@@bleiburg101 I am not an American of Irish descent, Of Italian ancestry and 100% Catholic born and will be Catholic dead when I die. 2 of the founders are Daniel O'Connor and Erick Everlast are of Irish ancestry and likely descendants from Irish Catholic immigrants to the USA in the 19th century. One guy is of Eastern European descent which the "This is It" guys pointed out.
After more than 3 decades this old school hip hop anthem is still a banger! Any joint that plays this hit erupts into a chaotic carnival, you cannot not jump!
I was a sophomore in high school when this song came out! The combo of House of Pain and Cypress Hill were a potent combination. They did a lot together.
@@shindigga420 there were a lot of good rap groups in the 90s. I loved De La Soul, Leaders of the New School, Tribe Called Quest, Onyx. Oh to be 16 and in the 90s again
As an Irish Catholic kid growing up in the inner city of Boston in the 90s you have no idea what this song did for us. It was a great time when everybody everybody flew their colors showed their pride of whatever country they were descended from and there was no conflict everybody appreciated everybody’s pride and as a kid I grew up in the boxing gyms as a fighter us Irish guys had everything green with shamrocks or Notre Dame Italians had all their Italian gear the Puerto Rican kids had their gear and just made everything seem better as we all train together and help each other get better this song will always bring a smile to my face and get me off my feet even at 46 years old
@@James-wj8eq during Irelands struggles American born Irish decent Americans sent Ireland weapons and funds to fight back against occupation of the brits, many of this Irish Americans were jailed/ended for doing so, put some respect on Irish Americans.
These Irish boys commanding respect, in the RAP world...just like Living Color commanding respect in the ROCK world, with Cult of Personality...around the same time ...GREAT STUFF!!!!
@@LibertySpamwhat's that got to do with the price of eggs? Almost everybody knows what your saying but it has nothing to do with what he's saying does it? He's talking about a certain point in time
@@brianmurphy6243 Boston Irish? The group was from the Los Angeles area, DJ Lethal is from Latvia, Danny Boy and Everlast were originally from New York.
I was in San Diego when this song dropped. You heard it in every club- alternative, hip-hop, country, etc. And the floors were packed! This is THE Gen X anthem.
the 90's era hip-hop/rap is still THE best. this tune filled EVERY dance floor, EVERY time it was played in EVERY club across Ireland... we adopted them 😎🤘☘ Go n'éirí an t-ádh libh ☘ Respect & Peace ☘
Hearing and dancing to this on the floor at the club was unforgettable. The energy it brings out in people was incredible back in the 90’s and I was in my early 20’s.
Still a classic to this day, I had the first House of Pain album on tape and I played it until the tape was ruined. It's definitely an anthem b/c other hip-hop groups will throw this song on just to get the crowd pumped.
My cousin was in boston on a soccer scholarship. His younger brothers visited from ireland and this banger came out and became their family anthem. Fast forward to now. Still gets us all back on the dancefloor albeit a lot less jumping on our middleaged knees
In the UK I was about 16 when this came out and yes it was a Nightclub banger, back then you could get into clubs if you were under 18 if you were tall and looked a bit older generally. No ID asked for then. Great days. Yep the UK club scene people loved this we went wild! Often asking the DJ to hit us with it again twice on the bounce! Early to mid 90s were awesome days in the UK club scene. So awesome, even people such as Shaggy used to come visit various Cities across the UK and do a set at some Clubs.
Being part Irish and growing up in the ghetto I loved this , just like when I discovered Native American rappers like Litefoot and Snotty Nosed Rez Kids and Drezus since I’m part Native on both sides of my family so it was music that spoke to me and my experience
@@PathtoYahawah sounds like you have been reading some of the pseudo bs , there were some African blood in some of the tribes in lower South America, but not in North America,the Black in North American tribes came from the fact that Native tribes welcomed runaway slaves and why the Underground Railroad used Native trails as routes
@@PathtoYahawah Natives and Native Hispanic have more Asian features because of the distant ancestors from the ancient Polynesians that we are related to just like native Hawaiians
@@DarkAngel1985Mike dude, you are so ignorant it's not even funny no they do not have those Asian features since those features were first created in Africa they are the original inhabitants everywhere and most people have melanin in their skin pigments all those who lack that is diluted from the Caucasian that came down from the Caucasus mountains after Moses went up there with the Pig to clean up the diseased environment they lived in and he taught them civility!
