With great musical talent comes great responsibility, and Harlem rapper Max B takes that charge with the utmost seriousness. In what many agree is an uninspired era in Hip Hop, the artist known as Bigavell brings authentic music of legendary proportions. "They need a powerful n***a again man," Max observes. "Fall back and let a n***a like Biggavel come sweep the rest of this shit under the table."
The rap game’s Vigilante, Biggavel is capitalizing on his outlaw status to distribute justice across the board. Known for his unorthodox hooks, ferocious bars, and versatile flows, the gravely-voiced rapper is showcasing his all-around rap package to the hungry masses. Max B’s expressions, ad libs, and taste for Grand Cru have spawned countless imitators who are connoisseurs of the wave.
A former stick up kid who spent nearly nine years of his life behind bars, Max B is currently out on a Hip Hop record-setting $1.5 million bail. Honing his rap skills while serving an eight-year bid from 1997 to 2005, Max would escape the bleak reality of prison life by smothering himself in music. It was behind the G wall that Biggavel perfected his craft, circulating tapes that became favorites throughout the penitentiary building.
When Max B's longtime friend and manager Mike Bruno passed a demo along to Diplomats member Jim Jones in 2005, a collaboration ensued that proved short-lived. As the streets concede, Max Biggavel was a dominant presence on every Jones project he touched. Max B’s contribution was evident on standout hits such as "G's Up, Ho's Down," and ushered in a new era of prosperity for Jim Jones.
Swiftly leaving a mark on the streets, the Byrd Gang was on a fast track to rap stardom before Max B was locked up on conspiracy charges and Stack Bundles was murdered. Back in the streets as of July 11, 2006, Biggavel returned to Byrd Gang for a brief period. Rap's equivalent of Jason Kidd on the NBA courts, Max would raise the bar on every group project. "I don't mean to toot my own horn, but anywhere on this planet I go, whoever f**k with me, is gonna become better. I bring the best out of people with my talent in a positive way." After doing just that, Max B parted ways with Jim Jones on less than amicable terms, and Biggavel’s solo career was officially launched.
Known for his prolific musical yield, Max B has delivered over 8 mixtapes of the highest caliber to the streets before having his official album out. Right before being imprisoned in 2006, Max dropped the Big Mike-cosigned Conspiracy Theory, the first part of his legendary Public Domain series and a certified hood classic. Along with his Million Dollar Baby series, Public Domain mixtapes are known to fly off shelves, crowd internet servers, and make heavyweights in the game take note of the wave. Max is currently gearing up to release Part III of the trinity, entitled Domain Pain: The Art of Lip Sangin.
With a legion of followers behind him, rap’s renegade Biggavel is prepared to build a case for the late bloomers on why he encompasses the greatness of B.I.G., Jay Z, and Tupac. "I bring all three of them artists together- I'm that outstanding, I'm that swaggerific. I'm that hook man, I'm that wave man, I'm that 16 bar man, I'm that ghostwriter man, I'm the go to guy, I'm the guy that make your song sound like no other. Every song I make is fire, every one. I can't say I'm all three of the greatest put together and then come with some bullshit. I gotta come with the superbness."
EPISODE 1 – MAX B “BIGGAVELI TVâ€
EPISODE 2 – MAX B “BIGGAVELI TVâ€
EPISODE 3 – MAX B “BIGGAVELI TVâ€
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