Da Youngstas - Pass Da Mic video free download


605,537
Duration: 04:13
Uploaded: 2011/10/01

Video version is the "Pete Rock Remix" from the 1992 Single...[Artist info below].....

Get Da Youngstas' Music:

http://www.amazon.com/Da-Youngstas/e/B000AQ1FDA/ref=ntt_mus_dp_pel

&

http://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/da-youngstas/id15533623

Da Youngstas were a hip-hop trio that consisted of two brothers, Taji "Taj Mahal" Goodman and Qu'ran Goodman, and their cousin Tarik Dawson, hailing from Philadelphia.

The Goodman brothers are the sons of Lawrence "LG" Goodman, CEO of Pop Art Records and one of Philadelphia hip-hop's founding fathers.

Da Youngstas' debut album, 1992's Somethin' 4 da Youngstas was unfortunately overshadowed by the explosive success of their kiddie counterparts Kris Kross. However, the trio was able to garner a strong reputation in hip hop's underground due to the fact that, unlike similar child acts of the day, they wrote their own lyrics.

Its second album, 1993's The Aftermath, featured grand influences from Das EFX and Onyx, as Da Youngstas boasted a more aggressive and dexterous rhyming style and had production support from some of hip hop's heavyweights such as DJ Premier, the Beatnuts, Marley Marl, and Pete Rock. Hardcore tracks such as "Wild Child" and "Crewz Pop" won them a bigger following; notably, Qu'ran began producing beats for the song "Da Hood," foreshadowing a future career as a producer. Some of the songs on the album had been directed to Kris Kross in songs Crewz Pop and Lyrical Stick Up Kids due to the beef they had going on with the group.

Da Youngstas' third album, 1994's No Mercy, is often regarded as its best. It contains the group's most successful single, "Hip Hop Ride," a sunny ode to hip hop music, which peaked at #21 on the Hot Rap Singles charts and #68 on the Billboard Hot 100. This time, most of the production work was left to Marley Marl, K-Def & Dante "Destro" Barton.

The group released its final album in 1995—I'll Make You Famous—that found them referring to themselves as the Illy Funkstaz, a nickname that the group had used sporadically during its last two albums. It contained the Mobb Deep-featured single "Bloodshed and War." The album was the least successful of the group's releases, and nothing has been heard from the group since.

Extended & Updated Info:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Da_Youngstas

Comments

8 years ago

Cyan Blackflower

At firss I was juss thinking...Whahh. But thenn..I'm with the little bRothahs YEEEEAAAAHHH !!

8 years ago

Shawn Williams

'money's growing like grass wit' the mass appeal..." sound familiar?

8 years ago

fooloof

These young niggaz was pretty ill.

8 years ago

Chris AA

These kids are the shit! This was the golden age where talent meant something. Lightyears ahead of today's stuff.

8 years ago

William Shakespeare 1564

im going to listen to hip hop until im 100 years old,lol

8 years ago

The Infamous Trini_Don

Onyx style here lol

9 years ago

Golden Hip Hop

Peace to Da Youngstaz and DJ Premier for sampling 'money's growing like grass with the mass appeal' RIP GURU! 

9 years ago

smittybob100

that gang starr mass apeal!

9 years ago

Solineis Rocha

Pastor mike yo, pastor we like.......god bless

9 years ago

Solineis Rocha

That's right, and its true old school

9 years ago

cubedmack

When I was in college at Morgan State back in the day, they came to Morgan on a promotional tour. I was part of student government and was ask to give them a tour of campus. They were like 14 or 15 and were carrying rubbers asking me where are all the freaks at. Shit was so funny! 

9 years ago

Jesus Ruiz

Somehow this song and music video makes me think when I was a little kid and middle school I was born in 1991 

9 years ago

Jonathan Guggenheim

this is legit hip-hop!

9 years ago

djspair

To my beat heads. Anyone else hear the Tommy Roe-Dizzy sample?

9 years ago

Jeris Lendore

Pete remixing, Primo sampling...... That's when u know u got a classic right there

9 years ago

aidan heaney

Like if your watching in 2015

9 years ago

tomas Lyzwa

Zajebisteeeeeee!!!max rap

9 years ago

Dewoy1

Holy shit those kids killing it how old are they 12-14 ?

9 years ago

Brian Thompson

Hip hop is dead you never had feelings like this again peace to the true hip hop fans in the nineties in the eighties and seventies babies

9 years ago

Mob Petruša

Kids took out Mobb Deep style

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