334 Mobb

334 Mobb

Genres: Hip-Hop, rap, Dirty South, United States, south

About 334 Mobb

Starting thier path to success in Buckingham-Montgoemry, ALabama. This duo set the Gump on fire with their magical lyrics as youngsters.Soon to come they was on the level already with groups who charted thoer success long before them. That's what's up! Signed to Def Jam, Montgomery’s 334 MO.B.B. look to continue Alabama’s recent success on the hip-hop map. Their new single, Supafly, is yet another “I’m so fresh” record, but before you Northerners dismiss them as cookie-cutter Southerners, you might want to pay attention to their extremely catchy swagger and original lyrics (Treat my girl like my chickens, cuz I keep ‘em in a coupe/coop). Fellow Alabamian Rich Boy describes his shine on a guest feature, although what really makes Supafly is the Beat Kingz’ Just Blaze-esque production. Old school vocal samples easily invade the listener’s head; leading to numerous requests and the growth of a mobb. Artist: 334 MO.B.B Title: Supafly ft. Rich Boy Label: Black Drop Ent/Def Jam Album: Birth Of A Hustler Producer: Beat Kingz Artist Website Featuring: Rich Boy, Originally from Alabama, the duo of Sawed-Off (aka Dreads) & Big Ken (aka Supa Star) have been performing since 1994 when they joined their father’s gospel group in church. Although Def Jam head honcho LA Reid was not in attendance at church, he was in his office when the guys made a visit. After a quick performance full of introspective song writing, unique flows and a compelling production style, 334 MO.B.B. was officially official. Having been on the grind with their own label, Black Drop ENT, their signing to Def Jam simply showcased the Bama boys as an upstart success story. Their first official single called “Take A Picture,” captures the essence of what the brothers feel is missing in today’s hip-hop world. The ability of 334 to capture a true vision of life’s realities (through their music), is what makes their combined 39 years of age seem trivial. Just ask Big Ken… “I’m not feeling the garbage. It’s hot garbage. Good hip-hop doesn’t mean jewelry, cars and cash.” During their interview with DJ “Z,” the guys criticize all of the DJs who won’t stop playing “crap music.” In addition, they sound off on the current formula that Southern hip-hop artists have followed toward success. They call out snap music producers and the Casio-keyboard like sounds that they claim will “ruin” the industry.

Taken from Last.fm

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