavis I get nuttin butt-head


RIP Big L.....

avatar van Niek
"And yes I'm living slick and my pockets are thick
I need surgery to get chicks removed from my (chill)"

avatar van Niek
eazyfan schreef:
en dat kan je toch ook zien, de ene scoort hoger en heeft meer stemmen, dan moet je toch geen 2 keer nadenken .


The Big Picture heeft een hogere score hoor...

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Relax
Niek schreef:
(quote)


The Big Picture heeft een hogere score hoor...


Hmm ben je slim ? hij postte die bericht ook op 16 Augustus...

avatar van Niek
Relax schreef:
(quote)


Hmm ben je slim ? hij postte die bericht ook op 16 Augustus...


Toen ook al...

avatar
Relax
Niek schreef:
(quote)


Toen ook al...


Maarja kijk, bij de eerste album zijn er 30 stemmen en bij 2de zijn er 16.. dus eigenlijk is het wel hoger.
Maar oke nevermind verder.

avatar van Niek
Relax schreef:
(quote)


Maarja kijk, bij de eerste album zijn er 30 stemmen en bij 2de zijn er 16.. dus eigenlijk is het wel hoger.
Maar oke nevermind verder.


Op zich heeft Eazyfan gelijk, maar ik vond het geen vreemde vraag van C Changes want echt een groot verschil is niet waar te nemen tussen beide albums...

avatar
eazyfan
Vette punchlines die ik hier lees :
deze is mijn favo:
U Broke??(gunshots)Well Now U're Dead Broke

echt geweldig, Lifestylez Of Da Poor And Dangerous kan nog in me top10 komen R.I.P. Big L

avatar van Zjapp
Big L moet zowat mijn favorieten mc allertijden zijn, zijn debuutalbum staat op de 2de plek in mijn top 10 na het onvermijdelijke Enter The Wu-Tang, ik check regelmatig het forum van zijn website. Ik vond er het volgende stukje.

Brings a tear to my eye.

We Miss You L!

Rapper, 23, was on verge of stardom when gunned down in Harlem
BY DAVID OVALLE

When Run-DMC's Jam Master Jay was gunned down recently, he became another on a list of high-profile hip-hop artists to die prematurely. The following is the equally tragic story of a rapper who was less-known in the mainstream but had helped discover such major names as Mase and Cam'ron and had a global following. Lamont Coleman, aka Big L, was one of New York's most popular rappers in the late 1990s. He was killed at age 23.

NEW YORK - Lenaisa Phinazee talks to her Uncle Mont often. Sometimes, the 4-year-old plays phantom games of basketball with him.

Uncle Mont's name morphs to those who knew him. Big L to legions of hip-hop fans, Mont-Mont to his nine aunts and uncles. His tombstone bears his real name: Lamont Coleman.

Lenaisa refuses to believe that death has taken her uncle, a popular rapper gunned down just blocks from the Harlem apartment where he grew up. He died just one block from the park where he freestyled with his friends, sharpened his lyrics and enjoyed barbecues with his family.

It's been more than two years since someone killed Coleman, the lightning-tongued lyricist who helped discover eventual rap stars Mase and Cam'ron.

No one has ever been brought to justice in his murder.

The man police believe killed him is in prison on federal drug charges, but they don't have enough evidence to charge him with the 1999 killing.

The most important question -- why was a rapper on the verge of stardom shot down? -- is still the source of speculation in the heart of Harlem.

For Coleman's family, his death has sucked away the energy that revolved around the 139th Street Park, once the vibrant hub of this block.

On his first album, Lifestylez Ov Da Poor and Dangerous, Coleman immortalized this stretch around West 139th Street and Lenox Avenue as the ''Danger Zone,'' a slice of Harlem far removed from the Bill Clinton-fueled neighborhood renaissance.

A mural of Big L painted on the side of a corner market watches over the park, where he used to hang out with Gerard Woodley, his alleged killer. Woodley used to eat at Coleman's dinner table.

BIG DREAMS

Gilda Terry laughed when she first heard her son's rap moniker; Coleman was anything but big. He stood no more than five-foot-eight and was toothpick thin, although he would flex his biceps jokingly for his family.

