| Artist: D.s.g.b. |
Product Details:
Song Listing
Troy, the son of a minister from College Park, Ga. formed the rap troupe, D.S.G.B., with a few of his friends and decided in 1999 to launch his first of four solo independent albums under the name Pastor Troy. By the end 2000, Troy had garnered such a following in Atlanta as well as in the rest of the south, that he caught the attention of Universal Records, who re-released Face Off in 2001. In 2002, there was no stopping Troy, he released the Universal Soldier' album which featured "Are We Cuttin", the critically acclaimed single, which was also featured on both the soundtrack and in the blockbuster movie XXX.
Lil Pete the Disciple, who is originally from Augusta, Ga., has performed with Troy for years. Described by the crew as, 'the 1st round draft pick' and 'the one to set it off,' he can be heard on "Vice Versa" (Face Off), "You Can't Pimp Me" (Universal Soldier) and "Respect Game." Pete reps with fellow Atlanta artist Bonecrusher's debut disc, AttenChun, on a track called "Ghetto Song." You can also hear Lil Pete holding his own on Till Death Do Us Part with his solo track, a head-nodding-tear-the-club-up-type-joint, called "Bust Yo Head To The White Meat," produced by David Banner.
Pinhead the Hellraiser, who is describes as 'the thinker, the one who is on some other shit' is only on a few tracks due to being briefly incarcerated during the recording of the album. Now he's out, the crew is complete and once again, it's on. "I'm the one behind the all controversy," states Pinhead.
Blackout (Black 2K), who is described as '
| The first single off Till Death Do Us Part is the rough and rowdy anthem, "D.S.G.B.," which will build an even bigger following to their already strong underground fans. Other standout tracks include, "My Block" a smoothed out melodic gangsta joint for all dem dirty boys who rep their block, "I'm Outside Ho," a straight crunk club-banga and warning to all who step to the crew in the club and "Who Down To Ride", a lyrical driveby. 'Till Death Do Us Part', an oath usually reserved for married couples, is more than an album title. It best describes the family-type vibe of D.S.G.B., who are the epitome of the phrase, all for one and one for all. Al Troy (Pastor Troy's brother) is the CEO of their label, Chaotic Generation, and the four-man-crew are more like brothers, "We all ran together even before this music thing kicked off," states Pastor Troy. |
Album Notes and Credits
Notes & Personnel Info |
|
| Full performer name: Down South Georgia Boyz. | |
| D.S.G.B. includes: Pastor Troy, Blackout, Pinhead, Lil Pete (rap vocals). | |
| Additional personnel: Wicket, Delilah, The Klones. | |
| Producers include: DJ Toomp, Pastor Troy, Taj Mahal, Slim, DJ Threat. | |
| Principally recorded at Madd House Studios, Atlanta, Georgia. | |
| Full performer name: Down South Georgia Boyz. | |
| D.S.G.B. includes: Pastor Troy, Blackout, Pinhead, Lil Pete (rap vocals). | |
| Additional personnel: Wicket, Delilah, The Klones. | |
| Producers include: DJ Toomp, Pastor Troy, Taj Mahal, Slim, DJ Threat. | |
| Principally recorded at Madd House Studios, Atlanta, Georgia. | |
| Personnel: Tony Love (guitar); DJ Toomp (programming). | |
| Audio Mixer: Taj Mahal. | |
| Recording information: Clean Recordings; Mad House Studios; Madd House Studios, Atlanta, GA. | |
Technical Info
| Release Date : 12/16/2003 | |
| Original Release Date : 2003 | |
| Catalog ID : AAB000154102 | |
| Label : Universal Distribution | |
| Number of Discs : 1 | |
| Studio/Live : Studio | |
| Mono/Stereo : Stereo | |
| SPAR Code : n/a | |
| UPC : 00602498611692 |