I was 22 when this song came out living my best life of course because I mean I was 22! And being at house parties because back in the day that’s what we did right we had a lot of house parties and also at the clubs when the song would come on just seeing everybody get together people you didn’t know people of all races, jumping around singing it was such a beautiful thing! My heart hurts for what’s going on in this country right now because I didn’t grow up like that and it sucks that my daughter has to. If you do not have fun, listening to the song you’re dead inside! I mean I would be up there, jumping in 5” heels!
That beat is just SO damn clever . Between the squeal and the de-tuned piano loop from "Popeye the Hitchhiker" you end up with this little melodic loop that's actually kind of fun and airy .
Listen...this song/rap group did what so many have tried before but failed!...this song is a club, strip club, house, car, anywhere anthem hands down. The beat, the mood, the theme, the lyrics and the atmosphere is by far bone chilling years and years after releasing. This breaks all color barriers and race dividing cultures. Its about feeling...and damnit, this song gives you the feels! EVERYONE should remember where they were when they heard this classic for the first time..especially if it was when it was first released!....damnit i had the cassette and cassette single!!
Jump Around at Camp Randall (Wisconsin Badgers), is an experience. Even the opposing teams and fans jump when it comes on. Shakes the entire stadium and registers on the Richter Scale. They had to do renovations to make sure the stadium wouldn't collapse when it plays.
Appreciate you guys letting the song roll! Especially when you know the song or the joke coming up and the hosts cut it, it's like a glass of cold water to the face.
Irish/French Catholic growing up in Montreal Quebec and this song happened after I grew up, moved away and had kids but I didn't miss out. I loved hearing it the first time and it's still on fire.
DJ Muggs dropped some of the sickest beats ever in Hip Hop. Way back with 7A3, then with Cypress Hill & House of Pain. Not to mention songs he produced for other artists.
I don't know a single person that doesn't at LEAST bob their head to this song. And every time I hear it, even in this video I can't help but throw my hands up. I was in 8th grade when this song came out. I've also got Everlast first three solo albums. And he's got some in studio video's on his TH-cam channel still rock'n it. His TH-cam channel is "Everlast Music".
i miss 90s rap when there were so many genres of rap (more early 90s) and rappers were really exploring where they could take the genre. Now everybody wants to sound like one another
Def top 100. Even the brothers used to get down to this. There was an actual Irish gang in Pittsburgh that made this their anthem and they were crazy as hell I think bc of this song at least for a few years
That album was pretty dang good. I didn't even listen to rap at all but when this came out i was rocking it . Still once in a while i'll go back to it . Reminds me of younger days in the early 90s
As a 54 white guy who played this in college along the rest of the 90's this is a banger. I mean, if it wasn't for this song, I'd still be doing the white guy dance in the corner. JUMP! Love how you guys are so open minded. PEACE!
I was a 80’s metal head but loved this song. First time I remembering hearing it was on some old cable station called the Box. You could call in and request a video like PPV. Might of been a dollar or something This song was on ALL the time.
I was 14 but not jumping around in the living room. We had so many underage clubs in my city. Bars would give a week night, a lazer tag place, just some huge empty building, roller skating rink, whatever. We were completely smooshed in and all jumping together. I mean seriously, no matter your dancing skills, everyone can jump. Wow this took me back. How lucky were we? You could never do that today. Give kids a place to go and you didn't find trouble. But, these days, they would bring it. It's sad.
I miss the 90s house of pain, Snow, lords of the underground,fushnikens, etc these were a few the djs would play in our elementary schools in Toronto Ontario
I love jump around house of pain get lumped into one hit wonder you listen to that album fine malt lyrics lot good songs on that album underrated album along with same as it ever was who's the man shamrock and shenanigans on point fed up legend
@3:28 Yo this was one of my first CD's, I felt like I had made it! CD was an upgrade to trailer park here, but I digress. I am impressed that you even played the intro to the 2nd track on this! Solid fam!
I work in the Hospitality industry and EVERY wedding reception when this comes on, people go ballistic!!! To this day, this comes on, my old ass is jumping around 😂😂😂😂
At the time this came out, I was deep into metal/grunge and the only rap I listened to was Beastie Boys and Run DMC. But when I heard this song it got me hooked back into rap again, at least more than before. And I'm Irish/Scottish ancestry. When I hear this song I can't NOT start jumping!
