High Definition Standard Definition Theater
Video id : QER4dLaLSs8
ImmersiveAmbientModecolor: #f4cdbb (color 1)
Video Format : 22 (720p) openh264 ( https://github.com/cisco/openh264) mp4a.40.2 | 44100Hz
Audio Format: ALAC lossless (https://github.com/macosforge/alac)
PokeTubeEncryptID: cf1deebb5202cd11c7727278f81d1c68e5644b8970df1fa6086850ff84dd0f463fd73d061189b94f5b78850280c3458b
Proxy : eu-proxy.poketube.fun - refresh the page to change the proxy location
Date : 1715699326496 - unknown on Apple WebKit
Mystery text : UUVSNGRMYUxTczggaSAgbG92ICB1IGV1LXByb3h5LnBva2V0dWJlLmZ1bg==
143 : true
Ras Kass - Miami Life
 Lossless
176,353 Views • Aug 23, 2019 • Click to toggle off description
Appears on the album "Soul On Ice" (1996), as well as the soundtrack to "The Substitute".

John Austin IV (born September 26, 1973), better known by his stage name Ras Kass, is an American rapper. He returned as a member of the hip hop supergroup The HRSMN along with Canibus, Killah Priest, and Kurupt in 2014.[1] Ras is a member of the group Golden State Warriors with Xzibit and Saafir. Editors of About.com ranked him #30 on their list of the Top 50 MCs of Our Time (1987–2007).[2] Pitchfork Media called him "one of the best rappers of all time."[3]

Austin was born on September 26, 1973[4] and grew up in Carson,Ca. In 1996 he had twin sons (Ras and Taj) with R&B and soul singer-songwriter Teedra Moses.[5][6] BMF Entertainment artist Barima "Bleu DaVinci" McKnight is his cousin.[7]

Ras Kass took his stage name from the legendary Ethiopian Emperor Yohannes IV whose name was Ras Kassa Mircha before he was crowned as an emperor. Ras Kass sent waves through the hip-hop world with his debut independent single release "Remain Anonymous," earning him a Hip-Hop Quotable in The Source Magazine. Before his signing with Priority/EMI Records, Ras Kass began making guest appearances on several records and freestyles on numerous radio shows, further solidified the emerging lyricist's notoriety. Recorded guest appearances include Sway & King Tech's "Come Widdit" (feat. Ras Kass, Ahamad and Saafir) (Priority Records) and their "Wake Up Show Anthem '94" (feat. Ras Kass, Nas, Lauryn Hill, Chino XL, Organized Konfusion and Saafir), as well as Chino XL's "Riiiot" (American Recordings), and KeyKool and Rhettmatic's "E=MC5" (feat. Ras Kass, LMNO, and Meen Green) Up Above Records.

From a young age, Austin was influenced by hip hop music and inspired by a variety of emcees including Ice Cube, Rakim, Scarface, and KRS-One. His first album, Soul on Ice, was released in 1996. Taking its name from a book by Eldridge Cleaver, Ras addressed racial relations in the same manner, most notably with "Ordo Abchao" and "Nature of the Threat." The album was released on Priority Records, as was the follow-up, Rasassination, which featured beats from Easy Mo Bee and guest appearances by RZA, Twista, Xzibit, Mack 10 and Dr. Dre. Lead single "Ghetto Fabulous" featured Dre and Mack 10 and was pushed by a lavish video shoot. The album received generally positive reviews,[8] and shortly afterward the MC announced his third album, Van Gogh.

During the recording of Ras's intended third album, Van Gogh, Priority Records merged with Capitol Records, which acquired the emcee’s contract and his material.[9] Initially near completion, the album was heavily bootlegged before any single or promotion could be prepared. In fact, the would-be single "Van Gogh" was even played on an episode of The Sopranos. Ras went back to work overhauling the project, procuring tracks from DJ Premier, Hi-Tek, and Dr. Dre and retaining songs from Rockwilder and Battlecat. Tensions arose during the re-recording, from budget restrictions to lack of promotion: Despite the fact that "Van Gogh" remained shelved the album's singles "Back It Up" and "Goldyn Chyd" received decent amount of spins on Los Angeles urban contemporary radio stations KKBT (The Beat) and KPWR (Power 106) during the course of 2001-02. "I would always tell Priority executives, "You give me a road kill cow and pair of scissors but you expect a pair of Air Jordans. It's not fair." Ironically, I would still somehow manage to make a couple pairs."