He rapped about street violence -- not unusual in this neighborhood -- but had never been in trouble with the law. His two older brothers called him a TV gangster.

Coleman embarrassed easily in front of his family. He didn't bring a girl home to meet the family until he was 19. If he was rapping with friends at the park, he would stop immediately if his family walked by.

At home, he was the youngest of three sons, a spoiled goofball with a penchant for card tricks and sunflower seeds. Only his aunt, Pam Phinazee, would laugh at his corny jokes.

While a student at Westside High School, Coleman was discovered at a record store by rapper and producer Lord Finesse. He became a young member of Harlem's fabled Diggin' in the Crates Crew and signed with Columbia Records in 1992. His mother giggled when he told her he toured in Japan and was treated like Michael Jackson.

''I never took him seriously because he would play so much,'' Terry says. 'He always said, `Momma, I'm going to be big.' And I would tell him to get out of my face.''

But he was big. His group, Children of the Korn, included Mase (then known as Murder Mase, sans the shiny suits) and Cam'ron (then Killer Kam) and Cam'ron's cousin, Blood. Eventually, Mase and Cam'ron would earn their fame after signing with P. Diddy's Bad Boy Entertainment. Blood would die in a car accident.

DROPPED FROM LABEL

Coleman was dropped from Columbia because his albums did not sell well -- they were not ''pop'' enough. Still, he stayed close to the park, sizing up talent and continuing to practice his verbal flow.

It was, after all, the same park on the same block where his family and the block association would gather regularly. Once, a family reunion/barbecue drew so many neighbors that the police demanded to know why they hadn't sought a block party permit.

And his loyalty to the rappers on 139th Street was unquestionable.

When Jay-Z's Roc-A-Fella Records offered to sign Coleman, he declined because it would not take his cohorts, McGruff and C-Town.

On Still Here, released posthumously on The Lyricist Lounge Vol. 2 (Rawkus Records, 2000), Coleman spits:

``My underground n - - - - - / y'all can shine with me / got my own label now, so y'all can sign with me / y'all can take me from the bottom and climb with me / that's fine with me, that's how it was designed to be.''

Indeed, Coleman started his own indie label, Flamboyant Entertainment, and was preparing a party to promote it when the shooting happened.

Police would later show the party fliers to anxious family members gathered at the scene. The family identified Coleman using the photo on the flier.

FATEFUL NIGHT

Feb. 14, 1999. That evening, Gilda Terry came home from work and half-jokingly chewed out her son, Coleman -- who had recently moved back into his mom's 140th Street apartment -- for not bringing her any Valentine's Day candy.

So he ran down five flights of steps and to the corner store. When he returned, he handed her a packet of peanut-chew candies before leaving the apartment again.

She settled down to watch the first of a two-part TV movie before going to bed. Terry would never see her son alive again. To this day, she will not watch two-part TV movies because it brings back bad memories.

When she returned from work the next day, Coleman was not home. Terry settled down on the couch to watch the second part of the movie (the title escapes her), her Valentine's peanut chews on the end table ready to be eaten. They would sit there, uneaten and forgotten, for weeks afterward.

Terry doesn't remember who called her with the news that her son had been shot, but she immediately jumped into a cab and rushed to a nearby hospital. It was the wrong place -- Coleman's body was in front of the Delano Village housing project, just a block away from the park.

Coleman's uncle, Kenny Phinazee, rushed to the scene, but the police would not let him pass. A crowd had gathered. He gripped the black iron gate -- the night air so cold that he could see his breath -- and cried for the first time in years.

Police soon arrested Woodley, who grew up with Coleman and his two brothers. At the time, Woodley was facing federal drug charges -- he had been arrested earlier in the year, along with Coleman's older brother, Donald Phinazee.

The New York Daily News reported that Woodley had a beef with one of Coleman's brothers and instead took it out on Coleman. Neighborhood speculation has provided plenty of other rumors. But to this day, Coleman's family does not know why Coleman was killed.

But there was not enough evidence to charge Woodley with the murder, said an assistant district attorney, Dan M. Rather. The investigation is still open.

