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mc_squared
25-08-2007, 11:49 PM
Kebab rapper stuns France



FOR months, kebab vendor Lil'Maaz amused clients with an improvised rap on the merits of his greasy snack.
Now, the 27-year-old has a contract with record label EMI and thousands in France know his "Kebab rap".
Slicing chunks of meat from a giant spit, Lil'Maaz, whose real name is Yilmaz Karaman, says his rapid ascent from a snack bar in northern Paris into French record stores and internet stardom started off with a joke.
"I just did it for a laugh," he said from behind a counter displaying salads, tomatoes, onions and hot sauce.
He explained how he would break into spontaneous song when clients ordered a kebab, but then the employees of a small recording studio next door heard Lil'Maaz rapping while having their lunch.
They invited the singer, who only came to France from Turkey three years ago, into their studio and helped him put together a video for the Internet.
"We did the clip with people who worked here in the kebab shop and Lil'Maaz just asked some customers to star in it," said Matt Delavego from the studio.
Lil'Maaz's kebap rap follows the internet success of Marly Gomont (http://www.mangedukebab.com/), a cheerful rap on life in the only black family in a small French village that made a star of former amateur Kamini.
Mange du Kebab (Eat kebab), which features Lil'Maaz rapping behind his counter, proved an instant hit with some 200,000 people watching it on the internet during the first weekend, the singer says.
"Everyday, it's kebab party!" Lil'Maaz sings in the clip while dancing in front of the juicy spit. "We're turning the spit. Oh, how we're sweating! The girls are loving it, we're drawing them in."
The clip attracted the attention of music label EMI, which produced a single with Lil'Maaz that came out this week.
Lil'Maaz, who came to France after working in tourism in Turkey, did not know how many discs had already been sold, but said he found his success overwhelming.
But he said he was not sure that his career would serve as a model for other rap hopefuls.
"I'm not sure I'm really an example," he said, grinning broadly beneath a red cap. "I was selling kebab and just had a lot of luck."

Shaftell
26-08-2007, 01:17 AM
:lol: How does this guy have a contract with EMI?

mc_squared
26-08-2007, 01:41 AM
:lol: How does this guy have a contract with EMI?

You doner think he deserves it?:rolleyes:

Cirrus Minor
26-08-2007, 10:27 PM
This is nothing but rubbish.

mc_squared
27-08-2007, 01:08 AM
This is nothing but rubbish.

Well what do you expect? It's French!!:P

Cirrus Minor
29-08-2007, 11:57 AM
^So am I. :P

Anyway you're making sense. It seems fashionable in France these days to sing a "song". You know, everyone tries, from the Kebab seller to the ex-porn actress Clara Morgane, which takes off all music's credibility.

The other problem is that all these I-make-music-because-I'm-bored-and-I-want-easy-money guys are compared to those who show mere originality, like the Country-rapper Kamini (Singer/Writer of "Marly-Gomont", mentioned in the first post), which is very bad. Kamini is great, Lil'Maaz is not.

Sometimes when I see all this bullshit in the ads, I feel ashamed of being French.