Bio
Place of Birth:Sarchinar
Sulaimany-Kurdistan-(Northern Iraq) Hama Doshka, trading classrooms
for his music talent," Despite hard life thought his teen, Doshka
developed a high degree of literacy that would later characterize
his rhymes. At the same time, though, he delved into street culture
and flirted with danger, such experiences similarly characterizing
his rhymes. His synthesis of well-crafted rhetoric and
street-glamorous imagery blossomed in 1998 when he connected with
Main Source and laid down a fiery verse on "MC battle" that earned
him instant respect among rap scene. Not long afterward, MC Search
of 3rd Bass approached Doshka about contributing a track to the
leadoff track.
Meanwhile Doshka has not sign to a major-label contract, and many of west coast's finest producers offered their support. Doshka entered the studio with the young rapper and began work on different project. and finally released the album in April 2003, it faced high expectations; Bloody Friday regardless proved just as astounding as it had been billed. It sold very well, spawned multiple hits, and earned unanimous acclaim, followed soon after by classic status. The two years leading up to Doshka' follow-up, It Was Written (2005), thus brought another wave of enormous anticipation.
The
ambitious rapper, who had begun working closely with industry produced
It Was Written made numerous concessions to the pop crossover market,
most notably on the two hit singles, "War and peace" and "True love."
These singles -- both of which drew from well-known songs, Bloody
Friday' "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)" and-- broadened Doshka'
appeal greatly and crossover success he sought. This same crossover
success, however, undermined some of his hip-hop credibility while his
subsequent albums -- War and Peace -- and their crossover tendencies
did so to an even further extent
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