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He acquired his handle, an acronym, through battling in high school hallways, where he used to end his bars with the line "first man battling, last man standing." The moniker encompasses Mangual not only as an MC but also the real person behind it.
Born in New Jersey, before moving with his working-class Puerto Rican parents to South Florida when he was eight years old, LMS grew up as the youngest of four brothers in tough Jersey City. "We grew up well but fucked up, in a sense, living in Jersey City, which was not a great neighborhood," LMS says. "One block you could walk through and the next you couldn't. The church across the street from us had bullet holes and was a crack house before then." As the youngest sibling, LMS took his fair share of knocks but also picked up a diverse range of musical influences. One of his brothers was a straight-up b-boy; another listened to rock. Their father played congas with salsa singer Hector Tricoche, and their mother always had the windows open and the stereo blasting when she cleaned the house Sunday mornings.
"My earliest memory of hip-hop growing up was Rob Base 'It Takes Two,' but I didn't decide I wanted to rap until seeing the movie Sunset Park," he says. "When Fredro Starr of Onyx was freestyling in the locker room about the players in the game, the way he flipped that rhyme was incredible to me then, and as a little kid, that's what I wanted to do." But when LMS moved to Miami in the early Nineties, it was a different ball game — freestyle and booty music ruled the airwaves. "When it came to hip-hop down here, Miami radio didn't get it. They would play Naughty by Nature's 'O.P.P.' every day when it was already old in NJ," he says. "That was my first taste of how Miami radio is so cookie-cutter, playing the same songs over again."
LMS was kicking rhymes and beat-boxing during recess when he was a sixth-grader at José Martí Middle School in Hialeah. "But it wasn't until later on that cats found out I was a beast on the mike," he admits. "I had to battle for respect and to sharpen my skills; I was getting good at writing and started recording music at 16. Back then I wasn't too into the Miami scene but rapped with local cats like Shakespeare and Minus in school and was listening to rappers like Xzibit, Mobb Deep, Pete Rock, and Eminem."
After graduating from Barbara Goleman Senior High School in Miami Lakes, and after a brief stint at Miami Dade College, LMS entered a battle during the first night of a new weekly party at Club G's in Miami Lakes. He won, garnering himself a performance slot a few weeks later. Soon he became the host of that memorable weekly hip-hop jam, which ran for almost a year in 2003. "That was really the first time where I got in on the local scene. I had known cats, but now they had a chance to see me develop," he says. "For a year we had a hip-hop spot in Hialeah-Miami Lakes, with performances, graff, and b-boy battles, and this is where I also met up with my crew, Dub P." Since then, LMS has continued to rock shows, opening for acts such as Kool Keith and KRS-One. He has also dropped two mixtapes, The Pagemaster, through Write Beat productions, featuring a fresh collabo with Dynas & Garcia on "Miami's Finest"; and last year's standout, In the Meantime.