
BaYzHe
Comments
92
KrayoLaBlackBeats
Nov 11, 2011
I digg ja work check me out bro and tell me what ju think
TIZ 92
Apr 23, 2010
i think you're original and i like that. im also feeling the track
Pos
Oct 31, 2009
yo...I dunno if you got my message on aim....get at me....presentlygifted at yahoo dot com....I gave you the facebook....f*** a!
GBC Productions
Oct 04, 2009
check my beats out mane
340music!!!
Jul 31, 2009
you got some nice flow man...fresh tracks.
"get high" sounds nice, so does "pain"...great ish. Keep up the good work.
I got this new track up, it's that raw underground type of ish...please give it a try if you have the time to. "Out of nowhere"...murder track, i will guarantee you that you've never heard anything like this before!
Make this ish go top 10 baby!
peace
-Averis- (NC)
May 19, 2009
Bayzhe - you left a comment on my SC page a while back about working together in the future - the future is now, homie! Haha, I've added quite a few songs since then and I'd love to know what you think about them. Also, check out the dude that's been supplying my beats lately (soundclick.com/stayhigh) and maybe the two of us could do something together - all I'd really need to do is record my verse and then leave you the space to do whatever you want... it's all up to you, bro. Just leave me a comment or hit me up at averisnc@gmail.com. Much love, and keep doing what you're doing. Stay up!
Amp dott
Mar 18, 2009
you the f*** in man, this song made it to #1
Dirty Grimy Children
Mar 18, 2009
sh** sounds great...
i just posted up some new beats...
"Bloody Knuckles" "DreadLock" & "Headed to Hell"
all of them sound f*** ing insane...come chek it out
-Averis- (NC)
Mar 17, 2009
What's up, Bayzhe -- I'm a white rapper out of North Carolina, just saw that you were a spotlighted artist and peeped some of your stuff. Good sh** , my dude! Really feeling that All The Girls joint. Take some time to look at my sh** if you can, but either way, keep doing what you're doing. Stay up!
Dirty Grimy Children
Mar 12, 2009
You got some sick tracks...
check me for beats...
'Am God' is what you'll be looking for
TresD33
Mar 12, 2009
Nice flows, keep doin what your doin fam
Swill(US)
Mar 04, 2009
whats goin' on if you need hot beats for cheap than come by and check out what i got
MaNItHePRODUCER
Mar 02, 2009
feelin tha tracks mah dude...holla atcha boi for any production if you want somethin fresh, looking 4 tracks 2 frontpage the music
The Trak Masta
Sep 14, 2008
Ill flow bro, like your style. give my page a look and see if ya like the beatz
"the Trak Masta"
BaYzHe
Dec 05, 2007
The CPSA was declared illegal in 1950. The party went underground and, in 1953 relaunched itself as the South African Communist Party - the name change emphasising the party's orientation towards the particular concerns of South Africans. The party was not legalised until 1990.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_African_Communist_Party
The Soweto and connected events clearly demonstrate the new mood of revolutionary militancy which grips the mass of our people. Our youth have shown unambiguously their readiness to sacrifice and, if need be, to die in the struggle against the minority regime. Our strong and experienced working class responded magnificently to calls for political general strikes which involved about a quarter of a million workers since June 1976 and inflicted great damage on the economy.
which was perhaps more vicious than any in our modern history of struggle. The mass killings on the streets, the torture and murder in the jails, and the administrative actio
BaYzHe
Oct 17, 2007
http://www.mediachannel.org/views/oped/lelyveld.shtml
BaYzHe
Oct 17, 2007
http://www.literarysocietysd.org/public/reviews/frm199902.htm
BaYzHe
Oct 17, 2007
http://www.nytimes.com/1979/08/19/books/gordimer-daughter.html
BaYzHe
Oct 10, 2007
Please don't use any tags, please enter text only.
Your message was: " Joys of Motherhood In the novel The Joys of Motherhood, author Buchi Emecheta uses the irony of the title of the novel to play with the themes expressed by conflicts and tensions that native citizens of a colonized state feel during the liminal experience of adjusting to being occupied and dictated to by a foreign influence through the eyes of a young mother. “Motherhood cannot be analysed in isolation from its historical context.” (Doria) Emecheta’s main character, Nnu Ego, faces the task of leaving her own native village in Ibuza to go to the colonized city of Lagos to be married. With the changes in the society in which she habituates, Nnu Ego is forced to live under the new principles of the white man, while still being bound by the old traditions of her own tribe. These conflicts become manifested in the raising of her children, the people she associates with in Lagos, and her less-than-dignified death. “Th
This beat go hard. You got skills man.