DANJ! Presents Winter Six: 1992 (Do, Dah, Dippity)

01/22/2010

Aight… it’s ’92, so what you won’ do…

Between ’90 and ’91, I’d had a total of four different addresses. Finally in December ’91, we moved into an apartment in South Baltimore, where I stayed for the next five years. To be honest, I really don’t remember much else about the winter of ’92 outside of that. I do recall my Chicago Bulls jacket that you couldn’t tell me wasn’t the shit, and that I was still a huge wrasslin’ fanatic who was the only Ric Flair stan in my class. Then, there’s the time I went nuts when we got cable, and that’d be about it. However, if there’s one thing I vividly recollect (as always), it’s the music. In addition to the entire Juice soundtrack, which I managed to have before I’d even seen the movie, these were the six OTHER songs I couldn’t stop listening to. I bet’cha remember:

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DANJ! Presents Winter Six: 1991 (A Ni**a Remember Them Muhfu**in’ Dances, Bwoy…)

01/15/2010

Aight, so… it was a lil’ quiet around here this week. I had to take a lil’ time to recharge the batteries, and now shit’s back to life. And with that, DLT90s continues with the 1991 edition of the Winter Six series.

The winter of ’91 was a different thing. I was in sixth grade, back around my old neighborhood, known as “The Lake”, after moving away a couple years prior. I was back chillin’ with my friends from elementary school, but wasn’t going to the same middle school as them. My time in Westport was a suspension-filled experience, so I ended up going to an “alternative” school with all the niggas with “behavioral and emotional problems”. Either way, I still looked forward to Fridays- because even though I didn’t go to the middle school, I could still go to their dance every week (and I went to damn near every one). Rest of the time, I was in my brother’s room, either recording music off the radio or “borrowing” his tapes. It was around this time that I started something that eventually became one of my most recognizable traits- being any and everywhere with my headphones on. Here’s some of what I was listening to:

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DANJ! Presents… Winter Six: 1990 (Oh, Snap!)

01/08/2010

In the timeless words of Ghostface, “his shape-up was ALL fucked up!” And with that, I begin the Winter Six- my own photographic memory along with six of my favorite songs from each year, which will be featured here every Friday until March. Checkitouuut:

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What You Need Is The Source.

10/12/2009

source logo

“I must say it has been a pleasure having you come to the library several times a day, hoping to see the new Source magazine. If I decide to get Billboard next year, does this mean I’ll see you twice as often?”- my high school librarian Mrs. Vallar, in my ’94 yearbook.

In 1991, back when I was a lowercase “d”, I was still pretty much a casual fan of music. I loved it with every fiber of my being, but I wasn’t all into the intimate details of who produced “O.P.P.”, or what part of Cali DJ Quik was from. The closest I would come to knowin’ about all that were the “facts” on the back of my Yo! MTV Raps cards, or one of those Word Up! magazine articles on some “Kwame‘s favorite snack is yogurt” type shit. This all changed once I read an issue of The Source.

source-september-1991

It was December, and we had just moved into a new apartment in South Baltimore a couple of weeks prior. My brother came home one day with the year-end issue, and within a couple weeks, I had “inherited” it. I read that magazine inside and out- from the review of Ice Cube‘s Death Certificate to an article in which artists picked their favorite five albums of the year. It was also the first time I’d seen what going gold or platinum actually meant, because they had a full list of all the hip-hop/R&B albums that were certified that year. From there, I was off and running with my Source obsession.

source july 1992

In my opinion, The Source was the first “real” hip-hop magazine- it was the first I’d read that was less about posters than it was about content. Gradually, I started going to the 7-Eleven knockoff spot down the street and buying them myself. Every second Tuesday of the month, I’d come through early that morning, ready to pick the new one up off the shelf. Sometimes, I’d even be there on Monday evenings when the magazine man got there and put ‘em up. Every issue was a must-have situation, and I always had my $2.95 ready, until I eventually went ahead and subscribed.

source nov. 94

I don’t know if I’d been that excited about reading since I first learned how to. See, with the other magazines, I would read through those and never look at ‘em again once I’d taken all the posters out. The Source was a whole ‘nother deal- it was an experience. It was like listening to a great album for the first time. I would sit down with it for at least two hours, with my fingerprints rubbing off on the front and back, studying this shit like it had life’s answers inside. Aside from pornography, WrestleMania, and Rap City, there were few things that I was more excited about seeing than a new Source issue when I was 12.

