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Pac Div's first mixtape, Sealed for Freshness: The Blend Tape, along with their first video, F.A.T Boys, was released in 2006.Focusing on their lives, adolescence and experiences in Southern California, their music garnered them mentions in magazines including Billboard, Rolling Stone, The Source, VIBE and XXL. [2]
GMB is the second studio album by Southern California-based hip hop trio Pac Div, released on November 27, 2012 under RBC Records and eOne [4] [5] It was preceded by the release of Pac Div's first studio album The DiV (2011). The acronym "GMB" stands for Gabe, Mike and Bryan, the respective first names of Like, Mibbs and BeYoung. [6]
List of single songs produced by Like with other performing artists, showing year released and album name Year Artist(s) Title Album Label 2011 Pacific Division: Posted co-produced with DJ Dahi The DiV: n/a Number One Brown Hi Five Mac Miller ft. Talib Kweli: Family First [16] single n/a 2012 Pac Div: Sneaker Boxes GMB: n/a Can't Help It ...
Printable version; In other projects ... Pac Div ; No I.D. ... DJ Dahi; Micky Park; Swiff D; Pac Div chronology; The DiV (2011) GMB (2012) The DiV is the debut studio ...
It should only contain pages that are Pac Div albums or lists of Pac Div albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Pac Div albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
This version of the intro has never been used with a studio version of the song so far. The progressive synthesiser music from the last part of the intro is repeated in the "I had a dream" section, complete with the last elongated note. The ending or outro varies from version to version. In the single version, it's a simple "Vision vision ...
In the song Eminem, 51, rapped: “Kells, the day you put out a hit’s the day Diddy admits that he put the hit out that got Pac killed, ah!” in reference to the infamous 1996 drive-by shooting ...
"Mayor of Simpleton" is a song written by Andy Partridge of the English band XTC, released as the first single from their 1989 album Oranges & Lemons. The single reached No. 72 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, No. 1 on its Alternative Songs chart, and No. 15 on its Mainstream Rock chart, [ 2 ] becoming the band's best-performing single ...