General Woo
Srđan Ćuk (born November 17, 1977) known better by his stage name, General Woo, is a Croatian rapper.
General Woo | |
---|---|
Birth name | Srđan Ćuk |
Born | 17 November 1977 |
Origin | Vukovar, Croatia |
Genres | Hip hop |
Occupation(s) | Rapper |
Years active | 1994–present |
Labels | Menart (1996–2003), Moriss (2003–2006), Croatia Records (2006–2010), Aquarius (2010–present) |
Associated acts | Tram 11, El Da Sensei, Koolade, Nina Badrić, Shorty, Dino Dvornik, Ugly Leaders, Edo Maajka, Frenkie, Ivana Husar |
He began his career in 1994. He is currently signed to Aquarius Records.[1] In 1999 he was part of one of the first successful rap acts in Croatia Tram 11.[2]
General Woo was born in and lives in Vukovar, where he also started organizing an open-air hip-hop festival in 2007.[3] He hosts a Hip-Hop radio station called Blackout Radio Vukovar in his home town of Vukovar. In 2011 he released his fourth studio album Verbalni Delikt on MTV's web site on free download. In 2014 his fifth studio album called Pad Sistem (Fall of the System) came out.
Albums
- Solo albums
- 2002 - Takozvani(So called)
- 2005 - Baš je lijep ovaj svijet (with Nered)(What a Beautiful World)
- 2006 - Krv nije voda(Blood is Not Water)
- 2011 - Verbalni delikt
- 2014 - Pad sistema(Fall of The System)
- Demo's
- 1994: - General Woo (Demo)
- 1996: - Verbalator (Demo)
- 1998: - WorkshopCLASS Volume#11
- As part of Tram 11
- 1999 - Čovječe ne ljuti se
- 2000 - Vrućina gradskog asfalta
- 2003 - Tajna crne kutije
- As part of Blackout Project
- 1996 - Project Impossible
- 2000 - Blackout 00
gollark: The justification was some bullying last year which happened to involve phones... clearly this is the appropriate response.
gollark: My school, in its infinite wisdom, has banned phones during lunch/break.
gollark: I mean, they're exempt from minimum wage...
gollark: Soon: monkeys hired by major stock trading whatevers.
gollark: Currently trying to make a pi zero act as a USB device. It's not cooperating.
References
- "General Woo" (in Croatian). Croatia Records. Retrieved 2011-07-30.
- Melisa Skender; Ivana Čulić (25 November 2003). "Novac je ubio hrvatski hip-hop" [Money killed Croatian hip-hop]. Nacional (in Croatian). Archived from the original on 3 July 2012. Retrieved 3 July 2012.
- "Vukovarski Blackout festival predvode Edo Maajka i General Woo". Jutarnji list (in Croatian). 2007-06-26. Archived from the original on 2011-10-15. Retrieved 2011-07-30.
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