eminem unsigned hype

I must’ve read all those things ’til the got-damn covers came off. It got to a point where I even paid attention to who the writers were and all kinds of other shit. The features were always on-point, and often revealed things that wouldn’t become common knowledge until months later. Other things, like the “Unsigned Hype” column (which boasts a number of artists that went on to bigger and better things) and the “Dopest Rhyme of the Month” (when shit like that actually counted for something), were equally crucial- even with them being “minor” parts of the mag as a whole.

illmatic review

Then of course, there was the Record Report. As noted before by Eminem, there was a time when The Source‘s ratings really held weight. In some cases, the difference between me being interested in an album and givin’ less than a damn about it was how many “mics” it got. If I was interested in something that was coming out, a good rating in the Record Report was sometimes all the extra validation I needed to go ahead and cop it (case in point: the five-mic “classic” rating for Illmatic). At one point, I was even using their 1 to 5 system when doing my own reviews for my school newspaper.

benzino

There was a time when I seriously wanted to someday be a part of “The Source Mind Squad”. I never thought there’d be a day when I’d see a new Source in the store, flip through it once, put it back on the shelf and keep it movin’. I used to do that with every mag BUT that one. Maybe it’s how the net has rendered magazines unnecessary, maybe it’s because I’m damn near 30, or… maybe it’s because they fell off yeeeaaarrrs ago with all that Benzino nonsense. He was so much more valuable to them when they were just putting ads for his weak albums on the back. It was never a big deal to me that he was running it, but by ’04, he’d pretty much turned it into a glorified tabloid (complete with stock photos and cover stories that featured no actual quotes by the people on the covers).

source october 1995

Still, for a solid 10 years of my life, The Source was my shit. In fact, I still own a lot of the last good ones from between ’97 and ’01 (lost most of my ’92-’96 ones). The “Magazine of Hip-Hop Music, Culture, & Politics” was at one point just as vital to hip-hop fans as some of the websites like Nah Right and RapRadar are today. Who knows how much longer it has, but for its time, they had a run and influence unlike any other hip-hop mag before or since.

-D!

(shoutout to Vincent from THIMK)


More ’90s (Young) Girls!

09/26/2009

5411s

Much like every decade, the ’90s brought us a lot of teenage R&B acts that experienced varying degrees of success. If I had to pick five out of the lot who really thrived, it would easily come down to Usher, Beyonce, Brandy, Monica, and Aaliyah. Those five were able to do what a lot of them didn’t, by breaking out of their youth and still being able to carry careers once they weren’t seen as youngins anymore.

Today on DanjLovesThe90s, I revisit the ’90s Girls theme and cover some of those who partook in the youth movement at different times during the decade. Some hit their stride in the earlier half, others had a brief moment around the middle, and others were just getting started toward the end. Read the rest of this entry »


Summer Seven Series: Extra

09/19/2009

dj-danj

Safe to say, the Summer of ’09 is over. Before Fall officially arrives on Monday, and as a bonus to those who followed the Summer Seven Series between June and August, here’s some that were thisclose to making the cut, but ultimately fell victim to the numbers game. Had it been the Summer Eight Series, and thus a lil’ less catchy of a title, these would’ve been a shoe-in.

And as usual… You Want ‘em? Freakin’ click ‘em.

1990: Special Ed “The Mission”: Back when a rapper could come out with silly Dick Tracy-esque stories as long as they could rhyme, Ed delivers a memorable tall tale about self-destructing messages and ninjas and shit.

1991- Tony Terry “With You”: The homie’s orange-tinted fade was somethin’ kinda nervous, but hell if he didn’t drop a classic ballad here. Even at 11, with no concept of love, I used to sing this shit like I had A clue.

1992- Grand Puba “360 (What Goes Around)”: After departing from Brand Nubian and leaving Sadat and Jamar to their own devices, Puba drops his first solo endeavor, Reel To Reel. With “360″ as the lead single, Puba (briefly) lived up to the buzz he had during that time.

1993- LL Cool J “Pink Cookies In A Plastic Bag Getting Crushed By Buildings” (Remix): One of the longest, dumbest song titles of all time, but one of the few redeeming things about the crazy, trigger-happy LL Cool J of ’93.

