Breez Evahflowin'  | |
|---|---|
| Birth name | Enrique DaSilva | 
| Born | December 19, 1975 New York City, New York, U.S.  | 
| Genres | Hip hop | 
| Occupation(s) | Rapper | 
| Years active | 1996-present | 
| Labels | Domination Recordings | 
Enrique DaSilva, better known by his stage name Breez Evahflowin, is a rapper based in New York. He is a founding member of the Stronghold rap collective. He was crowned the national grand champion of the Blaze Battle competition in 1999 sponsored by HBO and was 5 week battle champion on Yo! MTV Raps.[1]
He released his own independent solo 12-inch single, "Forsaken", in 1996, which appeared on the Barely Breaking Even compilation album Hip-Hop Forever (1998) by DJ/producer Kenny Dope. He recorded singles for an assortment of different indie labels, including the Boston-based Detonator Records, as well as contributing a slew of guest appearances on records and tours. During his tenure, he has worked with several underground rap artists including Vast Aire, Immortal Technique,[2] Slug, Chali 2na, and Molemen.
Discography
- Albums
 
- Fly (2006)
 - Troublemakers (2008) (with Dirt E. Dutch)
 - Breez Deez Treez (2009)
 - As He Goes On... (2010)
 
- EPs
 
- Pro-Files: The EP (2000)
 - The Mic and the Music (2004) (with Eric Krasno)
 
- Singles
 
- "Forsaken" (1996)
 - "I Heard It" (1997)
 - "Refined" (1999)
 - "Between Dah Seams" (2001)
 - "Don't Stop" (2001)
 - "Gimmie Mine" (2001)
 - "Grown Men" (2002) (with Akrobatik)
 - "Give It Away" (2003)
 - "When You Fall" (2009)
 
- Guest appearances
 
- Akrobatik - "Ruff Enuff (Re-Mix)" from The EP (2000)
 - Molemen - "Challenge Me" from Ritual of The... (2001)
 - DJ JS-1 & Dub-L - "Dr_gs in My Vein" from Ground Original (2002)
 - Brycon & Equal - "Samurai Code" from World's Deadliest Assassin Part II (2004)
 - DJ JS-1 - "Flying Guillotines" from Audio Technician (2004)
 - Zion I - "Communification" from Politicks: Collabs & B-Sides (2004)
 - Vast Aire - "Posse Slash" from Look Mom... No Hands (2004)
 - Rob Swift - "Dream" from Wargames (2005)
 - C-Rayz Walz - "The Branding Iron" from The Dropping (2006)
 - Snowgoons - "No Man's Land" from German Lugers (2007)
 - Zimbabwe Legit - "Take Back the Mic" and "Take Back the Mic (KHZ Remix)" from House of Stone (2007)
 - Expertiz - "Ring of Fire" from Disrupting Nature's Balance (2010)
 - Rob Swift - "Principio" and "Ultimo" from The Architect (2010)
 - Infinito 2017 - "Eyewitness to Dopeness" from We Are Dark (2010)
 - Dumi Right - "What They Want (Remix)" and "What They Want (Burn Rubber Remix)" from Connect the Dots (2012)
 - Atari Blitzkrieg - "Death from Above" from Technicolor Crime Scenes (2013)
 - Josh Blake - "Let It Breathe" from Unemployment Benefits Vol. 1 (2020)
 
References
- ↑ Johnson, Gregory (May 2001). "Breez Evahflowing on Yo! MTV Raps~". Vibe Media Group. Retrieved January 27, 2015.
 - ↑ Vito, Christopher (May 2014). "Who said hip-hop was dead? The politics of hip-hop culture in Immortal Technique's lyrics~". University of California, Riverside, USA. Retrieved January 27, 2015.
 
External links
- Breez Evahflowin' on Facebook
 - Breez Evahflowin' at AllMusic
 - Breez Evahflowin' discography at Discogs