This was the house party anthem for the Chicago South Side Irish in the 90s. Word to ya Moms, I'm here to drop bombs. I got more rhymes than the Bible got psalms!!! There's a version of Ice Cube's "Check Yo self" that sounds A LOT like this.
My music is from the 1970s always but i remember my kids teaching me to Dance Around to this in the 90s in the kitchen while i was suppose to be cooking dinner and helping them with homework😅😅😅😅😅
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What year were you guys all born....around '78 I'm guessing?
I’m a 63 year old white woman from an Irish Catholic family living in England. I bloody LOVE this banger!!!
Well they aren't actually Irish Catholic
@@bleiburg101 Good point, well made.
You're cute 😊
@@bleiburg101 I am not an American of Irish descent, Of Italian ancestry and 100% Catholic born and will be Catholic dead when I die. 2 of the founders are Daniel O'Connor and Erick Everlast are of Irish ancestry and likely descendants from Irish Catholic immigrants to the USA in the 19th century. One guy is of Eastern European descent which the "This is It" guys pointed out.
@@bleiburg101 They're Celtic - that's ancient and is now found in every corner of the world where Irish eyes are smiling.
After more than 3 decades this old school hip hop anthem is still a banger! Any joint that plays this hit erupts into a chaotic carnival, you cannot not jump!
You could even say it's Everlast(ing)
I was a sophomore in high school when this song came out! The combo of House of Pain and Cypress Hill were a potent combination. They did a lot together.
I was a SR. Nostalgia!
Funkdoobiest as well.
@@shindigga420 there were a lot of good rap groups in the 90s. I loved De La Soul, Leaders of the New School, Tribe Called Quest, Onyx. Oh to be 16 and in the 90s again
Ow were old.😮
Fo sure! My very first concert was cypress
I’m coming up on 69 and I so dig this. It came out year before my first grandchild came into this world.
As an Irish Catholic kid growing up in the inner city of Boston in the 90s you have no idea what this song did for us. It was a great time when everybody everybody flew their colors showed their pride of whatever country they were descended from and there was no conflict everybody appreciated everybody’s pride and as a kid I grew up in the boxing gyms as a fighter us Irish guys had everything green with shamrocks or Notre Dame Italians had all their Italian gear the Puerto Rican kids had their gear and just made everything seem better as we all train together and help each other get better this song will always bring a smile to my face and get me off my feet even at 46 years old
yup people dont get how great the 90s were we are all pulling together respecting each other the future looked great
Philly lite up to this song also .we have a huge Irish base in Philly and this was the anthem
Being from Ireland myself, how are you Irish if you're born in the U.S???
@@James-wj8eq during Irelands struggles American born Irish decent Americans sent Ireland weapons and funds to fight back against occupation of the brits, many of this Irish Americans were jailed/ended for doing so, put some respect on Irish Americans.
The funny thing is H.O.P. has nothing to do with Boston!
Being an 80s kid and hitting clubs in the 90s, I tell you this was a certified club banger. When you heard that intro the dance floor went crazzzy.
These Irish boys commanding respect, in the RAP world...just like Living Color commanding respect in the ROCK world, with Cult of Personality...around the same time ...GREAT STUFF!!!!
Bigdaddymojo!!! EXACTLY!! ❤
Black Men invented rock music. See Chuck Berry
@@LibertySpamwhat's that got to do with the price of eggs?
Almost everybody knows what your saying but it has nothing to do with what he's saying does it?
He's talking about a certain point in time
Boston Irish but Irish is Irish.
We dance like all others on our slave history.
Jump.
@@brianmurphy6243 Boston Irish? The group was from the Los Angeles area, DJ Lethal is from Latvia, Danny Boy and Everlast were originally from New York.
I was in San Diego when this song dropped. You heard it in every club- alternative, hip-hop, country, etc. And the floors were packed! This is THE Gen X anthem.
2024 at age 59 still bumpin this banger!!!!!
The Irish from House Of Pain have already been very successful here in Brazil. Hail to the Irish from here in Brazil.
Erin Go bragh!
