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The Scratch Perverts are a collective of turntablist DJs from London, formed in 1996 by Tony Vegas, Prime Cuts and DJ Renegade. World DMC team champions in both 1999 and 2001. Additionally Prime Cuts won 2 consecutive ITF World Scratching titles, first beating A-Trak in Hawaii in 1999 and then defending the title in Los Angeles the following year.
Soon Dike became the top DJ at Power Tools, a club in Los Angeles. In 1987, they founded Delicious Vinyl, an independent record label. [2] Almost immediately the label was a success. Delicious Vinyl's first release was "Crackerjack" by Master Rhyme and "On Fire"/"Cheeba Cheeba" by Tone Loc, a Los Angeles gang member. "Cheeba Cheeba" and ...
Prime Cuts (1997) Friends & Family, Vol. 1 (1997) Professional ratings; Review scores; Source Rating; ... It was released in 1997 on Epic Records. Background
Prime Cuts may refer to: Prime Cuts (Jordan Rudess album), a compilation album by Jordan Rudess; Prime Cuts, a compilation album by Steve Morse; Prime Cuts (Suicidal Tendencies album), a compilation album by Suicidal Tendencies; Prime Cuts (Shadow Gallery album), a compilation album by Shadow Gallery; Prime Cuts (Peter Lang album), a 1977 album ...
Prime Cuts (1997) – four new tracks; Friends & Family, Vol. 1 (1997) – three tracks; Six the Hard Way (1998) Freedumb (1999) Free Your Soul and Save My Mind (2000) Friends & Family, Vol. 2 (2001) – five tracks; Early 2001 – early 2002 Mike Muir – lead vocals; Dean Pleasants – lead guitar, backing vocals; Mike Clark – rhythm guitar ...
Los Cycos was an American crossover thrash band founded in 1984 in Venice, Los Angeles, California, by Suicidal Tendencies frontman Mike Muir.The only recording of the band appears on the rare 1985 release Welcome to Venice, the debut album and first release from Suicidal Records.
Although "Institutionalized" was never a hit in the charts, the song received regular airplay on the Los Angeles radio station KROQ, when DJ Rodney Bingenheimer added it to their playlist, and it was ranked #23 on the radio station's "Top 106.7 Songs of 1983" countdown list. [6] "
A music video was made for "You Can't Bring Me Down", which was a major hit on MTV's Headbangers Ball.The video seemed mostly to be about the band's ban from appearances in Los Angeles; in the beginning of the video a newspaper pops up with the head line "Suicidal Tendencies Banned In L.A."