Wrath of Kane… And Chuck

BDK & PE, Harlem ‘89. Shot by Carl Weston. Via THE NAH. See if you can spot Puff, on some Where’s Waldo? shit.

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8 Responses to “Wrath of Kane… And Chuck”

  1. Thaddeus Clark Says:

    I seen him!

    Now for the ultimate brain-fuck go read the credits to “Bigger And Deffer” and see who’s listed as LL’s Manager.

  2. tray Says:

    It’s too bad Kane never really fulfilled his potential, he’s easily one of the most talented rappers ever.

  3. bding7 Says:

    has any rapper realized their potential in you eyes?

  4. DaftCrunk.Com Says:

    Ha Ha Ha! What are you, their friggin’ teachers?!!? “If only Big Daddy could have reached his potential. He was such a nice boy.”

    I dunno, I think doing the synchronized dance is reaching your potential for anyone. If you have a good friend that you could do it with in the room right now I would be very impressed. I remember when ILLin’ P busted it out on stage in like 1998. I was blown away by how dope it was (remember, the other option these days is holding a rag and throwing water at the crowd in you new designer “shades”)

    I think the high top fade treats Puffy well. The worst part of this video is the fact that the beat to “Moe & More Hits” comes on and we don’t get to see Nice & Smooth come out, or even better would be to hear Kane rhyme over it.

  5. gforce Says:

    Daft – I’m with you. How come nobody busts it out like that any more? Rappers getting soft, that’s why. Give me a high top fade with a kick step any day.

    I’m doing it right now…

  6. tray Says:

    Well, some rappers actually overachieve relative to their potential. Could you expect any more of Freeway than what he’s done? Limited talent, two great records. Same’s true of Jeezy. As for Kane, of course he underachieved, he was as good as anyone of that generation and his catalogue doesn’t show it.

  7. Mike G Says:

    Big Daddy Kane killed it live!

  8. Big Daddy Kane and Public Enemy (1989): Anti-Racism Rally | Disinformation Says:

    [...] Rolling Stone Magazine: ‘Two hip-hop masters at the top of their game, making activist music that doesn’t sound pedantic or [...]

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