99 Posse is an Italian hip hop/reggae group from Naples. It raps both in Italian and in the local Neapolitan language. Most of 99 Posse's songs deal with political or social issues,[1] and the group members are considered left-wing hardliners. As a showing of their activism, all of the group's albums have been released with a prezzo politico ("political price"): each CD displays a sticker saying "Don't pay more than...". For 99 Posse, this means "putting into practice a specific understanding about their relationship with the market, a sort of ideal practice". The group has gained popularity in Italy through its songs and its voicing of progressive political causes.
99 Posse | |
---|---|
Origin | Naples, Italy |
Genres | Hip hop, reggae, trip hop |
Years active | 1991–2005 2009–present |
Past members | 'O Zulù Kaya Pezz8 JRM Sacha Ricci Clark Kent |
Website | novenove |
Its first album, Curre Curre Guagliò (1993), was mainly influenced by reggae and world music. Subsequent albums, Cerco Tiempo (1996) and Corto Circuito (1998), included new styles like drum 'n bass and trip hop. Curre Curre Guaglio was self-produced but rose from its underground status to become an iconic album and cultural manifesto that eventually inspired the film Sud by Oscar-winning director Gabriele Salvatores. The group also has its own record label, Novenove, which works to promote underground artists.
On 18 July 2009, they came back without Meg in Naples during a concert created by movements against repression and the blocking of 21 activists for G8 in Turin's university.
Band members
editMembers as of 2021
editThis section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (August 2021) |
Former members
edit- Luca "'O Zulù" Persico – vocals
- Marco "Kaya Pezz8" Messina – sampler and dub master
- Massimo "JRM" Jovine – bass
- Sacha Ricci – keyboard
- Claudio "Clark Kent" Marino – drums
- Maria "Meg" Di Donna – vocals
- Claudio Caca* – drums
Discography
editStudio albums
editDate of release | Title | Studio | Label | Producer | Track listing |
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1993 | Curre curre guagliò | Al Flying Recording Studio in Naples | Novenove/BMG | Sergio Messina Radio Gladio&99Posse |
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1995 | Guai a chi ci tocca | Splash and Flying Records in Naples | IO |
| |
1996 | Cerco tiempo | Flying Records in Naples | IO | Kwanzaa Posse |
|
1998 | Corto circuito | Transeuropa Recording Studio in Turin | IO | 99 Posse e Carlo U. Rossi |
|
2000 | La vida que vendrá | Folder Studio in Naples | Musica Posse / Self Distribuzione | 99 Posse e Carlo U. Rossi |
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2011 | Cattivi Guagliuni | Folder Studio in Naples | Musica Posse / Self Distribuzione | 99 Posse |
|
Live albums
editYear | Title |
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1994 | Incredibile opposizione tour 94 |
2001 | NA9910º |
References
edit- ^ Young, Richard (2002). Music popular culture identities. Rodopi. pp. 42–44. ISBN 978-90-420-1249-3.
Bibliography
edit- Behan, Tom. (2007) Putting spanners in the works: the politics of the 99 Posse. Popular Music 26.03, 497–504.
- Cavallo, Vincenzo; Chambers, Iain. (n.d.). "Neapolitan Nights: from Vesuvian Blues to Planetary Vibes"
- Dello Iacovo, Rosario. (2014) Curre curre guagliò: Storie dei 99 Posse. Milan: Baldini&Castoldi.
- Dines, Nick. (1999) "Centri sociali: occupazioni autogestite a Napoli negli anni novanta", Quaderni di sociologia, 43(21), 90-111.
- Messina, Marcello. (2016) "Cattivi guagliuni: the identity politics of 99 Posse". In P. Guerra, & T. Moreira (Eds.), Keep it Simple, Make it Fast! An approach to underground music scenes, Vol. 2, (pp. 131-136). Porto: University of Porto. Faculty of Arts and Humanities.
- Pugliese, Joseph. (2008). "Whiteness and the blackening of Italy: La guerra cafona, extracomunitari and provisional street justice". PORTAL Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies, 5(2).