enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Shorty Party - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shorty_Party

    "Shorty Party" is a song performed by Mexican hip hop group Cartel de Santa, featuring OnlyFans influencer La Kelly. [1] It was released as a single on 4 March 2023, through Babilonia Music. [2] The song was written and produced by Eduardo "Babo" Davalos De Luna, lead vocalist of the group. The song was also produced by Román Rodríguez.

  3. Cartel de Santa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cartel_de_Santa

    The album was meant as a message to fans that "el Cartel" would keep making music. The first single of this album was "Hay mamita" which also has a music videoclip. [1] In March 2010, Babo announced on the band's Myspace the release of another album. The fifth album was released in May 2010 with the name Vol. V: Sincopa.

  4. Proper Dos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proper_Dos

    The group's third album, Heat, was released in 1998, followed by Overdose in 1999. Overdose was supported by singles including "Shake the Ground", "We Run This Mutha" and "Can You Rock Like This". During their most prolific stages of musical output, Proper Dos released music videos for tracks including "Firme Hina", "Tales From the Westside ...

  5. That Mexican OT Is Rolling

    www.aol.com/entertainment/mexican-ot-rolling...

    That Mexican OT (Outta Texas) was mumbling raps before he could write them. When he failed grade school classes, he remembers his mother saying, “Fuck that school — my son is going to be a ...

  6. Chicano rap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicano_rap

    In 1990, the Chicano hip hop group A Lighter Shade of Brown released their album Brown & Proud, [4] which included hits "On a Sunday Afternoon" (a top 40 hit on the Billboard Hot 100) and "Latin Active". Rap group Cypress Hill (One Cuban, One Puerto Rican), would sometimes use popular Chicano slang and culture in their music and videos. The ...

  7. Mexican hip-hop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mexican_hip-hop

    Image of Mexican Hip hop group Cartel De Santa. Hip hop originated from the Bronx, New York [2] and as it become a sensation it grew to other parts of the world. The hip-hop movement reached Mexico around the 1990s with the emergence of the group Control Machete [3] and it has evolved to spanning more artists like Cartel de Santa, Gera MX, El Pinche Mara, Natanael Cano, and many more.

  8. Latin Artist on the Rise: How Realness Turned Santa Fe Klan ...

    www.aol.com/latin-artist-rise-realness-turned...

    “I began doing hip-hop in the barrio between the age of 12 and 13. My barrio taught me what hip-hop and rap music is. That’s when I began writing my own music,” he says.

  9. Akwid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akwid

    Akwid is a Chicano rap group. [1] Brothers Francisco "AK" Gómez and Sergio "Wikid" Gómez, who make up Akwid, are originally from Jiquilpan, Michoacán, but grew up in Los Angeles, California. Before becoming Akwid both "AK" and "Wikid" were part of a former rap group named the "Head Knockerz" with other group members Sabu and John Doe [2]