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The Cold Crush Brothers

 
Artist: Cold Crush Brothers
Cold Crush Brothers

Group Members:

Tony Tone, Easy A.D., Grandmaster Caz, The Almighty KG, DJ Charlie Chase, JDL

Similar Artists:

Funky 4 + 1, Grand Wizard Theodore & the Fantastic 5 MCs, Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five, Treacherous Three, The Sugarhill Gang, Busy Bee

Followers:

  • Formed: 1978, New York, NY [The Bronx]
  • Disbanded: 1986
  • Genres: Rap
  • Representative Albums: "Fresh, Wild, Fly & Bold", "Cold Crush Brothers vs. Fantastic Romantic 5", "Live in 82
  • Representative Songs: "Fresh, Wild, Fly and Bold", "Freestyling", "Yes Y'All

Biography

The Cold Crush Brothers were one of the first rap crews to emerge from the Bronx soon after hip-hop's birth in the mid-'70s. Along with Grandmaster Flash & the Furious Five, Grand Wizard Theodore & the Fantastic 5 MCs, and the Funky Four Plus One, these four NYC natives were already well-established long before the Sugarhill Gang made rap a household word with their multi-platinum-selling 12" "Rapper's Delight." In fact, as legend has it, it was a Cold Crush Brothers tape that a pizza-shop worker (and soon-to-be Sugarhill Gang member Big Bank Hank) was rapping to when Sugarhill Records owner Sylvia Robinson heard him in 1979. Instead of telling Robinson who the real artists on the tape were, he gathered some friends who soon became part of the much more successful and well-known Sugarhill Gang.

Founding members Grandmaster Caz, the Almighty KG, Tony Tone, JDL, Easy AD, and DJ Charlie Chase were showmen as well as a skilled tag team of rappers. They practiced and perfected their routines for over a year beginning in 1978 and began performing live, especially at numerous "MC battles" that took place at that time. One of these battles was caught on tape in 1981 and released in 1991 on a CD titled Afrika Bambaataa Presents Hip-Hop Funk Dance Classics, Vol. 1. It, along with the Cold Crush Brothers' Live in 82 album, epitomizes hip-hop before it became the commercial monster it was in the 1990s. The simple party-flavored rhymes hark back to a more innocent time when MC stood for Master of Ceremonies, DJs actually did something other than scratch over a DAT tape, and the only references to killing were metaphors. In 1982 they appeared in the legendary hip-hop film Wild Style as well as put out the excellent 12" "The Weekend." The Cold Crush Brothers never released a proper full-length album but did release a number of influential singles on the Tuff City label, including "Fresh, Wild, Fly and Bold." Most of these singles are collected on 1995's Fresh, Wild, Fly & Bold. They broke up in 1986, but reappeared on Terminator X's second solo album, Super Bad. ~ Kembrew McLeod, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: The Cold Crush Brothers
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The Cold Crush Brothers
Origin Bronx, New York, U.S.
Genres old school hip hop
Years active 1978 – present
Members
Almighty Kay Gee
DJ Charlie Chase
DJ Tony Tone
Easy A.D.
Grandmaster Caz
Mr. Tee
Former members
Dot-A-Rock
J.D.L. Money Ray (deceased)
Whipper Whip

The Cold Crush Brothers is a hip hop group that formed in 1978 in the Bronx, New York City, New York, the home of hip hop, during its beginning, alongside other hip hop icons such as Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five, Afrika Bambaataa & The Soulsonic Force, Grand Wizard Theodore & the Fantastic Five and DJs Baron and Breakout and The Funky Four Plus One.

History

The group's original lineup consisted of the founder, Original DJ Tony Tone, Easy A.D., DJ Charlie Chase, Whipper Whip, Mr. Tee, and Dot-A-Rock. Eventually, Whipper Whip and Dot-A-Rock left and joined the Fantastic Five, which they considered to be a more established group at the time. The Fantastic Five was originally the "L" Brothers, which consisted of DJ Mean Gene, DJ Cordio, DJ Grand Wizard Theodore, MC Smiley, Master Rob, the Original Kevie Kev and Busy Bee Starski.

Tony Tone, Easy A.D. and Charlie Chase brought in Grandmaster Caz (formerly DJ Casanova Fly), Almighty Kay Gee and J.D.L. Money Ray (Eric Hoskins) would be added to the group in the late '80s.

