Smif N Wessun The All Zip Apr 2026

In the pantheon of 1990s Hip-Hop, few duos embody the grittiness of Brooklyn brick and mortar quite like Smif-N-Wessun. As cornerstone members of the Boot Camp Clik, Tekomin "Tek" Williams and Darrell "Steele" Yates gave us the classic Dah Shinin’ in 1995—an album so raw it felt like a stick-up kid’s manual set to a Beatminerz soundtrack.

For new listeners trying to understand Smif-N-Wessun, The All is the perfect litmus test. If you can handle the uncompromising volume of the bass, the insular references to Fulton Street, and the complete lack of pop sensibility, you are a true fan. Smif N Wessun The All Zip

Hosted by the legendary DJ Evil Dee (of the Beatminerz), The All Zip strips away the glossy R&B hooks that plagued mid-2000s Hip-Hop. Instead, it offers 45 minutes of pure, unfiltered boom bap. Unlike Dah Shinin’ , which relied heavily on the filtered, muddy bass of Mr. Walt and Evil Dee, The All modernizes the formula without selling out. Production is handled by a rotating cast of underground stalwarts including Moss , Illmind , and Coptic . In the pantheon of 1990s Hip-Hop, few duos

The "Zip" format gave the project a raw, illicit feel. Fans traded the files on burnt CDs in parking lots or via Limewire. There was no skippable intro; you downloaded the folder, unzipped it, and got punched in the face by the first bar. While The All never charted and lacks the iconic status of Dah Shinin’ , it serves a crucial purpose in the Boot Camp Clik discography. It bridges the gap between the Golden Era and the "Blog Era" (2006-2010). If you can handle the uncompromising volume of

While many casual fans missed it due to its underground, digital-only release, The All (often referred to by its file name "The All Zip") remains a cult classic; a moment where the "Cocoa Brovas" reminded the world that they were still, first and foremost, the "Bucktown" enforcers. The title The All is significant. In the lexicon of street slang, "The All" refers to the entirety of one’s arsenal—everything you’ve got left in the clip. This mixtape wasn't about radio singles; it was a declaration of war against wack MCs and the softening of Hip-Hop.

But by the mid-2000s, the landscape had changed. The era of ringtone rap and crunk had marginalized the rugged, sample-heavy sound of the mid-90s. Enter —a digital hand grenade thrown into the complacency of 2006.

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