Das EFX 热门歌曲下载
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歌曲 | 专辑 | 时长 |
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1
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Real Hip-Hop (Original Version) SQ | Hold It Down | 04:09 |
2
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Check It Out (LP版) | Rhino-Hi-Five: Das EFX (US Release) | 03:55 |
3
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Real Hip-Hop (Pete Rock Remix) HQ | Rhino Hi Five - Das EFX | 03:59 |
4
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They Want EFX 臻品全景声 | Dead Serious | 03:41 |
5
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Check It Out (LP版) HQ | Rhino Hi Five - Das EFX | 03:55 |
6
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Jussummen | Dead Serious | 03:30 |
7
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Baknaffek (LP Version) | The Very Best Of Das EFX | 03:34 |
8
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Straight Out The Sewer | Dead Serious | 03:22 |
9
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Freakit SQ | Straight Up Sewaside | 03:19 |
10
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Represent The Real HQ | Hold It Down | 03:21 |
Das EFX 最新专辑下载
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Ends Up (Remix)
2016-07-03
The Very Best Of Das EFX
2007-06-26
Rhino-Hi-Five: Das EFX (US Release)
2005-05-24
Rhino Hi Five - Das EFX
2005-05-24
Serious B/W U Can't
2004-11-23
Generation EFX
1998-03-24
Generation EFX (PA Version)
1998-03-23
Straight Up Sewaside
1993-10-26
Das EFX 歌手简介
by Steve Huey
Das EFXs wildly playful, rapid-fire stuttering — dense with rhymes and nonsense words — was one of the most distinctive and influential lyrical styles in early-90s hip-hop. While the duo completely rewrote the MC rule book, they themselves were increasingly pegged as a one-dimensional novelty the longer their career progressed, despite watching elements of their style creep into countless rappers bags of tricks. Krazy Drazyz (born Andre Weston; Teaneck, NJ) and Skoob (born Willie Hines) were both raised in Brooklyn, but didnt begin performing together until they met at Virginia State University in 1988. Removed from an active music scene, the two were free to develop their most idiosyncratic tendencies; they started making up gibberish words (anything ending in -iggity was a favorite) that added loads of extra syllables to their lines, and wove plenty of pop-cultural references into the tongue-twisting lyrical gymnastics that resulted. Das EFX caught their big break when they performed at a talent show judged by EPMD; though they didnt win, EPMD was impressed enough to offer them a deal, and the duo became part of the Def Squad crew of protégés.
Signing to the East West label, Das EFX began work on their debut album, commuting between Virginia and New York and mailing tapes to EPMD (then touring the country) for guidance. Upon its release in 1992, Dead Serious caused an immediate sensation, and is still considered something of a landmark in hip-hop circles. The first single, the instantly memorable signature song They Want EFX, was a Top 40 pop hit and a Top Ten R&B hit, and helped push sales of Dead Serious past the platinum mark. Wary of being pigeonholed by repeating themselves, the duo slowed down their lyrical flow and downplayed the surrealistic side of their interplay on the follow-up album, 1993s Straight Up Sewaside, which went gold. Around the time of 1995s disappointing Hold It Down, Das EFX found themselves caught in the middle of EPMDs ugly breakup; it led to a three-year absence from recording. By the time they returned in 1998 with Generation EFX, the group was playing more to a devoted but narrower cult audience; they have remained largely silent since.