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Shock G remembered as rapper who infused hip-hop with humor in Digital Underground


Chris Vognar April 23, 2021Updated: April 23, 2021, 6:29 pm
Rappers Humpty Hump (Shock G) and 2 Pac of Digital Underground perform their hit song, ‘Sex Packets’ at Market Square Arena in Indianapolis in July 1990. Photo: Raymond Boyd, Getty Images 1990
The late ’80s and early ’90s were very serious years for hip-hop. Public Enemy brought the noise with heady Black nationalism and perhaps the greatest of all rap albums, “It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back.” N.W.A. owned gangsta rap, lashing out at law enforcement with the violent fantasies of “Straight Outta Compton.” This was no laughing matter.
Then there was this wild new crew from Oakland known as Digital Underground. Their leader rapper and producer Gregory Edward Jacobs, better known by his stage name Shock G donned a fake nose, glasses, fur hat and nasal delivery to create an alter ego named Humpty Hump. Their breakthrough album, 1990’s “Sex Packets,” blended punc ....

United States , Biz Markie , Raymond Boyd , Chris Vognar , Gregory Edward Jacobs , Too Short , Tim Mosenfelder , Groucho Marx , Tupac Shakur , Prince Paul , Slick Rick , Rappers Humpty Hump , Digital Underground , Sex Packet , Market Square Arena , Getty Images , Public Enemy , Hold Us Back , Outta Compton , Tampa Bay , Get Around , East Bay , Earl Gibson , Hot Rap Songs , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , பிஸ் மார்க்கி ,

Shock G Death Tribute - How the Digital Underground Rapper Bridged the Gap Between P-Funk and Tupac


Jesse Frohman
An amazing thing about listening to hip-hop in the late 1980s and early 1990s was the sense of infinite possibility. It seemed like every week, some new record came out that sounded like nothing you had ever heard before, and opened up some whole new territory you’d never even considered. The technology, the subject matter, and the audience were all shifting at warp speed; N.W.A’s
Straight Outta Compton, Public Enemy’s
It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, and De La Soul’s
3 Feet High and Rising all radically changed the direction of music, and they all came out within less than a year of each other. ....

Alan Light , Pat Johnson Shutterstock , George Clinton , Ice Cube , Tupac Shakur , Gregory Jacobs , Bootsy Collins , Jimi Hendrix , Alan Lightauthor , Black Rob , Vanilla Ice , Burger King , Straight Outta Compton , Public Enemy , Hold Us Back , Bay Area , Genetic Suppression Relief Antidotes , Humpty Hump , Digital Underground , Crystal Ball , Get Around , Many Tears , Black Panthers , Urban Dance Squad , Modern English , Music Seminar ,

ON THIS DAY IN MUSIC HISTORY: 4.14.21


By Keefer
Apr 14, 2021
1965 - The Beatles changed the name of their second movie from Eight Arms To Hold You to Help!
1972 - David Bowie released Starman and Suffragette City, the advance single from his acclaimed conceptual The Rise And Fall Of Ziggy Stardust And The Spiders From Mars. The lyrics of Starman describe Ziggy Stardust bringing a message of hope to Earth s youth through the radio, salvation by an alien. Ziggy would remain on the album chart for more than a year, finally putting Bowie over the top in the States.
1975 - Following many rumors and much speculation that Jimmy Page, Chris Spedding, Jeff Beck or even Eric Clapton would replace Mick Taylor in The Rolling Stones, it was announced that Faces guitarist Ron Wood would fill the shoes. I always knew I was gonna end up in this band, Wood told Stuff. I remember walking around the periphery of Hyde Park in 69, and this big car pulls up through a whole sea of people and out steps Mick and Charl ....

United States , New Jersey , Chris Spedding , Jeff Beck , Mick Taylor , Lloyd Dobler Cusack , Kurt Cobain , Ione Skye , Win Butler , Ron Wood , Peter Gabriel , David Bowie , Ritchie Blackmore , John Cusack , Percy Sledge , Eric Clapton , Jo Hale Getty , Jimmy Page , Diane Court Skye , Eight Arms To Hold You , Ziggy Stardust , Rolling Stones , Hyde Park , Getty Images , New Jersey State , Bruce Springsteen ,

A Recap of 28 Days of the Most Iconic Black Album Covers


Another year, another Black History Month coming to a close. For the past 28 days,
The Root has been celebrating Black Joy and how that looks whether it’s through art, family, food or music. Panama Jackson, senior editor of Very Smart Brothas, has brought us all the joy through the most iconic and Blackest album covers of our time. Granted, there are probably more than 28 out there, but it would be hard to top this series in all of its Blackness.
A slew of my personal favorites made this list Miles Davis in particular because Sundays were for jazz in my house and this particular album stayed on “heavy rotation.” On top of that, I’m sure many of them have played on repeat in Black households since they came out. Panama has done us the honor of making this list, to begin with, and I’m just here to put them together so we can look back and think, “ah yes, this is Black joy with some of the most iconic music moments to look back on.” ....

United States , South Africa , City Of , United Kingdom , Outkast Aquemini Laface , Marvin Gaye , Curtis Mayfield Curtom , Diana Ros , Minnie Riperton , Outkast Aquemini , Ralph Johnson , Donny Hathaway , Kool Moe Dee , Big Boi , Guy Warren , A Sista Tommy , Wilson Pickett , Big Bear , Wood Ariola , Maryj Blige , Janice Marie Johnson , Queen Latifah , Rick James , Miles Davis , Michael Jackson , Diana Ross ,