In December 1999, Woodley nervously pleaded guilty to one count of distribution and possession with intent to distribute cocaine base. He is serving a 50-month sentence in a New York federal prison and is scheduled to be released in late December.

To add further agony, Coleman's other brother, Leroy Phinazee, was murdered last year. His family declines to discuss the details, but Terry says Phinazee was killed while trying to find out what happened to Coleman.

HIP-HOP HERO

Coleman's fame within the hip-hop world did not sink in to his family until his passing. For eight hours, hundreds of people lined up around the block to view his body. When the viewing closed for the night, well-wishers had to be turned away.

Police escorted the family to the George Washington Bridge for the burial, which was attended by a throng of hip-hop stars, including Fat Joe, Mase and Cam'ron. Phone calls of condolences came from as far away as Brazil.

Those calls keep coming today. Earlier this month, one caller wanted to send a demo tape to Coleman. He had been in jail and didn't know Coleman was dead.

On Coleman's birthday, flowers pop up at the mural near the park. His album, The Big Picture, released posthumously, hangs on his grandmother's wall. It sold well enough -- some 500,000 copies -- to earn gold honors.

A box full of Coleman's rhymes, scribbled in journals and on scraps of paper and napkins, gathers dust in Terry's apartment closet. A trophy her son won at Harlem's famed Apollo Theater sits in the corner; it's taller than Terry.

And on 139th Street, the park looks little like it did when Coleman and his crew rocked it. City officials installed a colorful tot-lot and put up a sign that reads: ''No adults allowed without children.'' On a recent Sunday afternoon, it was desolate.

''L was the man,'' Cam'ron told The Village Voice after Coleman's death. ``If he wasn't out on the block, nobody knew how the block was going to function.''

For Coleman's family, the block has functioned little since Coleman's death. The spirit captured so vividly by Coleman and his friends, through the parties and rhyme sessions, melted away on a cold night by the heat of gunfire.

''I don't think they've had a real block party since Lamont died,'' Terry says. `We used to get out there and have a good time. Our family still gets together but not out there.''

avatar van Zjapp
"You lame-ass nigga, No dough, always on the train-ass nigga, Canal street, 10-karat-chain-ass nigga, You got fucked upstate, ya cupcake, How many dicks can your butt take?"

"So pal back up a bit, give me elbow space, I represent Harlem World, not Melrose Place!"

avatar van Zjapp
Big L: The Early Days.

AllHipHop.com: Can you describe Lamont’s upbringing, and what you stressed as a mother?

Gilda Terry: Lamont was a funny little boy, a jealous little boy. “Come on mama, let’s race.” When I’d win, he’d get mad. One Christmas I bought [Lamont and his brothers] turntables and a mixer. [Lamont] would be the MC. Leroy would be the DJ. Donald would be the dancer. I’d laugh at them. It was the worst thing I could’ve done. It made so much noise. That’s how he got into music and stuff. He really, really was into it. After a while, the newness of that went. But Lamont stayed right with it. He just loved it. He was a good kid. He always had a mind of his own. When he set his mind to do something, he just did it.

AllHipHop.com: You mentioned the race. So you weren’t the type of parent to let your children win?

Gilda Terry: He always wanted to race me. We’d race and I’d win. He’d get mad. I’d tell him, “Lamont, if you want to race me, you gonna have to win. I’m not gonna let you win and think you won. No, you got to win.” That’s how it went on until he finally beat me.

AllHipHop.com: Harlem was so prevalent in his rhymes. What was it like raising a child uptown in the late ‘70’s early ‘80’s, and how did Harlem harvest Lamont?

Gilda Terry: He loved the neighborhood. He loved 139th Street. I loved 139th Street until he got killed, because before that, it was a close-knit block. Everybody knew everybody. Back in them days, I used to take numbers. In the summertime, after I’d take all the numbers, I’d grab the kids and we would go different places. I organized the block association. For the block to change as much as it’s changed since Lamont died, and for that to happen to Lamont, it’s hard to believe. Everybody knew him, and he knew everybody from Lennox to 7th Avenue and 139th Street.

AllHipHop.com: Big L is remembered for his wit. He and Lord Finesse never laugh at their jokes on records, which made them even funnier. Was Lamont funny as a child?

