Search results for Far Too Jones
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10,

09:55,

2008-02-05 17:09:08
Description: Alex Jones interviews the controversial hip-hop warrior Paris.
Paris Biography
One of hip-hop's most militantly Afrocentric radicals, Paris struggled for most of his career to find (More) Alex Jones interviews the controversial hip-hop warrior Paris.
Paris Biography
One of hip-hop's most militantly Afrocentric radicals, Paris struggled for most of his career to find acceptance for his fiercely political music, which drew from the provocative intelligence of Public Enemy and the gut-level rage of early Ice Cube. Born Oscar Jackson, Jr. in California, Paris earned a degree in economics from the University of California-Davis (near the San Francisco Bay Area); but hip-hop appealed to him more, and he founded his own record label, Scarface. He recorded a single, but found he lacked the resources to promote it properly, and wound up landing a deal with Tommy Boy Records. His debut album, The Devil Made Me Do It, was released in 1990, and attracted some attention (and praise) for the single "The Hate That Hate Made," as well as the title track, whose video was banned by MTV. Paris completed the follow-up album Sleeping With the Enemy in 1992; however, in the wake of the controversy over Ice-T's "Cop Killer," Tommy Boy refused to release it, citing the anti-George Bush track "Bush Killa." Eventually, they decided the whole album was far too strident and inflammatory, and bought out Paris' contract. After distribution agreements with Polygram and Def American fell through for similar reasons, Paris resurrected Scarface (helped by the Tommy Boy settlement money) and finally put the album out himself. It was acclaimed as a major statement in some quarters, but failed to find a wide audience in the midst of the gangsta rap revolution. 1994's Guerrilla Funk met with a similar fate, slipping largely under the radar, and Paris spent four years away from the studio. When he returned with Unleashed in 1998, he'd largely abandoned his trademark political fury in favor of watered-down G-funk and gangsta clichés. He retired from hip-hop not long after and put his economics degree to use as a successful stockbroker.
In 2003, he resurfaced with Sonic Jihad, released through Guerrilla Funk -- his new label. Remastered versions of his first three albums were issued around the same time, and new music from himself, Public Enemy, Kam, MC Ren and the Conscious Daughters was promised.
From allmusic.com
Guerilla Funk Records
http://www.guerrillafunk.com/
Alex Jones websites
http://www.prisonplanet.com
http://www.infowars.com (Less) Channel: youtube

13,

09:56,

2008-02-05 17:04:45
Description: Alex Jones interviews the controversial hip-hop warrior Paris.
Paris Biography
One of hip-hop's most militantly Afrocentric radicals, Paris struggled for most of his career to find (More) Alex Jones interviews the controversial hip-hop warrior Paris.
Paris Biography
One of hip-hop's most militantly Afrocentric radicals, Paris struggled for most of his career to find acceptance for his fiercely political music, which drew from the provocative intelligence of Public Enemy and the gut-level rage of early Ice Cube. Born Oscar Jackson, Jr. in California, Paris earned a degree in economics from the University of California-Davis (near the San Francisco Bay Area); but hip-hop appealed to him more, and he founded his own record label, Scarface. He recorded a single, but found he lacked the resources to promote it properly, and wound up landing a deal with Tommy Boy Records. His debut album, The Devil Made Me Do It, was released in 1990, and attracted some attention (and praise) for the single "The Hate That Hate Made," as well as the title track, whose video was banned by MTV. Paris completed the follow-up album Sleeping With the Enemy in 1992; however, in the wake of the controversy over Ice-T's "Cop Killer," Tommy Boy refused to release it, citing the anti-George Bush track "Bush Killa." Eventually, they decided the whole album was far too strident and inflammatory, and bought out Paris' contract. After distribution agreements with Polygram and Def American fell through for similar reasons, Paris resurrected Scarface (helped by the Tommy Boy settlement money) and finally put the album out himself. It was acclaimed as a major statement in some quarters, but failed to find a wide audience in the midst of the gangsta rap revolution. 1994's Guerrilla Funk met with a similar fate, slipping largely under the radar, and Paris spent four years away from the studio. When he returned with Unleashed in 1998, he'd largely abandoned his trademark political fury in favor of watered-down G-funk and gangsta clichés. He retired from hip-hop not long after and put his economics degree to use as a successful stockbroker.
In 2003, he resurfaced with Sonic Jihad, released through Guerrilla Funk -- his new label. Remastered versions of his first three albums were issued around the same time, and new music from himself, Public Enemy, Kam, MC Ren and the Conscious Daughters was promised.
From allmusic.com
Guerilla Funk Records
http://www.guerrillafunk.com/
Alex Jones websites
http://www.prisonplanet.com
http://www.infowars.com (Less) Channel: youtube

