p swayze 166
New member
basically in 2003 his (foster) brother CAPO adrian Parlette, a member of his label, crew, family, etc. was brutally murdered.....it was speculated and kinda said by Bizzy that due to him being blackballed in the industry in that time and that leaving the money coming in slow for the movement they had going he went back to the hood and was selling weed...Bizzy was kicked off the grey goose tour by bone thugs other members for "being drunk on stage", Capo was with him at that time and him touring with them was basically his main source of income, thus bizzy getting kicked off meant he was gone too, so he went back to Cleveland/Columbus and started pumpin' again...here's the videos speaking on the murder of CAPO, Bizzy's foster brother...
so basically after that Bizzy kept working and running around and released two albums almost at the same time, Alpha and Omega & the Beginning and The End, (great albums by the way)...one which included a classic song talking about his brother entitled "Hellafied Game"
after that is when Bizzy went "crazy" or whatever they tried to say.....and basically he was running around working with artists on collabos when he did that radio interview that was eccentric, yet his words made quite alot of sense when you just listened to them and not the tone or way he said them, but anyway...he chronicled pretty much what he went through in this article to MTV
http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1511249/bizzy-bone-insists-hes-not-crazy.jhtml
heres an excerpt:
"There was such an abundance [of animosity], I wouldn't let them sneak in," he continued. "By them not being able to infiltrate, they said, 'He's crazy.' I know who I am, I'm the Lord's baby. That's just real. It's good to be the Lord's child."
Bizzy's questionable behavior last year makes his appearance in Houston seem as normal as pouring cold milk on cereal in the morning. In 2004 he voluntarily began life as a homeless person and went on a journey that changed his life. He began walking from his hometown of Cleveland throughout the state of Ohio for a little over half a year, giving away virtually all of what little money he had left and living in bus stations.
"Everybody thought I went crazy," he said. "They were questioning my motives and what was going on. I seen things for what they really was. Everybody around me changed. I was literally walking and spiritually walking. You can't take a walk without taking a walk.
"[I walked] pretty much the whole Ohio area," he continued. "People were passing in cars, looking at me, laughing at me. I was in bus stations and in the streets talking to people. Police waking me up like, 'You can't sleep here.' I had a little change in my pocket, not even enough to catch the bus. I'd given away my money 'cause I thought it was the right thing to do at the time. It was a learning process. It was a spiritual education."
While traveling through Ohio on foot, Bizzy said, he became closer with the Lord. But as strong as he became spiritually, physically he began breaking down, and his journey came to an end.
"I couldn't walk anymore," he recalled. "My legs wouldn't move, my feet were blistered. I was hungry, nowhere to go. It was just time to stop walking. I was walking on the freeway trying to get from Columbus to Cleveland. A policeman pulled me over and was like, 'Look, man, you cannot walk no more. We will take you to jail.' I really couldn't walk, I was hobbling around like my grandfather. I went to the hospital, I had a close friend come pick me up, put me in the tub, get some Epsom salt, washed me up."
The former Bone Thugs member (he's left and returned to the group several times and even put out an album with Layzie Bone earlier this year) said his group wasn't there to check on him during his seven-month journey and neither was his family.
"When you crawl out of that, you don't want anybody around you but who helped you," he said. "Everybody is fake. My own mother was trying to put me in an insane asylum. I was like, 'I know my name, my Social Security number. Just because I have a blessing and you don't feel what I feel, that gives you no right.' I returned with a blessing and everybody was treating it like a curse."
so basically instead of me telling you let Bizzy haha....but yeah so hope that helps ya out.....and Bizzy aint crazy I was with him and the whole group as they were recording the last UNI-5 album and he's very sane, just doesn't act like "rappers" are "supposed" to act, he is a unique individual and honestly does not give a fuck about anyone's opinions and lives for himself and not for anyone else......real cool, humble dude...if u ever have a chance hit up one of his shows and he'll probably be chillin with everyone afterwards having a drink or something...cool cat.
so basically after that Bizzy kept working and running around and released two albums almost at the same time, Alpha and Omega & the Beginning and The End, (great albums by the way)...one which included a classic song talking about his brother entitled "Hellafied Game"
after that is when Bizzy went "crazy" or whatever they tried to say.....and basically he was running around working with artists on collabos when he did that radio interview that was eccentric, yet his words made quite alot of sense when you just listened to them and not the tone or way he said them, but anyway...he chronicled pretty much what he went through in this article to MTV
http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1511249/bizzy-bone-insists-hes-not-crazy.jhtml
heres an excerpt:
"There was such an abundance [of animosity], I wouldn't let them sneak in," he continued. "By them not being able to infiltrate, they said, 'He's crazy.' I know who I am, I'm the Lord's baby. That's just real. It's good to be the Lord's child."
Bizzy's questionable behavior last year makes his appearance in Houston seem as normal as pouring cold milk on cereal in the morning. In 2004 he voluntarily began life as a homeless person and went on a journey that changed his life. He began walking from his hometown of Cleveland throughout the state of Ohio for a little over half a year, giving away virtually all of what little money he had left and living in bus stations.
"Everybody thought I went crazy," he said. "They were questioning my motives and what was going on. I seen things for what they really was. Everybody around me changed. I was literally walking and spiritually walking. You can't take a walk without taking a walk.
"[I walked] pretty much the whole Ohio area," he continued. "People were passing in cars, looking at me, laughing at me. I was in bus stations and in the streets talking to people. Police waking me up like, 'You can't sleep here.' I had a little change in my pocket, not even enough to catch the bus. I'd given away my money 'cause I thought it was the right thing to do at the time. It was a learning process. It was a spiritual education."
While traveling through Ohio on foot, Bizzy said, he became closer with the Lord. But as strong as he became spiritually, physically he began breaking down, and his journey came to an end.
"I couldn't walk anymore," he recalled. "My legs wouldn't move, my feet were blistered. I was hungry, nowhere to go. It was just time to stop walking. I was walking on the freeway trying to get from Columbus to Cleveland. A policeman pulled me over and was like, 'Look, man, you cannot walk no more. We will take you to jail.' I really couldn't walk, I was hobbling around like my grandfather. I went to the hospital, I had a close friend come pick me up, put me in the tub, get some Epsom salt, washed me up."
The former Bone Thugs member (he's left and returned to the group several times and even put out an album with Layzie Bone earlier this year) said his group wasn't there to check on him during his seven-month journey and neither was his family.
"When you crawl out of that, you don't want anybody around you but who helped you," he said. "Everybody is fake. My own mother was trying to put me in an insane asylum. I was like, 'I know my name, my Social Security number. Just because I have a blessing and you don't feel what I feel, that gives you no right.' I returned with a blessing and everybody was treating it like a curse."
so basically instead of me telling you let Bizzy haha....but yeah so hope that helps ya out.....and Bizzy aint crazy I was with him and the whole group as they were recording the last UNI-5 album and he's very sane, just doesn't act like "rappers" are "supposed" to act, he is a unique individual and honestly does not give a fuck about anyone's opinions and lives for himself and not for anyone else......real cool, humble dude...if u ever have a chance hit up one of his shows and he'll probably be chillin with everyone afterwards having a drink or something...cool cat.
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