Warp Brothers
The Warp Brothers were a 1990s electronic duo consisting of Keith "DJ Keef" Tucker and Robert "DJ Bobby B" Brooks. Their sound leaned into electro funk, with...
The pages that open this catalog up fastest
These picks surface the stronger lyric pages first instead of dropping you into one endless list.
The fast read
The facts this page is built to carry clearly
Use this page as the public reference for the artist summary, linked lyric pages, and any LyroVerse editor's note on the page. Listener comments remain user-generated context.
Keep moving through Warp Brothers
Archive material and source history
The Warp Brothers were a 1990s electronic duo consisting of Keith "DJ Keef" Tucker and Robert "DJ Bobby B" Brooks. Their sound leaned into electro funk, with Tucker handling the music and Brooks writing lyrics that often touched on mental health and social issues. Their debut single "Going Insane" from 1996 became their commercial breakthrough, exploring themes of mental illness over a pulsating beat.
That track, along with songs like "We Will Survive" and "Phatt Bass," helped define their style. They released a compilation called "Funkin' Around" in 1997 and followed with the album "Mindbenderz" in 1999, which continued their focus on social commentary. The duo's use of unlicensed samples led to some legal disputes during their career.
After their active period, a collection of unreleased material called "The Lost Tapes" came out in 2006. The Warp Brothers' music blended electro funk with lyrical content that was sometimes provocative, which drew both attention and criticism at the time.
What this artist page can answer fast
Where should I start with Warp Brothers on LyroVerse?
The Start here section opens with We Will Survive, Going Insane, and Phatt Bass so you can move through the artist's stronger lyric pages first.
How many lyric pages are live for Warp Brothers?
LyroVerse currently has 3 visible lyric pages for Warp Brothers.
Not just lyrics. The conversation around them.
Follow the artist, compare interpretations across songs, and leave corrections that help the catalog stay sharp.
What people are saying
No listener comments on Warp Brothers yet.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
Sign in to post the first listener note. Reporting stays open to everyone.