 
| The Birth EP: Information from Answers.com | |
" Artist: Rasco Tracks Credits Ken Lee (Mastering), Rasco (Main Performer), Rasco (Executive Producer), John Sexton (Executive Producer), John Sexton (A&R), Mark Humphries (Photography), Planet Asia (Vocals), Protest (Producer), Richness (Producer), Flii (Performer) . Library . Animal Life . Business and Finance . Entertainment and Arts . Food and Cooking . Health . History, Politics and Society . Home and Garden . Law and Legal Issues . Literature and Language . Miscellaneous . Religion and Spirituality . Science . Shopping . Sports . Technology . Travel . See All... . Join the Q&A community. Post a question or answer questions about "The Birth EP" at WikiAnswers. . Copyrights: . On this page: Selec"
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| Escape from Alcatraz by Rasco at Audio Lunchbox | |
" I'm not going to act like I know the details, because I don't, but even a quick listen to Escape from Alcatraz will tell you that Rasco charges one Jon Sexton, of Copasetik Records (the UK label that released Rasco's 2001 album Hostile Environment, plus his 1999 EP The Birth), with ripping him off, running away with the profits of the album, after giving Rasco high hopes for the album's success. This is all established right from the first proper track, "Get Free (featuring Shake da Mayor)," which is both a statement of independence and a threat against "Jon the Snake". And it's reaffirmed throughout the album, especially on "Snakes in the Grass (The Jon Sexton Story"). There's nothing subtle or cloaked about any of this; if you can't tell, Rasco is using his music to get at the throat of the man he feels betrayed him. When he's not calling out Sexton by name, he's trying to re-establish his own stature in the rap world by coming out h"
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