The Cold Crush Brothers were especially known for their memorable routines which included harmonies, melodies and stage-stomping performances. The Cold Crush Brothers set the standard for emceeing. They became known as "the Rolling Stones of hip hop".[citation needed] Because of the attention they began to attract, many groups would try to battle them to gain street credibility and for hip hop supremacy. This would lead to a fierce and well known rivalry with The Fantastic Five, culminating in a lyrical battle between the groups on July 3, 1981. The grand prize was $1000 cash. The Fantastic Five won the battle.

The Cold Crush Brothers began to release records commercially. The first single was "Weekend" on Elite Records. It was a party and dance record that described ways to have fun on the weekends. The second single was "Punk Rock Rap" on Tuff City Records and distributed by CBS. This was the first time an independent hip hop label and a major record company worked together. "Punk Rock Rap" was the first recording to fuse hip hop and rock together. The phrase, "Oh My God!" was sampled on Doug E. Fresh and the Get Fresh Crew's 1985 single, "The Show". The most successful Cold Crush single to date is "Fresh, Wild, Fly & Bold", released in 1984, which sold 16,000 units in its first week of release. A distribution dispute between Tuff City Records and Profile Records hindered the sales of the single with the most potential of reaching gold status. In 1988 they released Troopers, an album on the infamous B-Boy Records label which contained the singles "Feel the Horns/We Can Do This" and "The Bronx". This album was once extremely difficult to acquire, but it has recently been repackaged & re-released on B-boy/Traffic Records.

The Cold Crush Brothers toured all five boroughs of New York City and as far as Boston before commercially-released records. Their popularity was strengthened by the sale of their live performances that were recorded on cassette by Tape Master (Elvis Moreno). These shows were taped and distributed worldwide via word-of-mouth promotion. The Cold Crush Brothers were featured in the 1982 movie Wild Style, the seminal work depicting hip hop culture. In the movie, the Cold Crush was featured in a number of scenes, most notable was that featuring the Brothers' face off against their arch-nemesis, the Fantastic Five. A year after the movie was released, the Cold Crush Brothers took hip hop abroad with tour dates in Japan and Europe.

The Cold Crush Brothers became involved in one of hip hop's most historic moments when Joey Robinson (son of Sugar Hill Records founder, Sylvia Robinson) happened to hear (part-time club bouncer and former manager of Cold Crush member Grandmaster Caz) Big Bank Hank rapping to a tape of Caz while working at a pizzeria in New Jersey. Robinson informed Hank that he was forming a group called the Sugar Hill Gang and asked if Hank would like to join. Hank accepted, although he was not an MC. Hank went to Grandmaster Caz and asked him for some rhymes. Caz laid his rhyme books on the bed and said, "Take whatever you want," with the understanding that Hank would compensate Caz at a later time. Caz's lyrics landed in a song by the Sugar Hill Gang called "Rapper's Delight". The song became a huge hit in 1979 and was the first hip hop single to land on the Top 40 charts. Caz never received any credit or compensation for the rhymes that he contributed.

Another memorable moment of contribution of The Cold Crush Brothers was that they started the earliest foreign markets. The Cold Crush Brothers took 25MCs, DJs, breakers, and bombers to Tokyo, Japan in 1983. [1]This was one of the earliest foreign markets for hip hop other than La Belle, France. [2]Although they had linguistic and cultural barriers, the Wild Style tour was a big success. Right after this, the Cold Crush Brothers were able to gain a CBS records, through the Tuff City Label. They were the first crew to do so. [3]

In October 2002, member Money Ray died. The group still performs across the United States.

In 2008, the Wild Style single "Cold Crush Bros. at the Dixie" ranked number 77 on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of Hip Hop.

References

  1. ^ Schwartz, Mark. "Planet Rock; Hip Hop Supa National." The Vibe History of Hip Hop (1999).
  2. ^ Schwartz, Mark. "Planet Rock; Hip Hop Supa National." The Vibe History of Hip Hop (1999).
  3. ^ Roberts, Ed. "Cold Crush Brothers." Oldschoolhiphop.Com. 23 Oct. 2007. JMG Web Design. 18 Apr. 2008 <http://www.oldschoolhiphop.com/artists/emcees/coldcrushbrothers.htm>.


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