Performance

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Streams

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The Bi-Conicals of the Rammellzee

74.4K streams

74,352

Pay the Rent

40.7K streams

40,731

This Is What You Made Me

28.3K streams

28,280

Cheesy Lipstick

2.1K streams

2,132

Biography

Rammellzee was an important player in the initial crossover of hip-hop culture to the mainstream. He participated in hip-hop's earliest phases, though the bizarre edge his aggressively fanciful inventions brought to the original hip-hop style has been somewhat blunted by the dominance of the gangsta pose and its supposed "reality." Dynamite D, a conductor who rhymed boasts of the superior condition of his super clean D-train over the train's intercom, is named by Rammellzee as an early rap inspiration. Partnered with MCs Shock Dell and Jamal, Rammellzee participated in early hip-hop sound system battles, where he developed the "W.C. Fields" and "Gangsta Duck" voices originated by Jamal. Rammellzee employed the "Gangsta Duck" on "Beat Bop," a dense dialogue with K Rob, nominally produced by the late painter Jean Michel Basquiat and released on Profile Records. "Beat Bop" was the result of some improvised role playing, with Rammellzee playing a pimp and K Rob in the character of a schoolboy. The resulting rap is the best and most sustained example on record of Rammellzee's flights of wordplay, fantasy, and street surrealism. ~ Richard Pierson, Rovi