Concert in your area for Hip-Hop, Funk & Soul, Jazz, R&B, Electronic, Pop, and Rock.
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Formed of high school MCs Treach (Anthony Criss) and Vinnie (Vincent Brown) and DJ Kay Gee (Keir Gist), the hip hop group originally performed under the name New Style. After playing a number of live gigs and talent shows, the trio were discovered by Queen Latifah, who signed the group to her management company and secured a record deal with Tommy Boy Records.
The group’s debut eponymously-titled album arrived in 1991, spawning the utterly infectious Top Ten hit “O.P.P.” which sampled Jackson 5’s “ABC”. The single earned the group significant esteem as they were able to walk the fine line between maintaining their ghetto reputation in the underground and producing catchy anthemic funk for the mainstream. Treach, along with being a more than capable lyrical wordsmith, also turned his hand to acting, making appearances in the films “The Meteor Man”, Who’s the Man?” and “Jason’s Lyric”.
Like its predecessor, Naughty by Nature’s sophomore release “19 Naughty III” in 1993 was praised to the rafters by fans and similarly went platinum. The album produced the hit “Hip Hop Hooray”, known for its inescapable “Hey, Ho” chant; the single became synonymous with the era’s style of hip hop. The group’s follow-up album “Poverty’s Paradise” in 1995 earned a Grammy for Best Rap Album despite the lack of hit singles and marked the group’s departure from Tommy Boy Records.
A hiatus ensued with Treach landing a role in the HBO prison drama “Oz” and DJ Kay Gee, focusing on his production work for the likes of Zhané, Aaliyah and Next to name a few. In 1999 Naughty by Nature returned with the album “10 Naughty Nine: Nature’s Fury” and produced the sizeable hit “Jamboree” featuring Zhané. Kay Gee officially departed the group after the release to focus on his production work, and subsequently the duo singed with TVT. The group went on to release the album “IIcons” in 2002 successfully sustaining their career into the new millennium.
East 17 began when singer and songwriter Tony Mortimer absolutely aced a record label showcase with London Records. The label weren't looking for a solo artist but knew talent when they saw it, so they signed Mortimer up and decided to form a band around him, deciding on Terry Coldwell and John Hendy to join him. All three of the band members hailed from Walthamstow, a north-eastern district of London, and so the band was named after their post-code, East 17. The final piece of the puzzle came during the recording session for the band's first single, when Brian Harvey, who had been employed as a back-up singer and dancer originally, was overheard singing away from the mic. Astonished by his singing voice and very aware of his charisma, Harvey was promoted to lead vocalist, and the classic line up of East 17 had been formed.
Mortimer was trusted to write the band's songs, and while Harvey sung the lead vocals, Mortimer was the band's rapper. They soon built up a reputation for themselves as the harder, cooler, more street-wise alternative to the other boy-band on top of the world of British pop music, Take That, and right off the bat, they were an absolutely huge deal. Their debut single, 1992's “House Of Love”, was a top ten hit in the U.K that also charted solidly all over Europe, even hitting number one in Sweden, and their debut album, 1993's “Walthamstow”, rocketed to number one as well. For the rest of the 1990's very few bands came close to matching the success of East 17, who scored twelve Top 10 hit singles on the UK charts in 6 years. However spectacular this run was, it was nothing compared to the band's breakup.
In January 1997, Harvey claimed in an interview that “It's cool to take drugs”, and that “Ecstasy can make you a better person”. While East 17 were seen as the cool boy-band, this was still a step too far, and the media were soon baying for his blood, even tying his statement into the tragic case of Leah Betts, a school girl who had died after taking MDMA two years earlier. Harvey, understandably, was sacked and Mortimer left a couple of months afterwards. East 17 were dead, but in 1998, Coldwell and Hendy invited Harvey back into the fold to start the band up again, renaming themselves E-17 in the process. The band had some initial success, with their first single “Each Time” hitting number 2 in the charts, but they couldn't last after public interest in the new project waned, and they split up in 1999.
Over the 2000's, the band were constantly trying to reform and failing due to the existing friction between Harvey and Mortimer, both of whom were trying to start solo careers due to varying degrees of success. In the end, Coldwell and Hendy found that the best way of bringing East 17 into the 21st century is by not having Mortimer or Harvey in the band at all. In 2014, they added Robbie Craig as their new lead vocalist, and have seen more success as a live act around the U.K and Europe than they've done in over a decade. While it might be an exercise in nostalgia for most, that doesn't mean that a night with East 17 isn't a hell of a lot of fun, and that's what this pop music lark is all about in the end. For that, they come highly recommended.
Tha Luniz Show is phenomenal!!!! The New Movie #US directed by Jordan Peele, is a MASTERPIECE!!!! THE LUNIZ HIT SONG "I GOT 5 ON IT!" Is a vocal point of the movie. And, their NEW MUSIC IS, FIRE!!!!!
I hope i see her at the target center for The Waiting Game World Tour With joe Moses and Mila j!
November 9th
MILA J JOE MOSES AND NIVEA
7-11PM