With his work in the pioneering hip-hop group
Cypress Hill, rapper
B Real became something of a hip-hop legend for several reasons. Most immediately, his trademark rhyming style, featuring an exaggeratedly nasal whine and a jazz singer's skill at staying just behind
Dj Muggs' already sluggish beats, was one of the most instantly recognizable flows of the 1990s. Furthermore,
B Real and his partners
Sen Dog and
Dj Muggs were the first Latino hip-hop stars, ushering in a richly varied subgenre of hip-hop that thrives to this day. Finally,
Cypress Hill's fervent proselytizing on the subject of marijuana legalization both brought the subject to its highest public awareness since the days of
Cheech & Chong and paved the way for a generation of weed-happy middle-class high school kids to discover and identify with hip-hop to an even greater degree than before. However, that
B Real therefore is indirectly responsible in part for
Kevin Federline should not be held against him.
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