Le dimanche 11 décembre 2016
à partir de 20h

GUILTY SIMPSON & PHAT KAT // PAYE TON NOËL 10

LIVE / 21H / 5 €

Pelpass Asso en coproduction avec Le Fat Black sont heureux de vous représenter ce plateau de Détroit dans le cadre du festival "Paye Ton Noël".

PREVENTES :
- FAT BLACK PUSSYCAT ( 3 Rue Klein / Strasbourg )
- BOUTIQUE CULTURE ( place de la cathédrale)
- WEEZEVENT


GUILTY SIMPSON :

Guilty Simpson was born in Detroit, the son and grandson of the family’s performing musicians in his father and grandfather. At age four, Simpson and his mother began traveling with an aunt in the military, living in California and Birmingham, Alabama, before settling back in the Motor City at 15. Big Daddy Kane, N.W.A, and Scarface were all major influences, but it was Queens-bred street bard Kool G Rap who made the biggest impression. “That’s my crème de la crème rapper right there,” says Simpson, his own presence among the latest in a rich lineage of heavy-handed MCs.

For years Guilty Simpson has been a rock on the Detroit hip-hop circuit alongside those such as J Dilla, Slum Village, Eminem (whom Guilty still calls “Marshall”) & D12, Obie Trice, Proof, Phat Kat and Black Milk. A member of the Almighty Dreadnaughtz crew, Guilty emerged as a sound to be reckoned with after linking with producer Dilla in 2001. In the midst of recording an album’s worth of material on the MC – including the recently released duet “Take Notice” off of Dilla’s heralded Ruff Draft album – Dilla gave Simpson his first appearance on disc with “Strapped” (from 2003’s Jaylib album).

2006 marked his allegiance with Stones Throw Records – at Dilla’s behest – where he has released Ode to the Ghetto, OJ Simpson, and Detroit’s Son.
Guilty’s testosterone-charged, inner city themes possess of a sense of humor at times so side-splitting, it only proves how serious he really is. This rapper was raised on the field of battle and he has more to say than just how fresh he is and how fresh “they” are not. As a matter of fact, he’s found that he’s here to remind the hip-hop world – currently captivated with that manufactured freshness – that life in the ghetto is real.
The evidence shows excessive use of double entendres, too much flavor on public grounds, microphone assault, and verbal harassment of an officer of the law. On the counts of freshness AND realness: The Court of Hip-Hop finds Mr. Simpson to be Guilty.

-- Bio by Ronnie Reese.


Liens :
https://www.discogs.com/fr/artist/150554-Guilty-Simpson
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VEDBFzDnIRM
https://www.facebook.com/guiltysimpson313/


PHAT KAT :

His career began in the mid 90’s as part of 1st Down, which consisted of Phat Kat on vocals and Jay Dee on production. The group was short lived however, possibly because of insufficient support/promotion from their label, Payday, but the two continued to collaborate on many occasions afterwards, starting with an appearance on "Fat Cat Song" and its remix, from Slum Village’s Fan-Tas-Tic (Vol. 1).

In an interview, he spoke in regards to his time and music creations alongside Dilla, as well as the producer’s work ethic:

“ Dilla didn’t fuck around in the studio. Everybody else had to adjust their style to keep up with Dilla, or if they ever wanted the chance to work with Dilla. You had to be able to knock out your verse in one take. I’ve seen Dilla make beats in 10 minutes. We made that track off of Welcome 2 Detroit in 10 minutes flat. We completed the whole Dedication To The Suckers EP from scratch in less than one night. He did the beats and I laid the verses. We started at 9 p.m. and finished by 12 midnight.[1] ”
His first full-length album, The Undeniable LP was released on June 22, 2004, on Barak Records. It featured appearances from Slum Village, Dwele, Big Tone of 87 Wasted Youth, and Obie Trice. Kat released a 12-inch single in late 2006 for the song Cold Steel produced by J Dilla, he then followed it with his latest LP, Carte Blanche, on April 24 on Look Records. The album has proved to be Kat’s most universally acknowledged effort yet.[citation needed]

During a radio interview with T3 in WJLB, Phat Kat rung in and spoke against T3. He stated that T3 had dismantled the group, after the Reunion Pt 2 video was released and Elzhi wasn’t in the video. T3 had said that he and Elzhi were still on good speaking terms, however Phat Kat contradicted him saying that "Elzhi ain’t f***ing witchu, don’t do that to the fans, keep it real". T3 didn’t know what the future of Slum Village was as Elzhi hadn’t released a statement regarding his intentions of whether to continue Slum Village and Phat Kat strongly disagreed. Phat Kat was incredibly incensed and continued to swear as T3 tried to explain.

LIENS :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1IzLoix5s4Q

https://www.facebook.com/events/1629448497355829/

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Un anonyme a signalé une erreur le 04/01/2025 à 16:01
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Lieu : Fat

Adresse : Rue Klein

Ville : Strasbourg

Quartier : Quartier Krutenau

Département : Bas-Rhin

Région : Grand Est

Pays : France

Annoncé anonymement le vendredi 24 juillet 2020
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