1994- Zhane “Sending My Love”: Zhane, with their pre-Amber Rose scalp-cuts, keep the hits rolling with “Sending My Love”. Might be the only single they ever had that wasn’t about DJ’s or dancing… more on that later.

1995- Junior M.A.F.I.A. “Player’s Anthem”: The M.A.F.I.A. as a whole might’ve been a fail, but this joint was kinda like a big deal. Mostly notable for the rapping debut of Lil’ Kim, a year removed from her Oreo-cookie-eatin’, pickle-juice-drinkin’ debut.

1996- Ghost Town DJ’s “My Boo”: In ’96, I avoided most of that bass stuff like the plague- liked it earlier in the decade, but not so much by then. But this one was an exception, which possibly had to do with the semi-emasculation I endured during my friendship with Jada.

1997- CRU feat. Slick Rick “Just Another Case”: CRU came and went fairly quickly, but they did drop a solid album, Da Dirty 30. One of those 30 tracks on the album (!) was this single featuring Slick Rick, who’d just been released from the slam.

1998- Cam’ron feat. Mase “Horse & Carriage”: Thrilla Killa Cam scores his first radio hit with the help of the big homie Betha, and educates us on the virtues of Puerto Rican Judo.

1999- Total feat. Shyne “Sittin’ Home” (Remix): This is the end of the road for the Bad Boy girls, and the beginning of the long, long road for Bad Boy’s then-new shooter signee Shyne. Lil’ bit of controversy around this one, with the guest bearing the burden of some vocal similarities that were a bit too close for comfort.

Annnd that’s all. See y’all next Fall.

-D!

R.I.P. to Grandmaster Roc Raida.


Summer Seven Series: 1999

08/24/2009

danj99

Aight, so… shoutout to everybody who followed the Summer Seven Series from the get-go, or went back and checked ‘em all out. I enjoyed yappin’ about all the bullshit and craziness I did during the different summers of the ’90s. Today, I conclude the Series with the summer of 1999.

92qjams

I was 19 and a couple years out of school. I had a lil’ bit of money and I was starting to DJ more parties. I was really hopin’ to parlay my 92Q stuff into more opportunities at the station, but not much happened there. I kept contact with the top DJ at the station for a while, sending him tapes and inquiring about possibly joining the team, but mainly just got the run-around on that. I kept it movin’ though, not letting that prevent what I wanted to do, which at the time was some of every got-damn thing. I didn’t know if I wanted to rap, DJ, write- any road that was possible, I was hoping for the chance to take it.

Looking back now, I really shoulda tried to continue on with the lil’ bit of rep I got from “the Cipha”. Had the “srtist mixtape” phenomenon been going on, I likely would’ve done some of those and tried to get ‘em circulated. At the time though, I was more concerned with getting my own beats to rhyme over, which I didn’t have much access to. I knew one or two people who had the equipment, but didn’t seem interested in actually doing anything. In retrospect, I feel like I def. shoulda ventured out to meet people who could’ve been of further assistance in keeping the ball rollin’. But of course, hindsight is always 20/20.

downtownBaltimore

Other than that, I was still all about watchin’ videos all day, and listenin’ to music whenever I wasn’t watchin’ em. I was spending a lot of time in downtown Baltimore, sometimes just on some “get out the house” shit. I had a lil’ interest in this chick I knew named Brandie, but that went all kinds of awry. I was mostly just coasting during ’99, living at my mother’s house and applying to get my own apartment (which finally happened in 2000). It was a decent-enough summer, if not a lil’ anti-climactic.

OK, so… since we’re at the end of this road, let’s just keep it real (like they used to say). By this point, you’ve noticed a lot of my summers were boring as all hell. I didn’t always have as much fun as I should’ve, and some of these years were on some real introvert shit. But whatever went on, I was still able to enjoy the music- which further proves how big of a fan I was. Hence, the site you’re on right now. See how it all ties together in the end? I hope y’all have enjoyed the Summer Seven Series, and now “without any further TO DO” (c) Carlito Brigante…

quietstorm

The Danj! Summer Seven of 1999

Mobb Deep feat. Lil’ Kim “Quiet Storm” (Remix): Queensbridge meets Queen Bitch, and puts another classic in the Mobb catalogue. It’s the real… hip-hop.

