リリース
マーケットプレイス
出品52点、出品日: $1.01動画 (6)
編集リスト
- electro 作成者: zombiewhale
- SOME NICE FUNKY CLASSICS 作成者: secondspiritual_zone
- war chief 作成者: warchiefrecords
- war chief 作成者: warchiefrecords
- In Search Of Hip Hop Vinyl 作成者: DjGranddad
- Hip Hop Family Tree tome 1 : les disques 作成者: 1max2skeud
- Hip Hop: Oldschool 1981 -1992 作成者: Fernand8
- Ego Trip's Greatest Hip Hop Singles of 1980 作成者: BMcDonnell94
- 12'' singles 作成者: SteveEnjoysMusic
執筆者
Grandmaster Flash And The Furious 5* – Freedom
レーベル: | Sugar Hill Records – SH-549 |
---|---|
フォーマット: | レコード, 12", 33 ⅓ RPM |
国: | US |
リリース済み: | |
ジャンル: | Hip Hop |
スタイル: |
収録曲
A | Freedom (Vocal) | 8:13 | |
B | Freedom (Instrumental) | 8:13 |
会社名など
- 制作委託元 – A.P.C. Inc.
- 著作権© – Sugar Hill Records Ltd.
- 音源著作権℗ – Sugar Hill Records Ltd.
- 出版 – Malaco Music
- 出版 – Thompson Weekly Music
- 出版 – Sugar Hill Music
- ラッカー盤カッティング – Sterling Sound
クレジット
- Producer – Joey Robinson, Jr., Sylvia Inc. Productions*
- Written-By – R. Smith*, S. Robinson*, Furious 5*, T. Armstrong*
ノート
© ℗ 1980 Sugar Hill Records Ltd.
Published by Malaco Music / Thompson Weekly Music / Sugarhill Music
Published by Malaco Music / Thompson Weekly Music / Sugarhill Music
バーコードとその他の識別子
- Matrix / Runout (A-Side Label): VID-168-GMAS-BW
- Matrix / Runout (B-Side Label): VID-169-GMBS-BW
- Matrix / Runout (A-Side Runout Etching): BG VID-168-GM -1 ✩ STERLING
- Matrix / Runout (B-Side Runout Etching): BG VID-169-GM-1 ✩ STERLING
他のバージョン(23件中5件)全て見る
タイトル (フォーマット) | レーベル | カタログ # | 国 | 年 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
最近編集された | Freedom (12") | Sugar Hill Records, Vogue | 310850 | France | 1980 | ||
最近編集された | Freedom (12", 33 ⅓ RPM) | Sugar Hill Records | SH-549 | US | 1980 | ||
新しい投稿 | Freedom Part 1 & 2 (7", 45 RPM) | Sugar Hill Records, Vogue | 101365 | France | 1980 | ||
Freedom (7", 45 RPM) | Sugar Hill Records | 6.12948 | Germany | 1980 | |||
新しい投稿 | Freedom (12", 33 ⅓ RPM) | Sugar Hill Records | SH-549 | US | 1980 |
おすすめ
レビュー

11年前に編集されました
Crash Crew's Reggie Reg says:
"Sugarhill had wanted Crash Crew to come up there and do "High Power Rap" over the version of "Freedom" ["Get Up And Dance" by Freedom] they did with a band, but we wouldn't do it. We wouldn't leave Mike and Dave, so they got Flash to do it - Flash did the "Freedom" beat over, and now it was a beef. So what Sugarhill did was sign us to their label so that they could kill our version, and after then their "Freedom" with Flash could still go on. By then, we was having problems with Mike and Dave, so we left them and we went to Sugarhill. But their strategy didn't work. We still did our "Freedom."
"When we went up to Sugarhill to talk to them we met Master Gee. He come out of the office with a suitcase of money. "Oh, you're the Crash Crew!" They gassed us totally. We see all these nice cars in the lot - BMWs, Rolls Royces. Master Gee with a suitcase of money. We like, "Yo, this is it. right here. We Jackons now. We gonna be rich." I mean, I was seventeen years old. The rest of them must have been like eighteen. I'm like the second to the youngest. Darryl C was younger than me; he was sixteen. So we got our moms and them to come up there. Our moms advised us, "Get a lawyer. I don't know about these people. Blah-blah-blah." We didn't want to hear that. You know what I'm saying? "Ma, listen, I'm at an age where I can leave you right now. I'm gonna run away if you don't let me. This is my dream right here. This is me out of the ghetto." So she didn't want to do it but she did it.
"When we went on the road with Sugar Hill Gang, we was performing "High Power Rap," but we was told not to perform it, because Flash and them was doing "Freedom" also. We got into a little beef with that, and we settled that with a football game with Flash and them. And they won. They had Big Bank Hank from the Sugar Hill Gang with them. You know what I'm saying? They beat us. But it was a good game, and we settled it like that."
Quote taken from "Yes Yes Y'All" by Jim Fricke and Charlie Ahearn, DaCapo Press, 2002, page 271
"Sugarhill had wanted Crash Crew to come up there and do "High Power Rap" over the version of "Freedom" ["Get Up And Dance" by Freedom] they did with a band, but we wouldn't do it. We wouldn't leave Mike and Dave, so they got Flash to do it - Flash did the "Freedom" beat over, and now it was a beef. So what Sugarhill did was sign us to their label so that they could kill our version, and after then their "Freedom" with Flash could still go on. By then, we was having problems with Mike and Dave, so we left them and we went to Sugarhill. But their strategy didn't work. We still did our "Freedom."
"When we went up to Sugarhill to talk to them we met Master Gee. He come out of the office with a suitcase of money. "Oh, you're the Crash Crew!" They gassed us totally. We see all these nice cars in the lot - BMWs, Rolls Royces. Master Gee with a suitcase of money. We like, "Yo, this is it. right here. We Jackons now. We gonna be rich." I mean, I was seventeen years old. The rest of them must have been like eighteen. I'm like the second to the youngest. Darryl C was younger than me; he was sixteen. So we got our moms and them to come up there. Our moms advised us, "Get a lawyer. I don't know about these people. Blah-blah-blah." We didn't want to hear that. You know what I'm saying? "Ma, listen, I'm at an age where I can leave you right now. I'm gonna run away if you don't let me. This is my dream right here. This is me out of the ghetto." So she didn't want to do it but she did it.
"When we went on the road with Sugar Hill Gang, we was performing "High Power Rap," but we was told not to perform it, because Flash and them was doing "Freedom" also. We got into a little beef with that, and we settled that with a football game with Flash and them. And they won. They had Big Bank Hank from the Sugar Hill Gang with them. You know what I'm saying? They beat us. But it was a good game, and we settled it like that."
Quote taken from "Yes Yes Y'All" by Jim Fricke and Charlie Ahearn, DaCapo Press, 2002, page 271