6,

09:56,

2008-02-05 17:00:01
Description: Alex Jones interviews the controversial hip-hop warrior Paris.
Paris Biography
One of hip-hop's most militantly Afrocentric radicals, Paris struggled for most of his career to find (More) Alex Jones interviews the controversial hip-hop warrior Paris.
Paris Biography
One of hip-hop's most militantly Afrocentric radicals, Paris struggled for most of his career to find acceptance for his fiercely political music, which drew from the provocative intelligence of Public Enemy and the gut-level rage of early Ice Cube. Born Oscar Jackson, Jr. in California, Paris earned a degree in economics from the University of California-Davis (near the San Francisco Bay Area); but hip-hop appealed to him more, and he founded his own record label, Scarface. He recorded a single, but found he lacked the resources to promote it properly, and wound up landing a deal with Tommy Boy Records. His debut album, The Devil Made Me Do It, was released in 1990, and attracted some attention (and praise) for the single "The Hate That Hate Made," as well as the title track, whose video was banned by MTV. Paris completed the follow-up album Sleeping With the Enemy in 1992; however, in the wake of the controversy over Ice-T's "Cop Killer," Tommy Boy refused to release it, citing the anti-George Bush track "Bush Killa." Eventually, they decided the whole album was far too strident and inflammatory, and bought out Paris' contract. After distribution agreements with Polygram and Def American fell through for similar reasons, Paris resurrected Scarface (helped by the Tommy Boy settlement money) and finally put the album out himself. It was acclaimed as a major statement in some quarters, but failed to find a wide audience in the midst of the gangsta rap revolution. 1994's Guerrilla Funk met with a similar fate, slipping largely under the radar, and Paris spent four years away from the studio. When he returned with Unleashed in 1998, he'd largely abandoned his trademark political fury in favor of watered-down G-funk and gangsta clichés. He retired from hip-hop not long after and put his economics degree to use as a successful stockbroker.
In 2003, he resurfaced with Sonic Jihad, released through Guerrilla Funk -- his new label. Remastered versions of his first three albums were issued around the same time, and new music from himself, Public Enemy, Kam, MC Ren and the Conscious Daughters was promised.
From allmusic.com
Guerilla Funk Records
http://www.guerrillafunk.com/
Alex Jones websites
http://www.prisonplanet.com
http://www.infowars.com (Less) Channel: youtube

