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Raw Fusion was a low-key <a href="spotify:artist:7jocoSCuCtpCxCI6IbP8ye">Digital Underground</a> side project driven by that group's <a href="spotify:artist:6VH75hkpvvNBk8qKVPUUwl">Money-B</a>. 1991's Live From the Styleetron, the group's first album, featured cameos from <a href="spotify:artist:1ZwdS5xdxEREPySFridCfh">2Pac</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:7mFqeqDcctDWHGKY2AIAMl">Shock-G</a>, and <a href="spotify:artist:4KM0S1Bt0R8Le283T205pe">Saafir</a>, and it broke away from <a href="spotify:artist:7jocoSCuCtpCxCI6IbP8ye">Digital Underground</a>'s proclivity for Parliament/<a href="spotify:artist:450o9jw6AtiQlQkHCdH6Ru">Funkadelic</a>-derived goofiness with production values that were closer to the <a href="spotify:artist:2iclO3rlyF0YVNE46ctYRj">Jungle Brothers</a>/<a href="spotify:artist:09hVIj6vWgoCDtT03h8ZCa">A Tribe Called Quest</a> end of the spectrum, with liberal dashes of reggae shadings (dub, dancehall, roots). Featuring cuts like "Don't Test" and the jheri-curl send-up "Ah Nah Go Drip," the album stayed in the underground but proved to be a strong full-length. Three years passed before the follow-up, Hoochiefied Funk. The project presumably ended after that, with <a href="spotify:artist:6VH75hkpvvNBk8qKVPUUwl">Money-B</a> delivering a various-artists comp and a solo album before the end of the '90s; both releases were through Bobby Beat. ~ Andy Kellman, Rovi
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