Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Young Black Teenagers

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Genres
  
Record label
  
Years active
  
1989–1994

Genre
  
Hip hop music

Young Black Teenagers wwwenutexaseduClassesBremene316kgifsybt1gif

Labels
  
Sound of Urban ListenersMCA Records

Associated acts
  
Public EnemyHank Shocklee

Past members
  
ATAFirst BornTommy NeverKamronDJ Skribble

Origin
  
New York City, New York, United States (1991)

Albums
  
Dead Enz Kidz Doin' Lifetime Bidz, Young Black Teenagers

Members
  
Tommy Never, DJ Skribble, Kamron, ATA, Firstborn

Similar
  
Public Enemy, Edgar Allen Floe, Dazzie Dee, Grand Daddy IU, Boom Bap Project

Young black teenagers roll with the flavor


Young Black Teenagers (YBT) was an American rap group consisting of Kamron, First Born, Tommy Never, and DJ Skribble. Despite their name, none of the group was black. They intended their name as a tribute to the black culture they were influenced by, but some thought their name was offensive or ridiculous.

Contents

YBT had the support of the prominent rap group Public Enemy and their producer Hank Shocklee signed them as the first act of his label Sound of Urban Listeners (SOUL). They released their second album with MCA Records.

Their debut album Young Black Teenagers (1991) featured the singles "Nobody Knows Kelli" (about the character Kelly Bundy from the sitcom Married... with Children), "Proud to Be Black", and "To My Donna" (an attack on Madonna for taking the rhythm track of the Public Enemy song "Security of the First World" for her single "Justify My Love"). After the first album, Tommy Never inexplicably left the group, and YBT became a foursome, with A.T.A. contributing more vocally. Their second album, Dead Enz Kidz Doin' Lifetime Bidz (1993), featured the song "Tap the Bottle", their biggest single. The band did gain some publicity (albeit not necessarily positive) for the song "Time To Make The Dough Nutz", as it contained a sample of Rush's 1981 hit "Tom Sawyer", angering many devoted Rush fans, even though YBT insisted it had been meant as a tribute.

YBT were listed among VH1's "Least Hiphop Moments", where they were overtly ridiculed for their overall name and premise.

After "Tap The Bottle" became their only worldwide hit, YBT called it a day in 1994.

DJ Skribble worked for MTV for several years as an in-house DJ. Kamron (Ron Winge) along with ATA (Rodney) previously ran a music studio in Roosevelt, New York and produced hip hop tracks.

DJ Kamron (Ron Winge) is now co-founder of the Marksmen in Manhattan, producing tracks for Public Enemy, Ice Cube, Jerry Wonder, Jill Scott, 50 Cent, and TV commercials, films, video games and other prominent musicians. He also works at Geejam Studios as a senior audio engineer. He played the role of Jamal in House Party 2, Kamron is included in the credits from the Juice (film) producing all DJ Q's turntable scratching.

A.T.A. (Rodney) is a manager and a clothing entrepreneur. First Born owns and operates a tattoo shop in Brooklyn, New York called Ringleaderz Ink. Tommy Never worked with Clivillés + Cole in The S.O.U.L. S.Y.S.T.E.M. after leaving YBT. He now runs a wealth management firm in New York.

In 2015, DJ Kamron stated on his private Facebook page that he may eventually release the 3rd unreleased YBT album that was recorded back in 1994. He had stated that he still has, and owns, all the master DATs from the unreleased 3rd album.

Songs

Tap the BottleDead Enz Kidz Doin' Lifetime Bidz · 1993
Time to Make the Dough NutzDead Enz Kidz Doin' Lifetime Bidz · 1993
Roll w/ The FlavorDead Enz Kidz Doin' Lifetime Bidz · 1993

References

Young Black Teenagers Wikipedia


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