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Original Nuttah turns to Islam

Ever wondered where the Indian man who to this day made one of the biggest Jungle tunes got to? I'm talking so big it is not simply a niche genre-defining classic, but an all-round UK classic banger.

Taking it back to Telepathy days. When Nicky Blackmarket, M-Beat, MC Det, MC Shabba, Skibadee and them man were young. Tunes like Chopper, Wolf, Burial... The guy I'm talking about is



Who can say they never buss gunfinger when the bassline dropped? Back when Jungle had real bass (usually sampled ragga) before this watered down drum & bass (with minimal bass) stuff. I remember requesting this on The Box back in the days.

Anyway, I've found him



Guess he won't be doing any PAs of the tune anytime soon.

I am not Muslim, this isn't Muslim propaganda, don't want any Nick Griffin-esq comments about Sharia law or any of that. I found this Roadside to Islam channel interesting.

Jaja from PDC and Young Ummah talk religion vs. Music,



This ones deep. Dude talks about how his battles with living a grim life turned him to religion.



Whatever the religion, whatever the reason (how trivial it may seem on the outside or whatnot) if it makes them happy, I'm happy for them.

For more, check the YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/roadside2islam

In related news, Wu-Tang rapper The Chef a.k.a. Raekwon recently turned Muslim. Check out my interview with him here

Slightly related (Apache + Indian)

Here's the original video

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4LMN12U88RI

I've found him too. I think this is from last year. Let's just say I was by wasn't surprised to see he has dreadlocks!!!



If you didn't know, this was an attempt to capitalise on Shaggy's success with Oh Carolina (can you hear it sped up?). Ahh memories

Comments

  1. Here's his latest track...

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=__NhKbQ9lzM

    ReplyDelete
  2. l remember using the 'original nutta ' soundtrack for a 'performance art ' presentation during my BA hons Fine Art days at Derby University. The 'Good Fellas' intro was a classic.

    ReplyDelete

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