"This is Women's History Month and the 50th anniversary of Hip-Hop culture I get it," she explained. "All the females that came up with me in my era before 1979 and the onset of Hip-Hop records, or rap records want their stories told and it's only right. A lot of us were on the ground and the frontlines moving this billion-dollar culture forward and in the process, some of them lied to you."
Sha-Rock named Pepsi of The Zulu Nation as an early female on the mic who did not rhyme and spit bars but instead did shoutouts and phrases to hype up the DJ.
"She wasn't a bar spitter, she didn't spit 8,16,24 bars," Sha said.
Sha-Rock also named Queen Lisa Lee as another female MC who was down with Bambaataa and the Zulu Nation (and later with Sha-Rock in US Girls). "Bam went and got Lisa Lee to rock with me, to be able to deal with me and have the atmosphere of a female as part of his group," she said. "Lisa has been my go-to and friend for the last 40 years."
Sha also named Smiley of The Mercedes Ladies as an early female MC, but she questioned her former partner in US Girls, Debbie D, as well as Pebblee Poo of The Masterdon Committee, who have labeled themselves as the first female soloists in Hip-Hop. Check Sha-Rock's history lesson above.