This song had everyone jumping at high school dances and parties. Good times and memories for sure. It's still on my gym playlist for cardio.
still getting us jumping
I still do when this song plays!
the 90's era hip-hop/rap is still THE best. this tune filled EVERY dance floor, EVERY time it was played in EVERY club across Ireland... we adopted them 😎🤘☘
Go n'éirí an t-ádh libh ☘
Respect & Peace ☘
It never got old. I still blast this in my car
2:26 Top O' The Morning and Shamrocks & Shenanigans also charted, if memory serves.
My 7 month old grandson loves to bounce to this song. He heard it when I was watching college football, now I play it for him.
Stone cold classic right here. Never fails to get any crown in a club going crazy.
DJ Muggs is a phenomenal producer, classic hip hop
Came out my freshman year of college and we literally did jump around when this came on at the clubs.
I heard this song in a recent commercial and I dropped everything and jumped!!!😂
This song NEVER gets old.... classic. I was 24 when this came out, loved it from day one
I was 22
Hearing and dancing to this on the floor at the club was unforgettable. The energy it brings out in people was incredible back in the 90’s and I was in my early 20’s.
Still a classic to this day, I had the first House of Pain album on tape and I played it until the tape was ruined. It's definitely an anthem b/c other hip-hop groups will throw this song on just to get the crowd pumped.
I was 14 when this masterpiece dropped.
I still rock it in my car being 46 by now 😁
Hasn't lost ANYTHING of its fire, and never will 👍
My cousin was in boston on a soccer scholarship. His younger brothers visited from ireland and this banger came out and became their family anthem. Fast forward to now. Still gets us all back on the dancefloor albeit a lot less jumping on our middleaged knees
I saw these guys open for Primus when both were in their prime. So great live. The whole show was like a three hour aerobics class lol
My name is Mud has to have one of the NASTIEST BASS LINES EVER!!!😲😲😲
@@errollpalmer9568 Always a fun one live. Les is amazing.
This never gets old. Still gets me hype!
Everlast’s “What it’s Like” is one of the prettiest songs ever IMO.
Sophomore year, '92, just before I turned 16. MAAAAAANNNNN! I miss the 90s
It still holds up as a classic
In the UK I was about 16 when this came out and yes it was a Nightclub banger, back then you could get into clubs if you were under 18 if you were tall and looked a bit older generally. No ID asked for then. Great days. Yep the UK club scene people loved this we went wild! Often asking the DJ to hit us with it again twice on the bounce! Early to mid 90s were awesome days in the UK club scene. So awesome, even people such as Shaggy used to come visit various Cities across the UK and do a set at some Clubs.
80’s baby over here. Once I here the bagpipes at the family reunion and I embarrass everyone with my dancing
I just turned 50 and this takes me back. It was such a fun time!
I was in junior high and this was played at every school dance. This Irish girl was jumping the entire song ! I still listen to House of Pain🤘
Man remember watching this video in BET! How can you not love this song. This is one of a true classic. 🙏🏻🤙🏼
Being part Irish and growing up in the ghetto I loved this , just like when I discovered Native American rappers like Litefoot and Snotty Nosed Rez Kids and Drezus since I’m part Native on both sides of my family so it was music that spoke to me and my experience
The Original Natives were Black man I don’t see that in ur features
@@PathtoYahawah sounds like you have been reading some of the pseudo bs , there were some African blood in some of the tribes in lower South America, but not in North America,the Black in North American tribes came from the fact that Native tribes welcomed runaway slaves and why the Underground Railroad used Native trails as routes
@@PathtoYahawah Natives and Native Hispanic have more Asian features because of the distant ancestors from the ancient Polynesians that we are related to just like native Hawaiians
@@DarkAngel1985Mike dude, you are so ignorant it's not even funny no they do not have those Asian features since those features were first created in Africa they are the original inhabitants everywhere and most people have melanin in their skin pigments all those who lack that is diluted from the Caucasian that came down from the Caucasus mountains after Moses went up there with the Pig to clean up the diseased environment they lived in and he taught them civility!
Bro check out “why” by First Nation artist Supaman, it will make you cry and change your life if you really listen, video is super powerful too.
I was 22 when this song came out living my best life of course because I mean I was 22! And being at house parties because back in the day that’s what we did right we had a lot of house parties and also at the clubs when the song would come on just seeing everybody get together people you didn’t know people of all races, jumping around singing it was such a beautiful thing! My heart hurts for what’s going on in this country right now because I didn’t grow up like that and it sucks that my daughter has to. If you do not have fun, listening to the song you’re dead inside! I mean I would be up there, jumping in 5” heels!
