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Lil\' Keke : Changin' Lanes
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Classic Underground Southern Rap From Houston, TX By A Member Of DJ Screw\'s Screwed Up Click
Genre: Hip-Hop/Rap: Dirty South
Release Date: 2008
Changin' Lanes Record Label: Commision - SoSouth
  • Download Album (MP3) - $9.99
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Intro 2:10 $0.99
When We Ride 3:49 $0.99
Pimp The Pen III 3:23 $0.99
Do You Wanna Ride Pt. 2 3:59 $0.99
Skit 0:56 $0.99
We Coming Back 3:42 $0.99
Feel Good Don't It 3:49 $0.99
Ready 2 Rock 4:36 $0.99
Gangsta's 3:45 $0.99
Commercial 0:32 $0.99
Never Gone Give Up 3:39 $0.99
Get Paid 4:04 $0.99
Bounce And Turn... Remix 4:30 $0.99
Southside Wit Me 4:38 $0.99
Outro 1:32 $0.99
Intro Welcome 2:47 $0.99
The Underground 4:41 $0.99
Oh Buddy 6:19 $0.99
Creases And Pieces 5:58 $0.99
Till It Ain't No More 4:28 $0.99
Street Fame 0:39 $0.99
Commercial 7:00 $0.99
Represent 6:23 $0.99
P.W.A. Remix 5:01 $0.99
Wild Out 0:50 $0.99
Skit 5:55 $0.99
713 5:43 $0.99
Relax Ya Mind 5:50 $0.99
Da South 3:08 $0.99
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Album Notes

Coming up in the South Park, Houston neighborhood of Herschelwood, Lil Keke\'s first rise to notoriety came when he joined forces with DJ Screw and became an original member of the Screwed Up Click. His frequent appearances on Screw tapes occurred at an important time because of the popularity of the grey Screw tapes during that era. In the early to mid \'90s, he and Fat Pat recorded countless freestyles for Screw, which were featured on tapes being played all over the south side of Houston. They eventually spread to the north, which made Fat Pat and Keke citywide stars, even in Houston\'s then-polarized north and south sides. After Fat Pat\'s untimely death in 1999, Keke kept going strong, releasing roughly an album a year since his 1997 debut Don\'t Mess Wit Texas. It was that record from which he scored a massive hit with South Side. In late 2005, he signed a deal with TF Records/Swishahouse to release his next album, Loved By Few, Hated By Many. \"It was gonna take a person like me to bridge the gap, because the south side believes in me...\", Edwards said. \"This wasn\'t about the north or the south side, this really was good for Houston. Because, man I sold a lot of records on the north side... once the movement hits, man, the south side, they gonna follow.\"

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