Gilda Terry: It’s so funny that you would ask that question because Lamont was a comedian. When we did family gatherings, Lamont was the comedy. He always had to tell his corny jokes. The only ones who’d laugh at his corny jokes was my sister, Pam and Leroy. The rest of us would just look at him. He was corny.

AllHipHop.com: Give me an example. One liners?

Big L: He’d do knock knock jokes, or jokes where you supposed to answer, and he’d give you a silly-ass answer. Some of them, I just never got the meaning.

AllHipHop.com: How was he in school?

Gilda Terry: Lamont was about a B student. I had no problems with him going to school. I was never called to the school. The difference between Lamont and my other two sons, my other two, I stayed in school with. You have to know that Leroy was out in the street.

AllHipHop.com: What was the music like in the house when he was growing up?

Gilda Terry: Gospel. Strictly Gospel. I like R&B like Gladys Knight.

AllHipHop.com: So Lamont was connected to the church?

Gilda Terry: I took him, til’ Leroy said, “Why you forcing us? Let us make our own decisions.” So I didn’t force it.

AllHipHop.com: Were you embracing to his taking to Hip-Hop early on?

Gilda Terry: I didn’t even know he was getting into it like that. Lamont was competing at The Apollo. I got his trophy right here. I wanted to go see him, me and my mother. He wouldn’t let us come because of the cursing. He’d never tell us about his music. I’d heard one song he did called, “Devil’s Son,” when I was in the house. I started screaming, “Boy, you gonna have every preacher in Harlem knockin’ on our door!” That was the first time I heard any of his music. Later on, I heard “Put It On.” Even his Big Picture album, it was a long time after he died before I even heard that. Lamont was very respectful. If he was in the park, and they’d be playing music, and he was on the microphone, and one of us come around, he’d get off. If older ladies came around, he’d give them that respect. He knew I’d kill him if he didn’t. I used to tease him, “Lamont, are we ever gonna make it to the awards?” He’d say straight up, “Mama, the kind of music that I do, underground music, we won’t be going to no awards.” That was the most we talked about with his music.

AllHipHop.com: When he signed with Columbia in ’93 or so, no celebration?

Gilda Terry: When he signed with Columbia, he was with Finesse. I still never realized. I just never took to the Rap. I remember when he first went away, they were going to Brazil. I said, “Lamont, when you get there, you make sure you call me.” Lamont was cheap. Two days passed, I didn’t hear from my child. I’m worrying now. He’s never been away. Camp, one time. Four days past. The fifth day, he got back. I’m screaming on him. He said, “Mama, I sent you a postcard.” Postcard came three days after he got back. I wanted to wring his neck. He was not paying ten dollars to call.

AllHipHop.com: I ask lovingly, was he still thrifty as the success grew?

Gilda Terry: He was the same person. He was the same lil’ cheap person. Around us, it was us – the family. No music. Family things, his corny jokes, things like that.

AllHipHop.com: When you were first meeting the guys he was rolling with, how was that? Are those guys still around for you now?

Gilda Terry: I met Cam’ron, Mase, and all of them. I didn’t think of them as rappers. I just thought of them as little boys comin’ to see Lamont. They don’t like to be little boys. Finesse was the first one I met who was really into the music thing. I knew Finesse and I still know Finesse. [He] is just as humble as he can be. He was always just a nice guy.

AllHipHop.com: Has Hip-Hop been fair to you?

Gilda Terry: Uhh, yeah. The little ones still see me now and say, “Oh, that’s Big L’s mother.” I don’t go on 139th Street anymore. I lost both of my children there. It has bad memories for me. One day I was riding the D Train, and I climbed out of the subway, and I heard him playin’. I started crying. I get sad sometimes.

avatar van Zjapp
“Da Graveyard”: Squad Up

AllHipHop.com: “Da Graveyard” is probably the hardest Big L moment ever recorded. Tell me about the making of it?

Grand Daddy I.U.: We did that s**t at Powerplay [Studios]. Buckwild had did the track. The n***a just called me. I did it on the strength of, that was my dude. There was no money involved. No sales. If I’m cool with you, if you want me to get on the joint – I just do it.