9,

09:56,

2008-02-05 16:55:43
Description: PLAYLIST ADDED.CHECK PROFILE PAGE.
Alex Jones interviews the controversial hip-hop warrior Paris.
Paris Biography
One of hip-hop's most militantly Afrocentric radicals, Paris struggled for (More) PLAYLIST ADDED.CHECK PROFILE PAGE.
Alex Jones interviews the controversial hip-hop warrior Paris.
Paris Biography
One of hip-hop's most militantly Afrocentric radicals, Paris struggled for most of his career to find acceptance for his fiercely political music, which drew from the provocative intelligence of Public Enemy and the gut-level rage of early Ice Cube. Born Oscar Jackson, Jr. in California, Paris earned a degree in economics from the University of California-Davis (near the San Francisco Bay Area); but hip-hop appealed to him more, and he founded his own record label, Scarface. He recorded a single, but found he lacked the resources to promote it properly, and wound up landing a deal with Tommy Boy Records. His debut album, The Devil Made Me Do It, was released in 1990, and attracted some attention (and praise) for the single "The Hate That Hate Made," as well as the title track, whose video was banned by MTV. Paris completed the follow-up album Sleeping With the Enemy in 1992; however, in the wake of the controversy over Ice-T's "Cop Killer," Tommy Boy refused to release it, citing the anti-George Bush track "Bush Killa." Eventually, they decided the whole album was far too strident and inflammatory, and bought out Paris' contract. After distribution agreements with Polygram and Def American fell through for similar reasons, Paris resurrected Scarface (helped by the Tommy Boy settlement money) and finally put the album out himself. It was acclaimed as a major statement in some quarters, but failed to find a wide audience in the midst of the gangsta rap revolution. 1994's Guerrilla Funk met with a similar fate, slipping largely under the radar, and Paris spent four years away from the studio. When he returned with Unleashed in 1998, he'd largely abandoned his trademark political fury in favor of watered-down G-funk and gangsta clichés. He retired from hip-hop not long after and put his economics degree to use as a successful stockbroker.
In 2003, he resurfaced with Sonic Jihad, released through Guerrilla Funk -- his new label. Remastered versions of his first three albums were issued around the same time, and new music from himself, Public Enemy, Kam, MC Ren and the Conscious Daughters was promised.
From allmusic.com
Guerilla Funk Records
http://www.guerrillafunk.com/
Alex Jones websites
http://www.prisonplanet.com
http://www.infowars.com (Less) Channel: youtube

7,

07:44,

2008-01-15 20:10:48
Description: Alex Jones of www.infowars.com and Luke Rudkowski of www.WeAreChange.org cover the toxic sedative fluoride. Used in Nazi death camps of WW2, hitler cited a study from the University of Texas (More) Alex Jones of www.infowars.com and Luke Rudkowski of www.WeAreChange.org cover the toxic sedative fluoride. Used in Nazi death camps of WW2, hitler cited a study from the University of Texas explaining how fluoride can be used to sedate and dumb down a population as the reason it was used.
read more here: Scientific Study Finds Fluoride Horror Stories Factual
Industrial by-product consumed by millions of Americans lowers IQ, causes cancer
http://www.infowars.com/articles/science/fluoride_study_finds_horror_stories_factual.htm
Chemist Mr. Charles Perkins says, "In the 1930`s, Hitler and the German Nazi`s envisioned a world to be dominated and controlled by a Nazi philosophy of pan-Germanism. The German chemists worked out a very ingenious and far-reaching plan of mass-control which was submitted to and adopted by the German General Staff. This plan was to control the population in any given area through mass medication of drinking water supplies. By this method they could control the population in whole areas, reduce population by water medication that would produce sterility in women, and so on. In this scheme of mass-control, sodium fluoride occupied a prominent place. ...
"Repeated doses of infinitesimal amounts of fluoride will in time reduce an individual`s power to resist domination, by slowly poisoning and narcotizing a certain area of the brain, thus making him submissive to the will of those who wish to govern him. [A convenient light lobotomy]"
Scientific Study Finds Fluoride Horror Stories Factual. Industrial by-product consumed by millions of Americans lowers IQ, causes cancer
http://www.infowars.com/articles/science/fluoride_study_finds_horror_stories_factual.htm
also:
The 2008 study Alex Jones and Luke bring up can be read here: http://www.jonesreport.com/article/01_08/020108_fluoride.html
'Second Thoughts about Fluoride,' Reports Scientific American
"Some recent studies suggest that over-consumption of fluoride can raise the risks of disorders affecting teeth, bones, the brain and the thyroid gland," reports Scientific American editors (January 2008). "Scientific attitudes toward fluoridation may be starting to shift," writes author Dan Fagin.
"Fluoride, the most consumed drug in the USA, is deliberately added to 2/3 of public water supplies theoretically to reduce tooth decay, but with no scientifically-valid evidence proving safety or effectiveness," says lawyer Paul Beeber, President, New York State Coalition Opposed to Fluoridation.
Fagin, award-wining environmental reporter and Director of New York University's Science, Health and Environmental Reporting program, writes, "There is no universally accepted optimal level for daily intake of fluoride."
Some researchers even wonder whether the 1 mg/L added into drinking water is too much, reports Fagin...continued at http://www.jonesreport.com/article/01_08/020108_fluoride.html
The Alex Jones radio show can be heard 11am - 2pm central time at www.infowars.com or gcnlive.com (Less) Channel: youtube

