Ghetto Brothers

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Girl from the Mountain 00:00 Tools
There Is Something in My Heart 00:00 Tools
Got This Happy Feeling 00:00 Tools
Ghetto Brothers Power 00:00 Tools
Viva Puerto Rico Libre 00:00 Tools
Mastica, Chupa y Jala 00:00 Tools
You Say You Are My Friend 00:00 Tools
I Saw a Tear 00:00 Tools
Ghetto Disco 00:00 Tools
Pumpin' Bass Manoeuvres 00:00 Tools
Ghetto Blues 00:00 Tools
Bass Manoeuvres 00:00 Tools
Intro 00:00 Tools
You Say That You're My Friend 00:00 Tools
Supastarz 00:00 Tools
Girl From The Moutain 00:00 Tools
CDs & LPs 00:00 Tools
Muzik (FX Mix) 00:00 Tools
Aragance 00:00 Tools
Something About The South 00:00 Tools
DJ Screw Mix 00:00 Tools
Downtown Attitude 00:00 Tools
Can You Feel Me Now 00:00 Tools
Don't Mess Wit' Texas 00:00 Tools
When We ride 00:00 Tools
Make 'Em Break It 00:00 Tools
bass manoeuvers 00:00 Tools
Still Pimpen The Pen 00:00 Tools
Southside 00:00 Tools
You Got to Know When 00:00 Tools
Drink Tipperz 00:00 Tools
Back in Business 00:00 Tools
Serious Smoke 00:00 Tools
Bass Manoeuvres (original mix) 00:00 Tools
Mobb Style Nxxxxz 00:00 Tools
01 Girl From The Mountain 00:00 Tools
Clubland 00:00 Tools
High Class Rappers 00:00 Tools
I Am Not The One 00:00 Tools
08 Ghetto Brothers Power 00:00 Tools
06 Viva Puerto Rico Libre 00:00 Tools
05 You Say You Are My Friend 00:00 Tools
03 Got This Happy Feeling 00:00 Tools
04 Mastica Chupa Y Jala 00:00 Tools
Víva Puerto Rico Libre 00:00 Tools
Living Down South 00:00 Tools
Ghetto Brother Power 00:00 Tools
02 There Is Something In My Heart 00:00 Tools
07 I Saw A Tear 00:00 Tools
Muzik 00:00 Tools
Livin Down South 00:00 Tools
Get Rich And Maintain 00:00 Tools
Ghetto Blues (Picked by Efdé) 00:00 Tools
It's My Life 00:00 Tools
Then You Thuggin 00:00 Tools
What We Do 04:41 Tools
04 you say you are my friend 00:00 Tools
Running Around 00:00 Tools
Supa Fly 00:00 Tools
Rollin on Glass (RMX) 00:00 Tools
You Don't Want To Do That 00:00 Tools
Comin Down 00:00 Tools
Do Your Own Thang 00:00 Tools
Trapped in the Game 00:00 Tools
Bounce To This 00:00 Tools
Mobb Style N****z 00:00 Tools
A02 - There Is Something In My Heart. 00:00 Tools
Mobstyle N****s 00:00 Tools
They Don't Understand 00:00 Tools
05 girl from the mountain 00:00 Tools
02 got this happy feeling 00:00 Tools
Ride Wit A Hustla 00:00 Tools
A01 - Girl From The Mountain. 00:00 Tools
Get Your Loot On 00:00 Tools
Who Make It Hot 00:00 Tools
Hard Times 00:00 Tools
Come Get Some 00:00 Tools
Country Boys 00:00 Tools
dip yo hips 00:00 Tools
A03 - Got This Happy Feeling. 00:00 Tools
Thank Y'All Boys 00:00 Tools
Livin Lavish Down South 00:00 Tools
Never Change 00:00 Tools
This Is It 00:00 Tools
No When 00:00 Tools
There Is Something In My Heart (Spanish Gold Cover) 00:00 Tools
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The Ghetto Brothers were a gang (or club) and music group founded in New York City's South Bronx in the late 1960s. The gang eventually spread to much of the Northeastern United States. Like the Young Lords, they were involved in Puerto Rican nationalism, including, in the case of the Ghetto Brothers, an association with the then-new Puerto Rican Socialist Party. This gang had political motivation to uplift young Spanish and Black men in the community. The name Ghetto Brothers was chosen by Hui Cambrelen one of the original founders along with Ray delaVega and Benjamin Melendez (1952 – May 28, 2017), who left the organization in 1976, was also known as a guitarist. He led a band, also known as the Ghetto Brothers, which included his late brother Victor Melendez on bass. They released one album Ghetto Brothers - Power-Fuerza in 1971, which had only informal, local distribution. It has since been re-released on CD. Benjamin Melendez was best known for brokering the gang truce in the Bronx and Harlem (New York City) in 1971. At that time, he was President of the Ghetto Brothers, a mainly ethnically Puerto Rican South Bronx gang, and lead vocalist of a musical group also known as the Ghetto Brothers. The Ghetto Brothers, especially in their early years, had a reputation as one of the more politically minded and less vengeful of New York-area gangs. After Cornell "Black Benjie" Benjamin was killed in 1971 trying to prevent a fight between two rival gangs, the Ghetto Brothers did not seek the expected revenge on those responsible for his death. Instead, under Melendez's leadership (and that of Carlos Antonio Suarez, also known as Carlos Melendez), they were instrumental in achieving a moderately successful truce among South Bronx and other New York-area gangs at the December 7, 1971, Hoe Avenue peace meeting. Under Melendez's leadership, the Ghetto Brothers represented one end of the spectrum in terms of how they treated the women involved with the gang. Referred to as the Ghetto Sisters—the respectful term contrasted sharply with the names used for the women attached to other New York gangs of the period—the women were generally viewed as organization members and as girlfriends, whereas many other gangs treated women almost entirely as sexual property. Former Hartford, Connecticut mayor Eddie Perez was a member of the Ghetto Brothers when young. New York Daily News columnist Robert Dominguez was the leader of a Ghetto Brothers division in the Bronx when he was a teen. In the Connecticut prison system, during the 1990s, the Ghetto Brothers and the Savage Nomads joined together to form Los Solidos (the Solid Ones), which is now one of the most powerful Puerto Rican gangs in the state. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.