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Jesse Bonds Weaver Jr. (born June 22, 1962), better known by the stage name Schoolly D (sometimes spelled Schooly D), is an American rapper from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. ... 1989: Am I Black Enough for You? 1991: How a Black Man Feels; 1994: Welcome to America; 1995: Reservoir Dog; 2000: Funk 'N Pussy; 2008: Schoolly D's Out Cold;
Scroll down for track listing and sequence time.Schoolly DAm I Black Enough For You?(p) (c) 1989Jive RecordsSchoolly D RecordsSide B:00:00 Get Off Your Ass A...
Am I Black Enough for You? is the fourth album by rapper Schoolly D, released in 1989 via Jive Records/RCA. It was produced by Schoolly D and DJ Code Money. The album did not chart, although three singles were released: "Gangster Boogie", "Pussy Ain't Nothin'", and "Livin' in the Jungle". It was Schoolly D's last album for Jive Records. "Am I Black Enough for You?"
Description. Tracks. O.G. Schoolly D ., (a.k.a.) “The King Of New York”, is without a doubt one of the founding fathers of Hip-Hop and one of the baddest bad-ass muthafuckas around. ‘Am I Black Enough For You?’ is his fourth and probably one of his best albums, much funkier than his bleaker and more raw earlier albums. Much of his older ...
Am I Black Enough for You? may refer to: Am I Black Enough for You?, an album by Schoolly D "Am I Black Enough for You?" (song), a 1972 song by Billy Paul This page was last edited on 18 February 2022, at 18:59 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike ...
[Schoolly D] Am I black enough for ya, America? I don't need no {? ice until this hair is cut?} All I need is, my blackness Some others seem to lack this Black joy, and my black vibe Gonna be a black man til the day I die I'm just, rough and tough, and takin no stuff All I really wanna know y'all. am I black enough?
Am I Black Enough for You?, suffused with rhymes aiming to raise pro-Black consciousness, followed in 1989. Schoolly briefly joined the roster of Capitol for the 1991 album How a Black Man Feels. He began a lengthy affiliation with director Abel Ferrara in 1992 when "Signifying Rapper" was used throughout the film Bad Lieutenant.