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TheTabi89 liked a video
(1 day ago)

The Official Music Video Of SPM (South Park Mexican) Called "You Kn...
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The Official Music Video Of SPM (South Park Mexican) Called "You Know My Name" From SPM's Album Called "The Purity Album" DopeHouse Records Carlos Coy
SPM You Know My Name Lyrics: I'm SPM you know my name I'm the one that came about the dope game I've payed my dues and kept my cool I'm the one that told your kid to stay in school I'm from the streets thank god for rap I creep through my hood in the smoke gray 'llac Contradiction on my chest, Versace on my clothes I got too many, too many heh YO I'm shaking baking cookies turning rookies into vets I used to see my dreams through a foggy pyrex My lex is outside plus I got a 64 But my Benz is wrapped up around a telephone pole I'm dripping candy wet and I'm swanging 84s Nothing but the screw banging in my radio I'm blowing this Mary and I'm sipping on sherry Give my homies mama money for his commissary My name is..
[Chorus:] sssss ppppp mmmmm south park Mexican
heh you pass the green of weed tweedle lee tweedle la living like a king fill the steam in my SPA before I walk I gotta teach myself to crawl I started off small now I'm stronger than the law you know my name I'm SPM in this rap game I'm the creme a la cram I tell you what it is and I'll tell you what it was exotic foreign minx and imported Asian rugs police at my door fedarals on my phone I guess I'm making too much money with my microphone I did my time no sunshine it seems like they only wanna handcuff mine
[Chorus]
Uh I used to be a shoe shina now I sip aunt jamima I go to sleep in Europe and wake back up in China I take 'em break 'em down represent that H-Town I'm Los el Mehicano in english Charlie Brown my top is on drop and my trunk is on pop my girl is snow white in the form of a rock my hot block is in this in this rap I break against blowing into rolling 20 dollar pinnas dances with the wolves in my southern side hood got seven brick houses all made out of wood I'm either at the park where my homies shooting jumpers or in the limousine getting freaked by head hunters you now my name
1. Dope House Intro - (featuring Courtney Jones) 2. You Know My Name - Official Music Video (Remix) 3. Follow My Lead - (featuring Baby Beesh/Christian) 4. Joints - (Diamond, Grimm, Baby Beesh/Lil' Bing, featuring Dum Dum/Happy P/Low G) 5. Dope Game 6. Rollin - (featuring Shadow Ramirez/Grimm/Lil' Bing) 7. Child of the Ghetto - (featuring Monster/Juan Gotti/Scrilla) 8. Watch the Block Bleed - (featuring Grimm/Ikeman) 9. I Wanna Know Her Name - (featuring Baby Beesh/Low G) 10. Styrofoam Cup - (featuring Baby Bash/Grimm/Russell Lee/Ikeman/Lil' Villan) 11. Meet Your Fate 12. Cookie Baker - (featuring Lil' D/Guero/Smoke Dogg) 13. We Did Dat - (featuring Hillwood Hustlaz) 14. Crazy Lady - (featuring Russell Lee) 15. Whatever You Do - (featuring Low G/Happy P/Grimm/Rasheed) 16. I Am Your Future - (featuring Grimm) 17. Problemas - (featuring Guero/Scrilla) 18. Right Now - (featuring Major Riley)
The Last Chair Violinist Never Change Hillwood Son Of Norma When Devils Strike Hustle Town Reveille Park Power Moves The 3rd Wish To Rock The World Time Is Money Album Carolyn Rodriguez NEW 2009 FREE SPM Medicine Girl That Dirty Mexican Zoe Lucky Luciano Chingo Bling Stuna DFO
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TheTabi89 favorited a video
(1 month ago)

With their fusion of heavy metal, funk, hip-hop, and progressive rock, F...
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With their fusion of heavy metal, funk, hip-hop, and progressive rock, Faith No More has earned a substantial cult following. By the time they recorded their first album in 1985, the band had already had a string of lead vocalists, including Courtney Love; their debut, We Care a Lot, featured Chuck Mosley's abrasive vocals but was driven by Jim Martin's metallic guitar. Faith No More's next album, 1987's Introduce Yourself, was a more cohesive and impressive effort; for the first time, the rap and metal elements didn't sound like they were fighting each other.
In 1988, the rest of the band fired Mosley; he was replaced by Bay Area vocalist Mike Patton during the recording of their next album, The Real Thing. Patton was a more accomplished vocalist, able to change effortlessly between rapping and singing, as well as adding a considerably more bizarre slant to the lyrics. Besides adding a new vocalist, the band had tightened its attack and the result was the genre-bending hit single "Epic," which established them as a major hard rock act.
Following up the hit wasn't as easy, however. Faith No More followed their breakthrough success with 1992's Angel Dust, one of the more complex and simply confounding records ever released by a major label. Although it sold respectably, it didn't have the crossover potential of the first album. When the band toured in support of the album, tensions between the band and Martin began to escalate; rumors that his guitar was stripped from some of the final mixes of Angel Dust began to circulate. As the band was recording its fifth album in early 1994, it was confirmed that Martin had been fired from the band.
Faith No More recorded King for a Day, Fool for a Lifetime with Mr. Bungle guitarist Trey Spruance. During tour preparations he was replaced by Dean Mentia. Mentia only lasted for the length of the King for a Day tour and was replaced by Jon Hudson for 1997's Album of the Year. Upon the conclusion of the album's supporting tour, Faith No More announced they were disbanding in April 1998. Patton, who had previously fronted Mr. Bungle and had avant-garde projects with John Zorn, formed a new band named Fantômas with Melvins guitarist Buzz Osbourne, Mr. Bungle bassist Trevor Dunn, and former Slayer drummer Dave Lombardo. Roddy Bottum continued with his band Imperial Teen, who released their first album, Seasick, in 1996. A posthumous Faith No More retrospective, Who Cares a Lot, appeared in late 1998.
In 2009, after eleven years of dissolution, Faith No More toured Europe without Jim Martin but with Patton as vocalist. A U.S. tour followed a year later. by Stephen Thomas Erlewine
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