When Smif-N-Wessun ( Steele and Tek) dropped their debut Dah Shinin’ in 1995, they cemented themselves as icons of the gritty, basement-dwelling New York sound. But by the time the calendar flipped to the new millennium, the landscape of hip-hop had changed. The shiny suit era was fading, and the underground was simmering with a return to lyrical hardness.
A 45-second skit where Tek and Steele argue with a fictional record executive named "Phat Kat" about their jewelry. This skit was replaced by the "Sound Bwoy Bureill" intro on the retail version. Smif N Wessun The All Zip
Bridge: Zip the past, unzip the present — flip the tab, expose the linen, No hem too small to keep the truth from the given. Stitch up trauma, stitch on pride — every needle makes a vow, To hold the weight, to carry the story, to show the how. When Smif-N-Wessun ( Steele and Tek) dropped their
: The project features a heavy-hitting lineup including Raekwon , Rick Ross , Rapsody , and Musiq Soulchild , bridging the gap between underground legends and mainstream icons. Legacy and Evolution A 45-second skit where Tek and Steele argue