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Long Division 2023 Opening Night
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Biographie de Too Many T's
Leon Rhymes, Standaloft and DJ Savage Henry.
Two turntables, one battle-mixer, two mics, three baseball caps, thousands of delighted fan and hundreds of thousands of plays online.
Your brain will think it’s listening to classic, golden-era hip hop, but your arse will know it’s dancing to a formula that’s been updated...it’s hip hop, make no mistake, but it’s hip hop in the NOW.
Huffington Post know it. After seeing a live performance, they called them “The UK Beastie Boys”. Numerous other press have referenced the similarities in live energy. BBC 6 Music, Xfm, Soho Radio, Radio X all know it, with Too Many T’s music featured on their shows.
Snoop Dogg knows it, so do Jurassic 5, Wu Tang Clan, Ugly Duckling, People Under the Stairs, Abdominal, even Big Daddy Kane, who have all had Too Many T’s open for them.
Rob Da Bank really knows it, he asked Too Many T’s to play the album ‘South City’ on main stage at 2017 Bestival! Secret Garden Party know it, they witnessed Too Many T’s pull the biggest daytime crowd ever seen at Eddy Temple Morris’s 1200 capacity dance arena there. Glastonbury, Boomtown, Fusion, Kendal Calling, Shambala and many other festivals know it too, they felt the incredible positive energy buzzing from their stages and saw the smiles and wows in the faces of each crowd. Bass music hero Flux Pavilion, (Josh Steele) knows better than most. Alongside the innovative genius of Odjbox, Josh has worked with Too Many T’s on their debut album South City, an album of consummate skill.
It’s one thing to make people think with a record. It’s another to make people laugh with one. But to do both, with the same body of work, is something truly special.
This album will dazzle you with the skill of T’s flows, astonish you with the width of their lyrics and get your booty shaking with the infectiousness of Flux Pavilion’s future-bass production. Your brain will think it’s listening to classic, golden-era hip hop, but your arse will know it’s dancing to a formula that’s been updated...it’s hip hop, make no mistake, but it’s hip hop in the NOW.
Plus d'infoTwo turntables, one battle-mixer, two mics, three baseball caps, thousands of delighted fan and hundreds of thousands of plays online.
Your brain will think it’s listening to classic, golden-era hip hop, but your arse will know it’s dancing to a formula that’s been updated...it’s hip hop, make no mistake, but it’s hip hop in the NOW.
Huffington Post know it. After seeing a live performance, they called them “The UK Beastie Boys”. Numerous other press have referenced the similarities in live energy. BBC 6 Music, Xfm, Soho Radio, Radio X all know it, with Too Many T’s music featured on their shows.
Snoop Dogg knows it, so do Jurassic 5, Wu Tang Clan, Ugly Duckling, People Under the Stairs, Abdominal, even Big Daddy Kane, who have all had Too Many T’s open for them.
Rob Da Bank really knows it, he asked Too Many T’s to play the album ‘South City’ on main stage at 2017 Bestival! Secret Garden Party know it, they witnessed Too Many T’s pull the biggest daytime crowd ever seen at Eddy Temple Morris’s 1200 capacity dance arena there. Glastonbury, Boomtown, Fusion, Kendal Calling, Shambala and many other festivals know it too, they felt the incredible positive energy buzzing from their stages and saw the smiles and wows in the faces of each crowd. Bass music hero Flux Pavilion, (Josh Steele) knows better than most. Alongside the innovative genius of Odjbox, Josh has worked with Too Many T’s on their debut album South City, an album of consummate skill.
It’s one thing to make people think with a record. It’s another to make people laugh with one. But to do both, with the same body of work, is something truly special.
This album will dazzle you with the skill of T’s flows, astonish you with the width of their lyrics and get your booty shaking with the infectiousness of Flux Pavilion’s future-bass production. Your brain will think it’s listening to classic, golden-era hip hop, but your arse will know it’s dancing to a formula that’s been updated...it’s hip hop, make no mistake, but it’s hip hop in the NOW.
Hip Hop
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