AllHipHop.com: Out of the blue, or were y’all friends?

Grand Daddy I.U.: I met him ‘cause he was on Columbia in the Sony building. That’s when Cold Chillin’ had distribution through Epic. We all went on a promo tour. Nas, Big L, MC Eiht, me, Supercat – all the motherf**kas that was under the Sony umbrella at the time. That’s how we got cool and s**t. Then, I used to check him in Harlem sometimes. He called me like, “Yo, come get on this joint.” I didn’t even know what it was, I just went, heard the beat, he had like eight motherf**kas in there rhymin’ and s**t, Party Artie and them n***as.

AllHipHop.com: Was Jay-Z there?

Grand Daddy I.U.: Nah, he wasn’t even there. He had already did his verse. A.G. was supposed to get on it. He came through, but was like, “I ain’t even gonna f**k with this s**t, it’s ripped already.”

AllHipHop.com: Did you and L remain close after?

Grand Daddy I.U.: Nah. Actually, when he got killed, I hadn’t seen the n***a in a minute. He wasn’t in the same circle. We wasn’t in the industry the way we was [then]. That was my man though. We wasn’t on no everyday s**t though.

Children of the Corn: Myth or Super-Group?

AllHipHop.com: Who was really in Children of the Corn? There's a lot of speculation, why?

Digga: Well, Big L created the name Children of the Corn, and he added the members. From what I [believe], C.O.C was Big L, Cam'Ron, Mase, McGruff, Bloodshed, Terror, Party Artie, Budda Bless, TWAN, Mike Boogie, and me as the producer. I think there is a lot of speculation because there were members from the Bronx and Harlem, that didn't know each other. Also, when everyone split up. [Then,] me, Cam’Ron, and Bloodshed became professionally known as "C.O.C" when we signed with Freeze/Priority.

AllHipHop.com: How did you come into the fold?

Digga: I got down from working with Cam'Ron. Me, Cam, Bloodshed and Mase used to do songs and ask Big L to feature. Eventually, we became a crew because Big L was showing love by taking us to the radio stations.

AllHipHop.com: How did Harlem treat y'all? Were there many shows, mixtapes?

Digga: Back then, it was all love. C.O.C. was always the main crew, but were all members of smaller crews from different blocks. We would come together and do our thing. We did shows in little ‘hole in the wall’ sports-bars, Maria Davis Wednesdays, and school talent shows. The best part was going around to battle n from other blocks. The mixtapes just started to get hot at that time. We got it poppin’ on S&S and Clue tapes.

AllHipHop.com: What were those studio sessions like?

Digga: I think we only had one real studio session with everyone all together and that was to record a song called "American Dream.” Actually, that song was originally recorded by just me, Mase, Bloodshed and Cam’Ron. We later added Big L and McGruff because Columbia Records liked the song with the intentions on releasing it as a single.

AllHipHop.com: What is misconceived about L?

Digga: That he wanted to be an underground rapper. Of course I think he wanted to known as the nicest MC, but I think he wanted to be commercially known as well. When he came out, Biggie and Nas was becoming hot, and I think people never really looked at him as the competition.

AllHipHop.com: Why did the group disband?

Digga: We had the plan to be like the Harlem version of D.I.T.C. or Wu-Tang. At the time, Big L got dropped from Columbia, which left all the members still trying to get on. Mcgruff got a deal with Uptown Records, and Mase got a deal with Bad Boy and me, Cam'Ron and Blood signed with Freeze/Priority records. After everybody got deals, our concern was more with our solo deals that the original plan. Mase started to blow up with Bad Boy, and [was] leaning towards rolling with that whole situation. So, everyone started going pretty much for themselves.

AllHipHop.com: Who owns the rights to the C.O.C. material?

Digga: I guess I do, right? I released a mixtape of some material available on www.sixfigga.com. I think it’s not to late for us to make some music again. If the fans want it, they need to start a petition.

AllHipHop.com: What most valuable moment to you in those days?