19,

02:40,

2007-05-28 12:44:32
Description: One of my favorite Levellers song. From the album A weapon called the word. Buy their material. And just to mention I owned Leonardomario with the backround picture.
There was Robbie Jones
He (More) One of my favorite Levellers song. From the album A weapon called the word. Buy their material. And just to mention I owned Leonardomario with the backround picture.
There was Robbie Jones
He used to walk so tall
You know he'd hurt no one at all
Chased the girls around the world
Danced them round the dance halls
We'd have a drink and then he'd sink
Into nostalgic talk
We carried him home in the fallen snow
When he was too drunk to walk
Then came the day
We were sent away
We got our papers
Posted trough the door
And sent off to war
Dear old Tom
He'd sing a song and he'd play the guitar
He'd tell you all the stories
Of his travels near and far
Signed up one day to learn a trade
But that dream didn't go far
He'd be fighting Argentinians
With his gun not his guitar
He used to walk so tall
You know he'd hurt no one at all
Chased the girls around the world
Danced them round the dance halls
We'd have a drink and then he'd sink
Into nostalgic talk
We carried him home in the fallen snow
When he was too drunk to walk
Then came the day
We were sent away
We got our papers
Posted trough the door
And sent off to war
Dear old Tom
He'd sing a song and he'd play the guitar
He'd tell you all the stories
Of his travels near and far
Signed up one day to learn a trade
But that dream didn't go far
He'd be fighting Argentinians
With his gun not his guitar (Less) Channel: youtube

3,

00:29,

2008-04-21 17:27:01
Description: Kate and Grace are asked to pose for the camera. Instead, they feel that falling on the floor in a drunken state after FAR too many stella shandys and diet cokes. Elegantly, they proceed to show the (More) Kate and Grace are asked to pose for the camera. Instead, they feel that falling on the floor in a drunken state after FAR too many stella shandys and diet cokes. Elegantly, they proceed to show the world the outlines of the clams. (Less) Channel: youtube

0,

07:44,

2008-04-22 09:00:44
Description: Alex Jones of www.infowars.com and Luke Rudkowski of www.WeAreChange.org cover the toxic sedative fluoride. Used in Nazi death camps of WW2, hitler cited a study from the University of Texas (More) Alex Jones of www.infowars.com and Luke Rudkowski of www.WeAreChange.org cover the toxic sedative fluoride. Used in Nazi death camps of WW2, hitler cited a study from the University of Texas explaining how fluoride can be used to sedate and dumb down a population as the reason it was used. read more here: Scientific Study Finds Fluoride Horror Stories Factual Industrial by-product consumed by millions of Americans lowers IQ, causes cancer http://www.infowars.com/articles/science/fluoride_study_finds_horror_stories_factual.htm Chemist Mr. Charles Perkins says, "In the 1930`s, Hitler and the German Nazi`s envisioned a world to be dominated and controlled by a Nazi philosophy of pan-Germanism. The German chemists worked out a very ingenious and far-reaching plan of mass-control which was submitted to and adopted by the German General Staff. This plan was to control the population in any given area through mass medication of drinking water supplies. By this method they could control the population in whole areas, reduce population by water medication that would produce sterility in women, and so on. In this scheme of mass-control, sodium fluoride occupied a prominent place. ... "Repeated doses of infinitesimal amounts of fluoride will in time reduce an individual`s power to resist domination, by slowly poisoning and narcotizing a certain area of the brain, thus making him submissive to the will of those who wish to govern him. [A convenient light lobotomy]" Scientific Study Finds Fluoride Horror Stories Factual. Industrial by-product consumed by millions of Americans lowers IQ, causes cancer http://www.infowars.com/articles/science/fluoride_study_finds_horror_stories_factual.htm also: The 2008 study Alex Jones and Luke bring up can be read here: http://www.jonesreport.com/article/01_08/020108_fluoride.html 'Second Thoughts about Fluoride,' Reports Scientific American "Some recent studies suggest that over-consumption of fluoride can raise the risks of disorders affecting teeth, bones, the brain and the thyroid gland," reports Scientific American editors (January 2008). "Scientific attitudes toward fluoridation may be starting to shift," writes author Dan Fagin. "Fluoride, the most consumed drug in the USA, is deliberately added to 2/3 of public water supplies theoretically to reduce tooth decay, but with no scientifically-valid evidence proving safety or effectiveness," says lawyer Paul Beeber, President, New York State Coalition Opposed to Fluoridation. Fagin, award-wining environmental reporter and Director of New York University's Science, Health and Environmental Reporting program, writes, "There is no universally accepted optimal level for daily intake of fluoride." Some researchers even wonder whether the 1 mg/L added into drinking water is too much, reports Fagin...continued at http://www.jonesreport.com/article/01_08/020108_fluoride.html The Alex Jones radio show can be heard 11am - 2pm central time at www.infowars.com or gcnlive.com (Less) Channel: youtube

