Rah Digga and Evil Dee made sharp, political records out of Philly in the 2000s.
For a quick sense of their sound, try "7th rose" or "Art de La Piste." They're both good examples of how the duo worked.
They carved out a space in the Philadelphia underground with records like "Secret Society" and "The Blackening." Songs like "7th rose" and "Art de La Piste" show Rah Digga's dense lyrics over Evil Dee's beats, all without chasing radio play. Their music stayed focused on political themes, which kept it raw and direct.
They started in the early 2000s with "Secret Society" in 2006, then put out albums like "Pillars of the Underground" in 2009 and "The Blackening" in 2014. Rah Digga handled the rapping and lyrics, Evil Dee the production, and they worked as a unit for over a decade. Their approach didn't shift much, just steady records from that Philly underground scene.
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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