Digga: For me, it was the first time I saw a day and the life a rapper with a major label deal. To see how real it was in the business. L use to live in the same place, and stand on the same corner, while being signed to Columbia. Nas, Jay-Z and DMX use to all come to the block to rhyme with L - all for the music.

avatar van Zjapp
The Aftermath: Personal, Never Business

AllHipHop.com: How soon and on what label will we see a Big L album, because Rawkus folded, and Tommy Boy isn’t in good shape…

Renata Lowenbraun: It’s very upsetting. We have spoken certain distributors who have expressed interest. I anticipate that we’ll know who we’re working with in the next several months, for sure.

AllHipHop.com: Has bootlegging been a big an issue?

Renata Lowenbraun: I think everybody in music has a problem with bootlegging. Big L didn’t really get the opportunity to reach the height of his career. He was on his way up. There’s only so many things that he’s done by way of freestyles, interviews, live performances. We’re not dealing with an infinite amount of tracks. I wish we were. I do have a unique problem. I’ve got to figure out how to go about dealing with the bootlegging issue. I think it’s hurt [Big L’s mother’s] interests. I find it utterly despicable as human being that someone would take advantage who has died. As the attorney, I’ve been working with the probate court dealing with issues going into the future.

AllHipHop.com: Big L always spoke of Flamboyant Entertainment. Will that company exist or live on in his death?

Renata Lowenbraun: We intend on doing exactly what Big L wanted. Flamboyant Entertainment is the company that’s going to be doing [this album].

AllHipHop.com: Who, creatively handles this stuff?

Renata Lowenbraun: On the creative side, Lord Finesse is very involved in the estate – with good reason. He’s the one who discovered Big L. From my perspective, I can’t think of anybody in a better position to do material consistent with what Big L would have done.

AllHipHop.com: The Hip-Hop community was largely appalled with the creative mishandlings of Tupac and Biggie’s work. Their material ends up being auctioned off to Pop stars. Is Big L’s work safe from being compromised?

Renata Lowenbraun: I think it’s a combination of both. His mother has the right to make any decision, and has entrusted Lord Finesse and myself to make those decisions. Finesse knows what was appropriate to who Big L was. Me as the lawyer, I’m interested in maximizing the value of the estate. But certainly, I don’t feel it would be appropriate to him on a Nelly album, say. I doubt we would do that. We’ve certainly gotten a lot of support from Fat Joe and his camp, and those people who’ve worked with Big L before. Eminem goes out of his way to give shout-outs.

AllHipHop.com: Is there material out there, that labels have or otherwise, that you’re still seeking?

Renata Lowenbraun: There’s material that he did as a member of Children of the Corn, as a member of Diggin’ In The Crates, and we’re looking to locate the things he worked on that never went anywhere.


Dit waren nog enkele Big L gerelateerde interviews. En ik heb ook nog links voor de radioshow van van 15/02 jl. met Dj Premier, Big L's broer Don Ice, A.G. Big Shug en anderen die uitsluitend over L ging op HeadQCourterz FM.

Deel 1 radioshow

Deel 2 radioshow

avatar
CaliLove
^^^^
Propz 4 postin' this!!!

avatar van Kill_illuminati
Big L live at Amsterdam zouden julllie eens moeten uitchecken!!! Legendarisch gewoon.Vooral de nieuwe versie van "Devils Son"

avatar van Kill_illuminati
Z'n Ma is 15mei dit jaar (2008) overleden.


avatar van Pooiertje
Big L Docu
ziet er goed uit, ga meteen het album weer even checken, heb ik lang niet meer gedaan.

avatar van Kill_illuminati
Aaah precies de nostalgie .

avatar van Pooiertje
Juuuuuuist.


avatar van MAS
MAS
De 31ste komt er een plaat uit genaamd 139 & Lenox van Big L. Er staan 12 zeldzame en unreleased tracks op.

avatar van MJ_DA_MAN
Wtf, de vader van Big L zei juist laatst dat er niks meer uit zou komen. Misschien bedoelde ie een officiël album (die al jaren op de planning staat maar dus niet gaat komen, genaamd Real Legends Never Die).

avatar van MAS
MAS
Ja inderdaad een beetje raar. Lord Finesse zei vorige week nog dat er niks meer uit zo komen.

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Gast
geplaatst: vandaag om 15:39 uur

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geplaatst: vandaag om 15:39 uur

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