0,

03:52,

2009-05-23 08:46:42
Description: Track 1 From Picture Post Card Walls Leave A Comment
Channel: youtube

0,

07:45,

2008-06-20 09:07:29
Description: Alex dismantles a sophomoric attack that is used far too often.
Channel: youtube

4,

09:56,

2008-04-22 09:09:46
Description: PLAYLIST ADDED.CHECK PROFILE PAGE. Alex Jones interviews the controversial hip-hop warrior Paris. Paris Biography One of hip-hop's most militantly Afrocentric radicals, Paris struggled for most (More) PLAYLIST ADDED.CHECK PROFILE PAGE. Alex Jones interviews the controversial hip-hop warrior Paris. Paris Biography One of hip-hop's most militantly Afrocentric radicals, Paris struggled for most of his career to find acceptance for his fiercely political music, which drew from the provocative intelligence of Public Enemy and the gut-level rage of early Ice Cube. Born Oscar Jackson, Jr. in California, Paris earned a degree in economics from the University of California-Davis (near the San Francisco Bay Area); but hip-hop appealed to him more, and he founded his own record label, Scarface. He recorded a single, but found he lacked the resources to promote it properly, and wound up landing a deal with Tommy Boy Records. His debut album, The Devil Made Me Do It, was released in 1990, and attracted some attention (and praise) for the single "The Hate That Hate Made," as well as the title track, whose video was banned by MTV. Paris completed the follow-up album Sleeping With the Enemy in 1992; however, in the wake of the controversy over Ice-T's "Cop Killer," Tommy Boy refused to release it, citing the anti-George Bush track "Bush Killa." Eventually, they decided the whole album was far too strident and inflammatory, and bought out Paris' contract. After distribution agreements with Polygram and Def American fell through for similar reasons, Paris resurrected Scarface (helped by the Tommy Boy settlement money) and finally put the album out himself. It was acclaimed as a major statement in some quarters, but failed to find a wide audience in the midst of the gangsta rap revolution. 1994's Guerrilla Funk met with a similar fate, slipping largely under the radar, and Paris spent four years away from the studio. When he returned with Unleashed in 1998, he'd largely abandoned his trademark political fury in favor of watered-down G-funk and gangsta clichés. He retired from hip-hop not long after and put his economics degree to use as a successful stockbroker. In 2003, he resurfaced with Sonic Jihad, released through Guerrilla Funk -- his new label. Remastered versions of his first three albums were issued around the same time, and new music from himself, Public Enemy, Kam, MC Ren and the Conscious Daughters was promised. From allmusic.com Guerilla Funk Records http://www.guerrillafunk.com/ Alex Jones websites http://www.prisonplanet.com http://www.infowars.com (Less) Channel: youtube