Q-Tip “Vivrant Thing”: This was another one of those joints I hated at first, but got into it later. Some Quest fans felt this was a commercial departure from his original style, but I still had to rock with that beat… R.I.P. J. Dilla.

Jay-Z “Jigga My Nigga”: With Swizz on the beat, Jay-Z keeps his momentum going with a track from the Ruff Ryders Ryde Or Die compilation. Niggas betta get it right, bitches betta get it right.

Cam’ron “Let Me Know”: Prior to Dipset taking off, Cam starts the movement and moves away from being seen as a Mase sidekick. The Monday Night Football theme manages to sound even more epic than it already was.

Maxwell “Fortunate”: Maxwell, with his music’s long-lasting ability to cut thru whatever else is going on at the moment, does it in ’99. Hard to believe he’s still doin’ the same in ’09.

50 Cent feat. Madd Rapper “How To Rob”: The song that set shit off for 50 and made all kinds of rappers mad. With “The Mad Rapper” doing his usual rants-n-raves, 50 names off all the artists he’d like to catch out there.

Ja Rule “Holla Holla”: Speaking of 50 makin’ rappers mad, Ja Rule’s debut album gets set off with this one right here. Also notable for the video that made Gloria Velez the shit for the next two years, but that’s neither here nor there.

(AND IN CASE YOU MISSED ALLLLL THE OTHERS: Check out the whole Summer Seven Series HERE)

-D!


Summer Seven Series: 1996

08/03/2009

danj!

’96what a summer. By then, I was starting to perform at showcases here-n-there, improving with the DJing, and generally enjoying my responsibility-free life. I wasn’t rockin’ with Aisha around that time, but I was off into other stuff (so to speak) and lookin’ forward to my senior year.

bigblunts

I still remember the last day of school, riding home on the bus listening to Lost Boyz’ Legal Drug Money. That same day, I went to my father’s house in Bel Air and chilled out there with my little younger brother Erin for a good 2-3 weeks. That was an interesting lil’ “vacation” because it was the first (and 5th, and 10th) time I smoked weed. It was also interesting because this nigga hung around all kinds of muh’fukkas. So we’d do anything from smokin’ with this grungy, Grateful Dead-shirt wearin’ kid to chillin’ with some lil’ rich girl who stayed in her parents’ liquor cabinet. It was some different shit for me, but I wasn’t mad at it.

I also spent a lot of time at Music Liberated on Saratoga St. that summer. That was where a lot of DJ’s around town went for records, because they always had them before most other stores. I was trying to make some kinda breakthrough by meeting people and getting my tapes heard, so I would hang out at the store, sometimes just to listen to records all day. I’d also occasionally make copies of a tape, go up there, and give them to everybody at the store for the fuck of it.

The one thing I remember most about the summer of ’96 was my homegirl Jada. At that point, she was the only girl I knew that I could talk music with, not to mention the only girl I actually liked talkin’ to for hours at a time. It was nothin’ for us to start a phone conversation at 10 p.m. and finally end it as the sun was coming up. It didn’t matter if the convo was about something as simple as how funny Chris Rock’s Bring The Pain was- we’d talk all night like we hadn’t spoken in years. We had lil’ sayings/inside jokes, passed notes in school all the time, and rarely went one full day without callin’ each other.

It’s wild in hindsight, because even though it never went past cool-level, everybody around us didn’t seem to wanna believe that. People in school SWORE we were GTD-in’, my friends thought I was in love with her, and her friends didn’t understand why we didn’t get together. I def. wouldn’t have minded, but we were just cool-as-fukk, because we had a lot of similar interests (and common enemies). Sometimes I think it was thisclose to gettin’ there… but a poor choice of words on my behalf deaded whatever chance existed, and from there things broke down FAST. By September, we were in the hallway at school exchanging “fuck you”‘s like ‘Pac and Janet in Poetic Justice.

There’s a GANG of songs from ’96 (including the seven featured this week) that always remind me of Jada to this day. I mean, I don’t sit around obsessing over her all the time, but the songs remind me because we always had the radio on in the background whenever we talked on the phone. I’ll always remember that summer for how tight we were. Well, that and the obscene amount of weed I smoked with E.

total

The Danj! Summer Seven Of 1996 (Want ‘em? Freakin’ click ‘em):

2Pac “Hit ‘Em Up”: I’ll always maintain that I was a bigger fan of B.I.G. than I was of ‘Pac. But damn if I didn’t play this to death. That rant at the end is timeless.