This song is iconic. Brought me all the way back. I was in my early 20's and this song was everywhere.
Third quarter Jump Around happens at every Wisconsin Badgers football game.
This dropped just days before the summer break going into my senior year in high school. We partied to this jam all summer.
This song can turn a basketball ball arena into a madhouse! Amazing...
That beat is just SO damn clever . Between the squeal and the de-tuned piano loop from "Popeye the Hitchhiker" you end up with this little melodic loop that's actually kind of fun and airy .
There are SOOOO many layers of the NYC Irish American experience. ☘️🗽
@@michaelbhattonnope. Not a single band member is from Boston and the band formed in Los Angeles.
Can't get enough of this , like. It's addicting❤❤❤
Didnt matter who you were we all loveded it😊
Listen...this song/rap group did what so many have tried before but failed!...this song is a club, strip club, house, car, anywhere anthem hands down. The beat, the mood, the theme, the lyrics and the atmosphere is by far bone chilling years and years after releasing. This breaks all color barriers and race dividing cultures. Its about feeling...and damnit, this song gives you the feels!
EVERYONE should remember where they were when they heard this classic for the first time..especially if it was when it was first released!....damnit i had the cassette and cassette single!!
I was a freshman at Penn State fall 1992. Let me say it was played non stop loudly everywhere....from metal pubs to country bars to hip hop clubs
Jump Around at Camp Randall (Wisconsin Badgers), is an experience. Even the opposing teams and fans jump when it comes on. Shakes the entire stadium and registers on the Richter Scale. They had to do renovations to make sure the stadium wouldn't collapse when it plays.
Had to scroll down way to far for a Wisconsin comment....
Appreciate you guys letting the song roll! Especially when you know the song or the joke coming up and the hosts cut it, it's like a glass of cold water to the face.
Irish/French Catholic growing up in Montreal Quebec and this song happened after I grew up, moved away and had kids but I didn't miss out. I loved hearing it the first time and it's still on fire.
DJ Muggs dropped some of the sickest beats ever in Hip Hop. Way back with 7A3, then with Cypress Hill & House of Pain. Not to mention songs he produced for other artists.
I have Coolin in Cali on cassette in my collection.
This song makes me proud to be part Irish. Jump around!!
I don't know a single person that doesn't at LEAST bob their head to this song. And every time I hear it, even in this video I can't help but throw my hands up.
I was in 8th grade when this song came out. I've also got Everlast first three solo albums. And he's got some in studio video's on his TH-cam channel still rock'n it. His TH-cam channel is "Everlast Music".
This whole album, in general, is pretty good.
I LOVED THIS SONG!!! I grew up in Boston area and this was played at EVERY Celtics and Patriots game!! I love it!!!🎉
and H.O.P. aren't from Boston.
i miss 90s rap when there were so many genres of rap (more early 90s) and rappers were really exploring where they could take the genre. Now everybody wants to sound like one another
I can't help but think of Mrs Doubtfire. ❤😆
Facts!! 😂
Def top 100. Even the brothers used to get down to this. There was an actual Irish gang in Pittsburgh that made this their anthem and they were crazy as hell I think bc of this song at least for a few years
This was our football hype song in high school. (Go Irish!)
59 now and still jumpin around when this comes on!😎
When I was in High School we used to listen to this song during Gym class lol.
That’s kickass! Maybe I actually would have went to/enjoyed gym class if we were allowed to blast tunes! So cool!
My boys are in their 20's, and they love it. Only a few songs cross generations, and this is one.
30 years and still ❤🔥❤🔥❤🔥❤🔥❤🔥❤🔥
Their second album was severely slept on. While they didn't chart (On Point may have minorly) the whole album is nice. Check it out if you haven't.
Same As It Ever Was is just so goddamned raw. I played that album to death. Still slaps!
for real. the jazz loops are fire
Damn right. Truth Crushed was ok too, then Whitey Ford was the shit. La Coka Nostra came hard.....
That album was pretty dang good. I didn't even listen to rap at all but when this came out i was rocking it . Still once in a while i'll go back to it . Reminds me of younger days in the early 90s
As a 54 white guy who played this in college along the rest of the 90's this is a banger. I mean, if it wasn't for this song, I'd still be doing the white guy dance in the corner. JUMP! Love how you guys are so open minded. PEACE!