Ras Kass was also involved in The HRSMN, sometimes called the 4 Hrsmn, consisting of himself, Kurupt (of Tha Dogg Pound), Killah Priest, and Canibus. The Horsemen Project, a white-label of rough tracks by the four, was released in 2003, but no other releases have been subsequently forthcoming. Finally, nearing the completion of his album, the MC and Priority disagreed over the lead single. Originally pushing "Goldyn Chyld," produced by DJ Premier, Priority executives decided to try to release the Dr. Dre-produced "The Whoop" instead, against the wishes of both Ras Kass and Dr. Dre. As he was finishing up Goldyn Chyld, Kass was pulled over in California and arrested for a D.U.I., marking his third; though sentenced to jail time, he was given an extension. Two weeks before the start of his sentence, Priority informed him of their decision not to put out Goldyn Chyld after all. Becoming a fugitive, Ras attained the masters to his project, recorded some music, and finally turned himself in to police.[10] During this time, he also had minor problems with producer the Alchemist, who sold Ras a beat that he later re-sold to rapper Jadakiss, which ultimately formed the basis for the track "We Gon' Make It."
Metadata And Engagement

Views : 176,353
Genre: Music
Date of upload: Aug 23, 2019 ^^


Rating : 4.962 (49/5,134 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2022-04-09T18:49:27.160923Z
See in json
Tags
Connections
Nyo connections found on the description ;_; report a issue lol

YouTube Comments - 481 Comments

Top Comments of this video!! :3

@UPROXXVideo

4 years ago

Ras Kass is the next guest on People's Party with Talib Kweli. Episode debuts on UPROXX Video Monday 9amEST. And if you are on the move, subscribe to the People's Party audio podcast: Apple -- podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/peoples-party-with-t…

111 |

@Carlos-Freeze-Tha_Hated

7 months ago

The fact that a West Coast rapper captured mid 90s Miami perfectly in regards to an underrated ass movie is crazy

14 |

@loperkins4419

1 year ago

RIP COOLIO🙏🏽✨26years later & this joint is still in heavy rotation on my playlist‼️

51 |

@browardc2428

9 months ago

This instrumental give you the most South Florida in the 90's feeling ever 🔥🔥🔥

24 |

@trentyates418

3 years ago

Soul on ice is the west coast illmatic!

19 |

@IHMadeThis

4 years ago

Wow. Flashback. I haven't heard this in more than 20 years and I just rapped along with the first 2 verses. Crazy,

133 |

@yuvithedope

1 year ago

Rass Kass is one of the best artist R.I.P Coolio 🕊️

11 |

@HustlasFigureItOut

4 years ago

Top 100 best songs in rap history.

276 |

@TommyWitDaTone

2 years ago

One of the greatest beats of all time

53 |

@madvilliandoom6163

4 years ago

Ras kass is underrated

96 |

@ORIGINALTHINKA

4 years ago

Peace, Soul on Ice is one of the greatest hip hop albums of all time. Peace to Ras Kass!

59 |

@JONTEE206

3 years ago

I almost teared up thinking of the memories. One of the cleanest one hitter HipHop joints ever. Bass line gets me every time.

97 |

@josiahfadder

4 years ago

This song is so fucking beautiful

18 |

@davidwood8439

1 year ago

Rass Kass was dope, hope he can make a living on interviews, give this man his flowers, RIP Coolio

55 |

@DovelleCB

3 years ago

Classic!!!! Takes me back to 1996, 25 years ago WOW! The middle school era for me. I would blast this song on the TV everytime somebody order the video on The Box. That's how old I am now, crazy how time flies. Dope song and dope movie too The Substitute.

46 |

@4g6XX

2 years ago

This joint be having a mf having memories of a past he didn't have.

7 |

@joshuaberry5465

4 years ago

Ras kass..lyrical monster...period

52 |

@realmaticktv7006

1 year ago

R.I.P. Coolio Mad Love for you and condolences to your family

9 |

@HesTooOpinionated

1 year ago

I remember when this first came out. Good movie and dope track. RIP Coolio

6 |

@themoscatofamily2353

1 year ago

This song got me through some times. RIP Coolio 🙏🏽

64 |

Go To Top