3,

09:56,

2008-04-22 09:09:46
Description: Alex Jones interviews the controversial hip-hop warrior Paris. Paris Biography One of hip-hop's most militantly Afrocentric radicals, Paris struggled for most of his career to find acceptance (More) Alex Jones interviews the controversial hip-hop warrior Paris. Paris Biography One of hip-hop's most militantly Afrocentric radicals, Paris struggled for most of his career to find acceptance for his fiercely political music, which drew from the provocative intelligence of Public Enemy and the gut-level rage of early Ice Cube. Born Oscar Jackson, Jr. in California, Paris earned a degree in economics from the University of California-Davis (near the San Francisco Bay Area); but hip-hop appealed to him more, and he founded his own record label, Scarface. He recorded a single, but found he lacked the resources to promote it properly, and wound up landing a deal with Tommy Boy Records. His debut album, The Devil Made Me Do It, was released in 1990, and attracted some attention (and praise) for the single "The Hate That Hate Made," as well as the title track, whose video was banned by MTV. Paris completed the follow-up album Sleeping With the Enemy in 1992; however, in the wake of the controversy over Ice-T's "Cop Killer," Tommy Boy refused to release it, citing the anti-George Bush track "Bush Killa." Eventually, they decided the whole album was far too strident and inflammatory, and bought out Paris' contract. After distribution agreements with Polygram and Def American fell through for similar reasons, Paris resurrected Scarface (helped by the Tommy Boy settlement money) and finally put the album out himself. It was acclaimed as a major statement in some quarters, but failed to find a wide audience in the midst of the gangsta rap revolution. 1994's Guerrilla Funk met with a similar fate, slipping largely under the radar, and Paris spent four years away from the studio. When he returned with Unleashed in 1998, he'd largely abandoned his trademark political fury in favor of watered-down G-funk and gangsta clichés. He retired from hip-hop not long after and put his economics degree to use as a successful stockbroker. In 2003, he resurfaced with Sonic Jihad, released through Guerrilla Funk -- his new label. Remastered versions of his first three albums were issued around the same time, and new music from himself, Public Enemy, Kam, MC Ren and the Conscious Daughters was promised. From allmusic.com Guerilla Funk Records http://www.guerrillafunk.com/ Alex Jones websites http://www.prisonplanet.com http://www.infowars.com (Less) Channel: youtube

6,

09:55,

2008-04-22 09:09:46
Description: Alex Jones interviews the controversial hip-hop warrior Paris. Paris Biography One of hip-hop's most militantly Afrocentric radicals, Paris struggled for most of his career to find acceptance (More) Alex Jones interviews the controversial hip-hop warrior Paris. Paris Biography One of hip-hop's most militantly Afrocentric radicals, Paris struggled for most of his career to find acceptance for his fiercely political music, which drew from the provocative intelligence of Public Enemy and the gut-level rage of early Ice Cube. Born Oscar Jackson, Jr. in California, Paris earned a degree in economics from the University of California-Davis (near the San Francisco Bay Area); but hip-hop appealed to him more, and he founded his own record label, Scarface. He recorded a single, but found he lacked the resources to promote it properly, and wound up landing a deal with Tommy Boy Records. His debut album, The Devil Made Me Do It, was released in 1990, and attracted some attention (and praise) for the single "The Hate That Hate Made," as well as the title track, whose video was banned by MTV. Paris completed the follow-up album Sleeping With the Enemy in 1992; however, in the wake of the controversy over Ice-T's "Cop Killer," Tommy Boy refused to release it, citing the anti-George Bush track "Bush Killa." Eventually, they decided the whole album was far too strident and inflammatory, and bought out Paris' contract. After distribution agreements with Polygram and Def American fell through for similar reasons, Paris resurrected Scarface (helped by the Tommy Boy settlement money) and finally put the album out himself. It was acclaimed as a major statement in some quarters, but failed to find a wide audience in the midst of the gangsta rap revolution. 1994's Guerrilla Funk met with a similar fate, slipping largely under the radar, and Paris spent four years away from the studio. When he returned with Unleashed in 1998, he'd largely abandoned his trademark political fury in favor of watered-down G-funk and gangsta clichés. He retired from hip-hop not long after and put his economics degree to use as a successful stockbroker. In 2003, he resurfaced with Sonic Jihad, released through Guerrilla Funk -- his new label. Remastered versions of his first three albums were issued around the same time, and new music from himself, Public Enemy, Kam, MC Ren and the Conscious Daughters was promised. From allmusic.com Guerilla Funk Records http://www.guerrillafunk.com/ Alex Jones websites http://www.prisonplanet.com http://www.infowars.com (Less) Channel: youtube

