"Auteuil, Neuilly, Passy (rap BCBG)" is a song recorded by the satiric group Les Inconnus in 1991.
The group used music by Maceo Parker in the song without his permission; as a result, they had legal problems due to copyright issues.
[1] Music & Media considered the song as a "parody on rap", in which "the three TV stars turn the tables on the usual raprecord dialogue-which often boasts of male chauvinism, ghetto talk and social engagement-by coming out with a rap about rich snobs.
Miles from Brooklyn in many ways, Auteuil, Neuilly, and Passy are names of the most fashionable quarters of Paris".
[2] The song is about the life of fictitious youngsters from the upper class singing rap on their allegedly difficult lives.