A late-1990s underground group that mixed hip-hop with hardcore and punk, delivering politically charged lyrics from the streets.
For their tone, try 'Daqui Pra Frente' or 'O Amanhã a Deus Pertence' - they're more rallying cries than pop hooks.
They came out of São Paulo's underground rap scene with a sound that wasn't designed for broad radio play. Their debut album 'A Bomba' in 1998 got them noticed, and tracks like 'Voz do Povo' carried confrontational energy about inequality and street life. The music stayed raw, aggressive, and rooted in a specific place and moment.
The group formed around DMC Roger on vocals, DJ C4 on production, D'Bow on bass, and Pedro D'Paula on drums. They followed their debut with self-titled and concept records, then kept recording through the early 2000s with albums like 'Pacto de Sangue' that dug into violence and social injustice.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
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