3,

09:56,

2008-04-22 09:09:46
Description: Alex Jones interviews the controversial hip-hop warrior Paris. Paris Biography One of hip-hop's most militantly Afrocentric radicals, Paris struggled for most of his career to find acceptance (More) Alex Jones interviews the controversial hip-hop warrior Paris. Paris Biography One of hip-hop's most militantly Afrocentric radicals, Paris struggled for most of his career to find acceptance for his fiercely political music, which drew from the provocative intelligence of Public Enemy and the gut-level rage of early Ice Cube. Born Oscar Jackson, Jr. in California, Paris earned a degree in economics from the University of California-Davis (near the San Francisco Bay Area); but hip-hop appealed to him more, and he founded his own record label, Scarface. He recorded a single, but found he lacked the resources to promote it properly, and wound up landing a deal with Tommy Boy Records. His debut album, The Devil Made Me Do It, was released in 1990, and attracted some attention (and praise) for the single "The Hate That Hate Made," as well as the title track, whose video was banned by MTV. Paris completed the follow-up album Sleeping With the Enemy in 1992; however, in the wake of the controversy over Ice-T's "Cop Killer," Tommy Boy refused to release it, citing the anti-George Bush track "Bush Killa." Eventually, they decided the whole album was far too strident and inflammatory, and bought out Paris' contract. After distribution agreements with Polygram and Def American fell through for similar reasons, Paris resurrected Scarface (helped by the Tommy Boy settlement money) and finally put the album out himself. It was acclaimed as a major statement in some quarters, but failed to find a wide audience in the midst of the gangsta rap revolution. 1994's Guerrilla Funk met with a similar fate, slipping largely under the radar, and Paris spent four years away from the studio. When he returned with Unleashed in 1998, he'd largely abandoned his trademark political fury in favor of watered-down G-funk and gangsta clichés. He retired from hip-hop not long after and put his economics degree to use as a successful stockbroker. In 2003, he resurfaced with Sonic Jihad, released through Guerrilla Funk -- his new label. Remastered versions of his first three albums were issued around the same time, and new music from himself, Public Enemy, Kam, MC Ren and the Conscious Daughters was promised. From allmusic.com Guerilla Funk Records http://www.guerrillafunk.com/ Alex Jones websites http://www.prisonplanet.com http://www.infowars.com (Less) Channel: youtube

0,

09:22,

2009-09-05 16:53:53
Description: Former First Edition drummer Mickey Jones introduces two performances by Jim Croce, which premiered on Kenny Rogers' weekly music show "Rollin' On The River" on January 18 1973. (More) Former First Edition drummer Mickey Jones introduces two performances by Jim Croce, which premiered on Kenny Rogers' weekly music show "Rollin' On The River" on January 18 1973. Jim, backed as usual by his ace lead guitarist Maury Muehleisen, performs his biggest hit up to that time, "You Don't Mess Around With Jim", followed by "Operator (That's Not The Way It Feels)". Mickey Jones first gives a background to each of the songs, which are then followed by further information about Jim and some nostalgic trivia from 1973. Note: Mickey Jones mispronounces Maury Muehleisen's surname - for the correct pronunciation, listen carefully for the ever-gracious Croce's verbal credit to Maury right at the end of "You Don't Mess Around With Jim". Fond memories of two extraordinary musicians who were taken from us far too young. (Less) Channel: 123video
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