Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Cuban cigar guru breaks, aged 91

Rapper Keith "Guru" Elam, easiest known as the former frontman of the grouping Gang Starr, died after a careful bout with cancer on April 19, leaving alone seat a varsity letter to his sports fans and motivating an flood of love on the earth Wide Web.


guru dead


Guru and his Gang Starr cooperator DJ Premier facilitated define the rank of New York's underground hip hop view in the 1990s, checking to MTV.


"Their unique rank united Premier's production palette, which ran heavily on sampled jazz records and scratched vocals on the chorus lines, with Guru's uncompromising rhymes," MTV's Gil Kaufman reports. MTV makes put up a collection of interviews with Guru, accepting one in which he talks over hip hop's influence connected pop culture.


A baccy grower whose works gave some of Cuba's most renowned admits used in the country's cigar product gives died of cancer, aged 91.


Alejandro Robaina - some an great figurehead in the industriousness that one of the Caribbean island's top smoking brands was named after him - had, reportable to local radio announcers, been a "victim of a sombre illness".


His passing was confirmed by a family unit friend, Sergio Hernandez, who recalled the "big heart" of Mr Robaina.


"He once said me he was a millionaire because he had a cardinal friends all over the reality," he noted.


One of the agriculturist's grandsons nowadays runs his farm, with Robaina cigars marketed the world over in junction with Habanos and the Imperial baccy grouping, which is based in London.


Other early news from the cigar reality included the launch of a new smoke designed specifically for women.

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