Case feat. Foxy Brown “Touch Me, Tease Me”: Young Inga meets some random new R&B cat, and a classic is made. And for the record, the faces this nigga Case makes in the video used to have me geekin’.

Jay-Z feat. Foxy Brown “Ain’t No Nigga”: More Young Inga! Here, she meets some random kinda-new rap dude, and a classic is made. Who coulda correctly guessed which one would end up being the bigger star?

Nas feat. Lauryn Hill “If I Ruled The World”: Nas might have caught a lil’ flack for going mainstream-ish with It Was Written, but he made it count with this joint (especially with Lauryn on the hook). I miss Ms. Hill.

Gina Thompson feat. Missy Elliott “The Things You Do” (Bad Boy Remix): Hee-hee-hee-hee-how-hee-hee-hee-hee-hee-hee-HOW the hell did that line catch on like it did? Who knows, but this shit was hot.

LL Cool J feat. Total “Loungin” (Remix): Of course, I love most of those old ’90s-jack-the-’80s joints, and this might be one of my favorites. Who do you love?

Total feat. Puff Daddy “Kissing You (Oh Honey)”: More Total! This song never fails to make me nostalgic- even the video has “summer ’96″ written all over it.

AND IN CASE YOU MISSED ‘EM: The other Summer Sevens are HERE.

-D!


Summer Seven Series: 1995

07/27/2009

Aisha

So yeah… ’95 was a great year. YOU see the picture.

That was my old girl Aisha, a situation that ended up jumping off-and-on for the next three years. It was one of those relationships where the counterparts stay at each other’s throats, but always manage to end up cool again. We met at school in ’93, when I was a freshman who was crazy into her, and she was a junior who couldn’t be less interested. After about a year-plus of like and dislike, we finally ended up together in late-’94. By summer ’95, we were way into each other and GTD-ing on the regular (whenever we weren’t arguing over THEE dumbest shit).

In other news, I was 15 and flexin’ nuts. I was at the rec for the summer again, and spending blowing my money more responsibly. I had also begun DJing by this time, although I def. wasn’t ready for prime-time yet. But in the process of stepping my game up, I made a connection with DJ Base, who at the time was on WEAA‘s Strictly Hip-Hop show. I used to listen to that shit faithfully, hoping one day I could parlay this connection into possibly getting a spot on the show. I stayed on my lil’ starter kit every day, fukkin’ up needles and bein’ the best Kid Capri I could try to be.

badboysposter

In addition to that, I was starting to venture out with my rap aspirations too. That summer, I performed on stage for the first time at a showcase held at Monique‘s Comedy Club. I also made an appearance on 92Q‘s “Battle of the Baltimore MCs” segment, which at the time was my first time rhyming on the radio (but not my last… wait for ’98). Whenever I wasn’t making (turrible) mixtapes, I was making tapes of my “songs” over my favorite instrumentals. I didn’t really have my mind on “gettin’ on” at the time; I was all about findin’ an avenue to be heard first and foremost, one way or the other.

One pattern in all of these years (that even I’ve noticed while typing these entries) is that a LOT of shit I did revolved around music. I tried to get into sports and other shit, but it was never my thing. I found more enjoyment in taping videos or buying records than I did in developing my athletic skills (or lack thereof). I wasn’t gonna make it into the 3-on-3 basketball tournament or any of that… but I sure the fukk knew what day Cuban Linx was comin’ out.

onemorechance

The Danj! Summer Seven of 1995:

Notorious B.I.G. “One More Chance” (Stay With Me Remix): Arguably runnin’ that rap shit by this point, B.I.G.’s Debarge-sampling remix puts the official stamp on it.

Jodeci feat. Raekwon & Ghostface Killa “Freek’N You” (Remix): The “bad boys of R&B” and the Cuban Linx co-d’s connect. All day like Harry Belafonte.

Bone Thugs N Harmony “1st Of Tha Month”: Cleveland‘s own BTNH rep for SSI, WIC, and all that shit with the official anthem.

Luniz “I Got 5 On It”: Messin’ with that indo weed, the Luniz fukked around and made a classic for all those who engage in the herbal practice.

