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One-half of the legendary hip-hop duo EPMD, Erick Sermon was also among the genre's most prominent producers, deservedly earning the alias "Funklord" with his trademark raw, bass-heavy grooves. Born in Bayshore, NY, on November 25, 1968, Sermon -- aka E Double, the Green-Eyed Bandit, and MC Grand Royal -- teamed with rapper Parrish Smith in 1986 to form EPMD, an acronym for "Erick and Parrish Making Dollars"; signing to the tiny Sleeping Bag label, they soon released their debut 12", "It's My Thing," which went on to sell an astounding 500,000 copies. In the years to follow, EPMD emerged as one of rap's most vital acts, their hard-edged beats and Sermon's mumbled, monotone delivery becoming a great influence on the burgeoning gangsta movement. In addition to producing their own material, the duo also helmed records for the extended family of performers dubbed the Hit Squad, whose ranks included Redman, K Solo, and Das EFX. In early 1993, EPMD disbanded, and Sermon soon resurfaced with his solo debut, No Pressure; he also became a sought-after producer and remixer, working with everyone from En Vogue to Blackstreet to Shaquille O'Neal. After a second solo effort, 1995's Double or Nothing, he and Smith reformed EPMD in 1997, releasing the LP Back in Business. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi
E is straight hip hop, straight hip hop. EPMD straight hip hop. But his rhymes are very simple, but dope. Lot of movie references haha I love dat shii.
I don't which of them sing the "just like you babe" line but I thought it was Marvin Gaye I was hearing and was surprised when I turned to look at the artist...wow -
Agreed @ gugis1997, I like EPMD in small doses. Erick Sermon is a great producer, but EMPD's rap delivery is more forced than energetic (Parrish to a lesser extent). Even my 16 y/o noticed the often out-of-sync rhymes. I loved his Marvin Gaye-sampled songs only as it made me revisit my "Midnight Love" cd. I am not going to lie, I have "Feel It" on my MP3 player and play it quite a bit.
Where is No Pressure on here? That album knocks.
Erick Sermon is one of the more underrated producers in hip hop. He has always been one of my favorites.
gugis1997
An example of how SOME of the nice stage music doesn't transfer well to studio tracks. I find myself skipping to next halfway through each song on this album. Hooks are lacking and after awhile, the simplicity of the song formats (loop loop loop no change up .. more loop ) just bores me.
one of the top ten greatest rap groups ever!!!! i had the liberty to see them when they first came out, they did a free concert in baltimore....i thought that it was a grand move!!!!!!
Comments
More precious-tha n - g o l d " . . . .
Erick Sermon is one of the more underrated producers in hip hop. He has always been one of my favorites.