LBC Crew
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Long Beach Crip Crew | ||
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From left:Tray Deee, Techniec, Bad Azz, South Sentrelle, Lil C-Style from their music video "Beware of my crew"
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Background information | ||
Origin | Long Beach, California Los Angeles, California |
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Genre(s) | Gangsta rap West Coast hip hop |
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Occupation(s) | Rapping | |
Years active | 1994 - 1998 | |
Label(s) | Dogghouse (1997 - 1998) Death Row (1994 - 1996) |
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Associated acts |
Snoop Dogg 213 |
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Former members | ||
Tray Deee Techniec Bad Azz South Sentrell Lil C-Style |
The LBC Crew were a short-lived collective of Long Beach-based rappers. They were the first act to be executively-produced by Snoop Dogg. In 1997, The LBC Crew were signed to Doggystyle Records
There is a full LBC Crew album called "Our City", although it was never released, it is floating around the internet, LBC Crew had a hit single with the song "Beware Of My Crew", from the A Thin Line Between Love and Hate soundtrack. They were also prominently featured on Snoop Dogg's sophomore album Tha Doggfather. The group disbanded following the collapse of Death Row. Since then, unreleased material from the group emerged on the underground.
Most of the LBC Crew remained visible figures in West-Coast hip-hop. Prior to his incarceration, Tray-Dee was part of the successful rap-trio, Tha Eastsidaz. Bad Azz released two solo albums under the Doggy Style imprint. Lil C-Style remained part of unorganized Death Row camp. And Techniec recently signed to The Game's The Black Wall Street Records.
Contents |
[edit] The Break-Up
Early on in the LBC Crew's lifespan, a small dispute broke out between Lil C-Style and Snoop Dogg over C-Style's royalties (he claimed he wasn't being paid enough for them). The argument was never settled, resulting in C-Style damaging the original tape of LBC's debut album beyond repair, and telling Snoop he no longer wanted to be part of the group.[1]
[edit] Members
- Tray Deee (Tracy Lamar Davis)
- Techniec (original member) (David Williams III)
- Bad Azz (original member) (Jamarr Antonio Stamps)
- Lil' C-Style (original member) (Ronald Gillion)
- South Sentrell (sometimes spelled Cintrell, Cinema, Mz. South 'Sentral or Ms. South Central) (Sentrelle Connerly)
[edit] Discography
- Haven't You Heard? (We Givin' Something Bacc To The Street) (cancelled)
- Blueberry (originally recorded for the album later included in Tha Doggfather)
- Gold Rush (originally recorded for the album later included in Tha Doggfather)
- Out the Moon /Boom, Boom, Boom/ (originally recorded for the album later included in Gridlock'd (OST)
- "Dippin' In My Low-Low" (re-recorded with Shaquille O'Neal for an unreleased Shaq project)
- "I Just Wanna Be From D.P.G."
- "Getup To Get down"
- 1996: Our City
- 1995: A Thin Line Between Love and Hate soundtrack (Warner Bros. Records)
- LBC Crew : Beware of my crew EP #75 US, #51 R&B, #8 Rap, #23 Dance-Maxi
- 1998: 19th Street LBC Compilation (19th Street Recods)
- Flossin' (Tray Deee, Bad Azz, Lil' C-Style) (re-up)
[edit] Filmography
- February 24, 1996 : Soul Train
- Season 25, Episode 817 - themselves
- 1997 : Rhyme & Reason - themselves (Miramax)
[edit] References
Snoop Dogg |
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Discography |
Studio albums |
Doggystyle • Tha Doggfather • Da Game Is to Be Sold Not to Be Told • No Limit Top Dogg • Tha Last Meal • Paid tha Cost to Be da Bo$$ • Rhythm & Gangsta • Tha Blue Carpet Treatment |
Singles |
"Who Am I" • "Gin and Juice" • "Doggy Dogg World" • "Snoop's Upside Ya Head" • "Vapors" • "Tha Doggather" • "We Just Wanna Party with You" • "Still a G Thang" • "Snoop Dogg" • "From tha Chuuuch to da Palace" • "Beautiful" • "Drop It Like It's Hot" • "Let's Get Blown" • "Signs" • "Ups & Downs" • "Real Soon" • "Vato" • "That's That Shit" • "I Wanna Love You" • "Candy" • "Boss' Life" |
List of all albums • Filmography • Complete discography |
Related articles |
Geffen • Interscope • Universal • Doggystyle Records • List of awards • 213 • Tha Dogg Pound • LBC Crew • N.W.A. • Tha Eastsidaz • DPG Unit • The Warzone • Nine Inch Dix • Dr. Dre |