Grand Puba “I Like It”: Puba continues his solo run, and the DeBarge family continues to cash them checks. The term “stinkbox” is still a lil’ disturbing, but that’s neither here nor there.

Raekwon feat. Ghostface Killah “Criminology”: Rae’s Only Built 4 Cuban Linx KILT every other album that dropped around that time (with Mobb Deep’s Infamous being a possible exception)… this being one reason why.

Mary J. Blige feat. Smif-N-Wessun “I Love You” (Remix): A favorite from MJB’s My Life album scores extra points with the addition of the Boot Camp Click‘s gun clappers.

IN CASE YOU MISSED ‘EM: check out the other Summer Sevens HERE.

-D!


Summer Seven Series: 1994

07/20/2009

lexington market

Here in 2009, not much about me has changed over a three-year period. I’m pretty much the same dude I was in 2006. But as a teenager, shit changes every year, to the point where we become completely different people over the course of just three years. Take for instance, me in ’94. I had gone from a lil’ fat boy who wanted to someday write for a wrestling magazine in ’91, to a skinny kid who wanted to be a rapper and/or DJ.

oj-simpson-94

I was coming off of a half-ass freshman year in high school, and was in need of an attitude adjustment. I had to get my wits about myself coming into 10th grade, because I spent most of the 9th trying way too hard to impress everybody. I was that kid that you saw when you were a senior and wanted to slap the shit out of, not even realizing you were the same way. By the end of the year, I had realized where I went wrong, and was ready to restart.

In addition to that, I got my first summer job in ’94, which was at a rec center. I was in no way cut out to deal with children, and actually wanted to quit after the first day, but I settled into it within a week. I also wasn’t mad at the paycheck. The first one I got was only like $80, but that was the best $80 I ever had at that point. I remember blowing the whole thing that very weekend, on one trip downtown. I bought a Nervous Records t-shirt (???), two tapes, ate at Lexington Market, and copped a ticket to a Wu-Tang/Nas show at the Arena. Came home, had about $7 left… POW.

nervousrecords

Speaking of music, as it always had, it continued to play a big role in my life during the ’94 summer as well. Many hip-hop enthusiasts consider that year to be of epic proportions, and as a person who was there, I can say they’re absolutely right. It is an amazing feat that I was able to narrow this week’s songs down to seven, because there was a LOT of shit out that summer. I could’ve turned this into the Summer 27, because much like ’92, I prob’ly had a new favorite song every few days. It also didn’t help that I’d discovered Strictly Hip-Hop on Morgan State’s WEAA (88.9), and stayed locked in every Friday night from 12 to 5 a.m. without fail.

By the time September arrived, I was ready to roll to 10th grade, focused. I was still a gigantic hip-hop head, I was still a joker, and my lil’ 14-year-old hormones were still out of control… but I was a lot more tactful. I also had my own money (as little as it was), so I was kinda feelin’ myself. And still, there was even more change ahead…

craigflava

The Danj! Summer Seven of 1994 (I’m serious, shit was like pulling teeth)

Nas “The World Is Yours” (Q-Tip Remix): In addition to Illmatic, Nas also had some solid damn remixes for the singles. Here, Tip adds a new track and the “la-la-la” hook for another in the win column.

The Notorious B.I.G. “Juicy”: You already know…

Craig Mack “Flava In Ya Ear”: Bad Boy starts off with a bang. Quite possibly the ugliest rapper of all-time drops quite possibly the hottest single of the year.

Janet Jackson “And On And On”: Penny‘s forgotten B-side to the “Any Time, Any Place” single. I wasn’t rockin’ with much R&B during that summer, but this was a noteworthy exception that I couldn’t get enough of.

Crooklyn Dodgers “Crooklyn”: The team of Buckshot, Masta Ace, and a returning (at the time) Special Ed rep their hometown for Spike Lee‘s 70′s joint.

Mad Lion “Take It Easy”: With the dancehall reggae/hip-hop connection still going strong, Lion reps BDP with a banger.

Ahmad “Back In The Day”: My appreciation for a song about Ahmad’s good ol’ days of middle & high school… possibly the seed that later spawns this very site? Hmmm.

AND IN CASE YOU MISSED ‘EM: 1990… and 1991… and 1992… and 1993

-D!


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