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  1. 22. Jan. 2021 · Grandmaster & Melle Mel 'White Lines (Don’t Don’t Do it)'. One of the great anti-cocaine songs, Melle Mel and Sylvia Robinson originally intended this to be a satire of the coke-fuelled New York yuppy lifestyle of the 80s but had to make its stance more obvious so it would be more commercially successful and accepted by the music industry.

  2. 13. Jan. 2013 · To Tell You the Truth. Scrobble, find and rediscover music with a Last.fm account. Producer No I.D. has started up a new collective of musicians, singers, and rappers who all call themselves Cocaine 80s. Well, there is actually only one rapper in the group, Common, and he appears on just one of the seven tracks on their EP, ''The Pursuit''.

  3. Cocaine 80s. Cocaine 80s is a "super group" of A-list artists from all genres aiming to create something new, something that refuses easily labeling. In the center of the crew is Chicago's Dion Wilson, better known as No I.D., who handles all, production for the group. Other members include rapper Common, singers and instrumentalists like James ...

  4. Stream Cocaine 80s (James Fauntleroy & No I.D.) & Common - Six Feet Over by Shabazz The Magnificent on desktop and mobile. Play over 320 million tracks for free on SoundCloud.

  5. 21. Okt. 2011 · Cocaine 80's was an American hip hop collective founded in 2011, by record producer No I.D. With James Fauntleroy serving as lead singer on each song, the group has collectively released four full-length projects: The Pursuit EP (2011), Ghost Lady EP (2011), Express OG EP (2012) and The Flower of Life (2013).

  6. Provided to YouTube by Universal Music GroupTo Love & Die · Jhené Aiko · Cocaine 80sSouled Out℗ 2014 Def Jam Recordings (ARTium Records), a division of UMG R...

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    • Jhené Aiko - Topic
  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Cocaine_boomCocaine boom - Wikipedia

    The cocaine boom was a stark increase in the illegal production and trade of the drug cocaine that first began in the mid to late 1970s before then peaking during the 1980s. The boom was the result of organized smugglers who imported cocaine from Latin America to the United States, and a rising demand in cocaine due to cultural trends in the United States.