Jump,Jump, Jump, still Jumping,❤ Great music 🎶🎶🎶🎶
I forgot all about that intro!!! Maaann, that was good!!! I quote this, song all the time.. "I aint going out like no punk bitxh!" Soooo good! ❤
That entire album was fire...Greatest line ever.."Ya make me sick like Strawberry Quik"....
This never gets old
It takes me back to high school. ❤
Jump Around is One of the Greatest jamz of all-time, along with 'It Takes Two', In Da Club, and California Love‼️🤔
I used to go to clubbing in the 90s. And people will go crazy every time this song comes on.
I was a 80’s metal head but loved this song. First time I remembering hearing it was on some old cable station called the Box. You could call in and request a video like PPV. Might of been a dollar or something
This song was on ALL the time.
I was 14 but not jumping around in the living room. We had so many underage clubs in my city. Bars would give a week night, a lazer tag place, just some huge empty building, roller skating rink, whatever.
We were completely smooshed in and all jumping together. I mean seriously, no matter your dancing skills, everyone can jump. Wow this took me back.
How lucky were we? You could never do that today. Give kids a place to go and you didn't find trouble. But, these days, they would bring it. It's sad.
Listening to them to in the 90’s this is the first time seeing the music video
Y'all are pumping out the Hits 🤘🤘
Everyone was jumping to this back in the day
Tunes is a banger then and now. Im from the UK 🇬🇧 and kicked ass when i was at school.
I miss the 90s house of pain, Snow, lords of the underground,fushnikens, etc these were a few the djs would play in our elementary schools in Toronto Ontario
Wore this cassette, along with Cypress Hill Black Sunday, out in the 90's man, rolling my slammed 67' C-10.
I love jump around house of pain get lumped into one hit wonder you listen to that album fine malt lyrics lot good songs on that album underrated album along with same as it ever was who's the man shamrock and shenanigans on point fed up legend
The rock version of shamrocks and shenanigans would always cause my amp to overheat😂
It is an everlasting song
Song slayed. Video was as fitting. Great production on Muggs as well as the video production. And people look over the diss at the end fade
Seeing the oldest guy mashing with this jam the hardest brings a smile to my heart. That dude knew it wasn't about no color.
You guys are the absolute best!
@3:28 Yo this was one of my first CD's, I felt like I had made it! CD was an upgrade to trailer park here, but I digress. I am impressed that you even played the intro to the 2nd track on this! Solid fam!
I remeber everlast. Back in the 90's my era. Was banging bro. 1992. Where hip hop songs reigned supreme. They had bars for real. 🔥 🔥 🔥 🔥
Ooo the best times being a teen in the 90's! This song transcended all groups, if this song came on you were gonna jump jump!
I work in the Hospitality industry and EVERY wedding reception when this comes on, people go ballistic!!! To this day, this comes on, my old ass is jumping around 😂😂😂😂
It does it every time!!!
At the time this came out, I was deep into metal/grunge and the only rap I listened to was Beastie Boys and Run DMC. But when I heard this song it got me hooked back into rap again, at least more than before. And I'm Irish/Scottish ancestry. When I hear this song I can't NOT start jumping!
I was in the 9th grade at a "party" head banging and jumping till my legs hurt when this first came out. Ahhh thank yall this took me back! ❤
I remember when this first came out and oh my God it was so much fun
This was the house party anthem for the Chicago South Side Irish in the 90s.
Word to ya Moms, I'm here to drop bombs.
I got more rhymes than the Bible got psalms!!!
There's a version of Ice Cube's "Check Yo self" that sounds A LOT like this.
CERTIFIED HIP HOP CLASSIC FOR SURE!! The hood still goes hard for this Anthem
My music is from the 1970s always but i remember my kids teaching me to Dance Around to this in the 90s in the kitchen while i was suppose to be cooking dinner and helping them with homework😅😅😅😅😅
92, what a Time to be alive whoooo!!
most people dont know the screech in the hook is a sample of Prince screaming.
Has no idea! Ta mate!
Classic! Their 3 albums are hella underrated. If you want that hard core boom bap H.O.P, wu tang, funk doobiest and cypress hill.