<p align="left"><strong>Jamalski </strong> was born in New York, the son of a Jazz drummer and an artist, and began his work in the entertainment industry at quite a young age. In the early 1980's <strong>Jamal </strong> started <strong>LVP </strong>, a handmade bead company, and was exposed to music and club culture at 16 years young. It was soon after that <strong>Jamalski </strong> the performer emerged on the New York music scene. </p>
<p align="left">In 1991, <strong>Jamalski </strong> appeared along side of <strong>KRS-One </strong>, as a member of <strong>Boogie Down Productions </strong>, on the album <em>"Edutainment" </em>, on a track called "7 DJs" featuring <strong>KRS-One </strong>, <strong>Miss Melody </strong>, <strong>D-Nice </strong>, <strong>Harmony </strong> and others. He then went on to record and perform on <em>"BDP: Live Worldwide Hardcore album" </em> for <strong>Jive Records </strong>. Within a year, <strong>Jamalski </strong> had released his first solo single titled <em>"Jump, Spread Out (Let's Do it in the Dancehall)" </em>produced by <strong>Bobby Konders </strong>. This project sold almost 200,000 copies, and rocketed <strong>Jamalski </strong> to the front of the crossover reggae/hip-hop audiences in New York. </p>
<p align="left">By 1993, <strong>Jamalski </strong> was signed to a record deal with <strong>Columbia/Sony Music </strong>, and released <em>"Roughneck Reality" </em>, a full-length album, as well as a handful of singles and a video or two. By mid-1994, <strong>Jamalski </strong> was becoming a household name with his video playing in rotation on <strong>MTV </strong>. Over the next year, <strong>Jamalski </strong> appeared on quite a few different albums, covering many and varied styles. He voiced a song for the <strong>Brand New Heavies </strong> on their album <em>"Heavy Rhyme Experience" </em> for <strong>Delicious Vinyl </strong>, and also appeared on two tracks of <strong>Dee-Lite </strong>'s second album <em>"Infinity Within" </em>, for <strong>Electra Records </strong>. He also voiced tracks for the house act <strong>Wildchild </strong>, and performed on a few jungle tunes as well. </p>
<p align="left"><strong>Jamalski </strong> has performed all over the world, and still to this day travels throughout the globe DJing and MCing across the US, Europe, and Japan. He has recently released two singles on <strong>Jazz Child Records </strong>titled <em>"Ganga Plane" </em> and <em>"No Murderin'" </em>, about the death of <strong>Biggie Smalls </strong>. Jamalski also appears on two tracks on the <strong>PSM </strong> compilation <strong><em>"Time's Up" </em></strong> and on the B-side of the first single from that release <strong><em>"True Freedom Fighters" </em></strong> with <strong><a href="http://www.bigupradio.com/artistDetail.jsp?aid=2916">Rocker-T</a>.</strong> He is also featured on <strong><em>"Mi Selecta" </em></strong> with the track, <em>"Rinse Out." </em></p>
<p align="left">Over the past year, <strong>Jamalski </strong> has been terrorizing the international rave circuit. He has been crowned the number one stateside Jungle MC, seen performing with <strong>Aphrodite </strong>, <strong>Jumpin Jack Frost </strong>, <strong>Dylan and Facs, </strong><strong>Dieselboy </strong>, <strong>DJ Dara </strong>, <strong>Rinse and Flux </strong>, <strong>Phantom 45 </strong>, <strong>Danny the Wildchild </strong> and even MCing to house and breaks alongside <strong>DJ Dan </strong>, <strong>Donald Claude </strong>, and <strong>Fatboy Slim </strong>. The lyrical, mystical, magical, metaphysical, roughneck <strong>Jamalski </strong> is a guaranteed master of vibing up the crowd. </p>