Encuentra fechas de giras y eventos de música en directo de tus grupos y artistas favoritos en tu ciudad. Recibe entradas para conciertos, noticias y confirmaciones de asistencia a conciertos con Bandsintown.
get app
Regístrate
Iniciar sesión
El da Sensei
2544 Seguidores
• 1 Próximos espectáculos
1 Próximos espectáculos
Never miss another El da Sensei concierto. Get alerts about tour announcements, concierto tickets, and shows near you with a free Bandsintown account.
Seguir
No hay próximos espectáculos en tu ciudad
Envía una solicitud a El da Sensei para que dé un concierto en tu ciudad
Solicitar un espectáculo
conciertos y fechas de la gira
Próximamente
Anteriores
Todos los eventos y retransmisiones en directo
Gira de El da Sensei
Los fans también siguen
Nas
1M Seguidores
Seguir
The Roots
739K Seguidores
Seguir
KRS-One
138K Seguidores
Seguir
J-Live
17K Seguidores
Seguir
Acerca De El da Sensei
El Da Sensei stepped onto the hip-hop scene as one half of the Newark, NJ, duo, Artifacts. The Artifacts first rose to fame with the hit "Wrong Side of the Tracks." After El Da Sensei and his partner Tame-One sent a rough demo to Bobbito the Barber at WKCR in New York, the group was signed to Big Beat/Atlantic Records. They released their debut album, Between a Rock & a Hard Place, in 1994 with "Wrong Side of the Tracks" as the lead single and video. After that initial hit, the Artifacts splashed the world with joints like "C'mon Wit Da Git Down" and "Dynamite Soul," and went onto tour the U.S. as well as Europe and Japan. They had developed a fan base of hardcore hip-hoppers, being graffiti artists and hip-hop purists themselves; they sparked a new sub-culture in hip-hop called "backpackers." In 1996, the group followed up their debut with their sophomore album, That's Them. Although not nearly successful as the first album, many hip-hop fans claim the album is an "underground classic," spawning the underground hits "The Art of Facts" and "The Ultimate." Shortly after the release of the second album, El and Tame decided on an amicable break up. After the split, El Da Sensei went on his own traveling around the world and appeared on numerous compilations from Japan to Norway to Germany. During this time, he dropped the singles "Frontline" and "Got That" to let fans know he was still working.
In the fall of 2002, El finally dropped his debut solo album, Relax, Relate, Release, through Seven Heads Entertainment. The album featured guest appearances from Sadat X (of Brand Nubian), J-Live, Organized Konfusion (Pharoah Monch and Prince Po), Mike Zoot & F.T., Asheru, and others.
In 2006 he returned with his sophomore album titled "The Unusual".
In the fall of 2002, El finally dropped his debut solo album, Relax, Relate, Release, through Seven Heads Entertainment. The album featured guest appearances from Sadat X (of Brand Nubian), J-Live, Organized Konfusion (Pharoah Monch and Prince Po), Mike Zoot & F.T., Asheru, and others.
In 2006 he returned with his sophomore album titled "The Unusual".
Mostrar más
Géneros:
Hip Hop
No hay próximos espectáculos en tu ciudad
Envía una solicitud a El da Sensei para que dé un concierto en tu ciudad
Solicitar un espectáculo
conciertos y fechas de la gira
Próximamente
Anteriores
Todos los eventos y retransmisiones en directo
Gira de El da Sensei
Acerca De El da Sensei
El Da Sensei stepped onto the hip-hop scene as one half of the Newark, NJ, duo, Artifacts. The Artifacts first rose to fame with the hit "Wrong Side of the Tracks." After El Da Sensei and his partner Tame-One sent a rough demo to Bobbito the Barber at WKCR in New York, the group was signed to Big Beat/Atlantic Records. They released their debut album, Between a Rock & a Hard Place, in 1994 with "Wrong Side of the Tracks" as the lead single and video. After that initial hit, the Artifacts splashed the world with joints like "C'mon Wit Da Git Down" and "Dynamite Soul," and went onto tour the U.S. as well as Europe and Japan. They had developed a fan base of hardcore hip-hoppers, being graffiti artists and hip-hop purists themselves; they sparked a new sub-culture in hip-hop called "backpackers." In 1996, the group followed up their debut with their sophomore album, That's Them. Although not nearly successful as the first album, many hip-hop fans claim the album is an "underground classic," spawning the underground hits "The Art of Facts" and "The Ultimate." Shortly after the release of the second album, El and Tame decided on an amicable break up. After the split, El Da Sensei went on his own traveling around the world and appeared on numerous compilations from Japan to Norway to Germany. During this time, he dropped the singles "Frontline" and "Got That" to let fans know he was still working.
In the fall of 2002, El finally dropped his debut solo album, Relax, Relate, Release, through Seven Heads Entertainment. The album featured guest appearances from Sadat X (of Brand Nubian), J-Live, Organized Konfusion (Pharoah Monch and Prince Po), Mike Zoot & F.T., Asheru, and others.
In 2006 he returned with his sophomore album titled "The Unusual".
In the fall of 2002, El finally dropped his debut solo album, Relax, Relate, Release, through Seven Heads Entertainment. The album featured guest appearances from Sadat X (of Brand Nubian), J-Live, Organized Konfusion (Pharoah Monch and Prince Po), Mike Zoot & F.T., Asheru, and others.
In 2006 he returned with his sophomore album titled "The Unusual".
Mostrar más
Géneros:
Hip Hop
Los fans también siguen
Nas
1M Seguidores
Seguir
The Roots
739K Seguidores
Seguir
KRS-One
138K Seguidores
Seguir
J-Live
17K Seguidores
Seguir
Vive la experiencia total con la aplicación de Bandsintown.