Shaggy 2 dope too dope free mp3 download






















Vintage shit here. Ringmaster Tour video. Pretty sure this isn't soundboard but for those who don't have, this is pretty rare.

Twiztid-A Cut-Throat Xmas. Scans only streaming on Tidal, etc. The single. The deluxe tracks only. CD rip. You can click either pic. Scans only. Very rare demo ft The R. This is from a Detroit mixtape. The hidden track only. Scans Only. Vinyl scans only. But the filenames are correct in this. Note that the reissue is NOT remastered. Limited to just copies available at GOTJ , this sold out quickly. It was given away FREE at the seminar.

FYI this doesn't sound much better than what we've been listening to since , it's barely remastered. Golden Goldies was a comical group whose lyrics focused solely on gold. Golden Goldies was a project put together by Insane Clown Posse for entertainment purposes only. To add more humor to the album, each artist was given only five minutes to write their verses, and had only one take to record them, which resulted in some artists messing up their lines, and lyrics containing "some very strange things.

Available digitally. Given away free at GOTJ , limited to copies. Scans only, available digitally. Here you go, if you want a really dope scan of it. Scans only of all the included cassettes. Scans are all dpi too. There are multiple pressings of this 3 or so so I lumped what I think is all of them, together. Tour-only EP. Uploaded to The Internet Archive. This is direct from the USB stick itself.

These are kbps MP3s. There was no Chapter 17 included, I'm guessing that was intentional. DJ clay is such a one dimensional producer. Every track literally sounds the same as the one before it, and after it. Hopefully the Y. Anyways if the album maintains this standard it will be worth a purchase. Shaggy always has his best rapping on gangster tracks. He stays quiet because J always keeps talking and Shaggy is always simple and blunt. And it just left us reeling.

Violent J: …And anything we did, it was the Hatchet Family. And when we went on tour, it was the whole Hatchet Family. And we toured with Twiztid a hundred times, you know what I mean? And that was all we did. That was the card we played: Juggalo Family. Every Gathering, everything we did. And so all of a sudden, that era kinda ended. And the whole situation just made us even closer. And it makes perfect sense for them.

But what makes perfect sense for us? Is to stay together. You know, me and Shaggy, Billy, Jumpsteady. For life. I just know that ICP will always be here. Because I would have never guessed that they would leave. It makes perfect sense why they left. And now I totally understand it. And I get it. And I wish them nothing but the best in the future. FLH: Yeah. And they said the same thing, when I had spoke with them at Fright Fest in October.

It was a business move, you know? And it has to happen, you know? But, man, those are our brothers. Never in a million years, man. We just have to tweak some technicalities and whatnot. Violent J: This is the new room. That was the last I heard, and that was like a half a week ago so….

FLH: OK! Let me ask you about Juggalos. But to be smack dab in the middle of it? Does that make sense? Violent J: You guys know me, man, I fuckin cry over the shit. I have to take medicine. It—it overwhelms me every single night. I gotta take medicine to fucking put me down, you know? Juggalos that are writing letters. Because there was a time where more people were so-called down with us than there are today.

And so I look at the Juggalos that are here today as extra special, beautiful Juggalos, and they mean everything to us. I gotta see a doctor for the shit, man. We were just a band. The Juggalos are what the story is, you know? Violent J: The Juggalos are what make everything about us so interesting and insane and viable and cool. And fuckin iconic. Us fighting the FBI and all that? It freaked the FBI out.

They label it all kinds of shit. What was it about his story that made you feel like you wanted to reach out to his family in particular? Violent J: Man, he was just one of us. He was one of us.

He was right over in Ohio, and his boys, they contacted my brother through you guys, and he was just one of us, man. He was right in Ohio. We went and saw him, and you just realize how close you are to everybody.

And what everybody really needs to do is get one of those shirts at that concert. Get your hands on one of those shirts and rock that shit to the Gathering. Rock that shit through the mall. That lets everybody know that you did a beautiful, wonderful thing, man, so them shirts? FLH: Dude that is dope. That is super cool of you guys to do that. Instead, we want to tackle one at a time and really try to help them. FLH: I gotcha.

OK, J, I gotta ask. Violent J: Oh, no. Violent J: Yeah! FLH: Damn. Well Shaggy, I know a lot of people have asked you over the years about a book. Do you think you got one in you, or will it be more of a collaborative effort with J on this upcoming book?

Shaggy 2 Dope: I mean, for now, it would just be a collaborative effort anyhow because my book be the same fucking thing [ Laughs ]. A lot more than the first book did. This book goes into thing me and Shaggy have gone through, and it covers them in depth. Violent J: This book goes into our personal lives a lot more than the first book.

The first book was a different time. We were younger; we were out running around bangin neden holes, wylin out and everything, and this is a different time. Violent J: Well yeah! Do you think he has any aspirations to get into the rap scene or any musical aspirations? Violent J: I ask him. I asked him, does he want to? FLH: Wow! So what do they think of ICP as a whole? And do they have any musical aspirations, or are they just kinda doing their own thing?

They just enjoy their privacy. With this whole shit with me right now, in the news and stuff, I kind of feel bad because it puts them on the spot and shit. They just like doing their own thing and just moving, doing what they do, without being bugged, you know?

And I respect that out of them. FLH: So, I gotta congratulate both of you, because you were both recently married, so congratulations on that.

FLH: Has that changed your day-to-day life at all? Or was it just that you were both already in long-term relationships, so…. FLH: Alright. What do you guys think about Eminem mentioning you guys positively on his new LP? Shaggy 2 Dope: Yeah! And was it for real when it was out there? Yeah it was for real, you know? But people grow up. Wounds heal. That really said something to me. Are we on his mind or what? At least for me, it is. The people have no rules.

You had to keep your credibility up. If you were a gangster rapper, you had to affiliate with only gangster rappers. It was never that back in the day, but rap is now pop and pop artists work together. What can you do, you know? FLH: Right. Do you guys have any say on what videos are chosen for ICP Theater?

Shaggy 2 Dope: No, they just throw them at us. We do some really funny things and when we see the episode, they left it out. And that sucks, man. Believe me, brother. And non-Juggalos too. His writing is pretentious and demeaning at best and sounds like the narrative from a National Geographic documentary. We been doing this since Stranglemania…. Violent J: We always have records with little skits and shit. We been cracking jokes from Day fucking 1. Violent J: I think the issue is getting the rights to those videos.

One way or another, listen brother, we will release a DVD of the shows, even if we have to do it bootleg style here at Psychopathic and sell it on Hatchetgear. I promise you. We will be coming out with that DVD one way or another. He fits like a glove.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000