Their track "A Gangster's Wife" from 2005 captured street life and relationships with raw storytelling.
For a sense of their style, check out "A Gangster's Wife" or "Why You Worried? (feat. T Train)." They give you the plainspoken vibe that defined their catalog.
MS Krazie's music offers a straightforward look at Chicago's street rap scene in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Songs like "A Gangster's Wife" and "Why You Worried? (feat. T Train)" deal with the realities of that world without much polish. Their work still pops up in conversations about that era's hip-hop.
Curtis "Coo Coo Cal" Huffman and Reginald "Lil' Rel" Rogers put out tracks together in the late '90s and early 2000s. They released albums like "Krayzie Bone Presents: Thug Mentality 1999" and later "Retribution" and "Hell's Kitchen." After that period, details about their activity as a duo are thin.
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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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