Rascals (ex Lil' Rascals) / Class 90 Vol.1 (mixtape)
Жанр: Grime, Trap, Bass, Hip-Hop
Страна: Великобритания
Год издания: 2013
Издатель (лейбл): ℗ 2013 Class 90 Ent / Defenders Entertainment
Аудио кодек: AAC
Тип рипа: tracks
Битрейт аудио: 256 kbps
Продолжительность: 00:43:12
Источник: iTunes [GB]
Вшитые тексты: не добавлены
Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: нет
Треклист:
01. Big Shizz - Class 90 Intro
02. Big Shizz feat Manga/Mercston/Double S - Tutti Riddim
03. Big Narste feat Big Shizz & Merks - My Different
04. Kay Wills feat Tempz/Merks/Aks - Aint Involved
05. Big Shizz feat Tempz/Merks/Aks - Ill Brain Cypher
06. Swing feat Goldie 1/Kay Wills/Squeeks - Tell Em
07. Kay Wills feat Dru Blu & Delusion - So Dumb
08. Kay Wills feat Ghetts & Lunar C - The Streets
09. Big Shizz feat Kay Wills/Merks/Tempz - Memories Acoustic
10. Big Shizz feat Merks & Tempz - Keys
11. Kay Wills feat Lil Torment/Merks/Tempz - Freedom
12. Kay Wills - Tell The Tale
Об исполнителе (группе)
Growing up in legendary Bow, east London’s musical melting pot and surrounded by grime luminaries such as Tinchy Stryder, Roll Deep, Ghetts, Dizzee Rascal and Wiley – who’d regularly frequented the same circles, youth clubs and record shops – RASCALS have emerged from the underground in the only way they know how; shining like uncut diamonds in chasm of MCs. “When we were coming up there were loads of crews, everyone had youngers,” 19 year-old Shizz states in his usually animated manner. “We thought it was normal being 9 and chilling with 16 year-olds. When I was 7, I remember Dizzee and Tinchy going to the local youth club, Link Road, and we were just fascinated.”
Linking up with fellow partners in rhyme, now also 19, Tempz, and 18 year-old, Merkz, RASCALS got their first slice of street success when they were just 12 and 13 with the debut smash New Era. Coupled with an infectious Fluke’s produced Future Wifey on the b-side and television-favoured Bang Your Headz follow up – which went straight in at No.1 on Channel AKA (formally Channel U, the UK’s No.1 Urban Youth Music Channel and also had a cameo from a tinier Tinie Tempah) and stayed there for 13 weeks – these early anthems garnered RASCALS, or Lil’ Rascals to give them their correct guise at the time, a footing within the rarely infiltrated grime fraternity in which the then trio could work alongside the biggest names in the underground scene, appear on the same popular DVDs and build an avid fanbase (“we remember when a WHOLE school got shut down and the playground was full with girls chanting our names.”)