I like this topic..
Biggie and Pac were widely loved by everybody. No different than the top rappers at any given time in history, fans/other artists were mixed about them. Some people loved them, some people hated them.
There was a bunch of different rap acts getting major play. If you watched Video Music Box and other local/smaller Hip Hop shows, you'd definitely get mid-tier underground acts videos getting played but the bigger Hip Hop shows on MTV and BET pretty much only played what was popular or what the label was pushing. Mainstream Hip Hop media has always been about numbers. Don't let these nikkas lie to you.
Yup, this hs a HUGE misconception. They were definitely not universally loved like they are now
Big had beef with Jeru Tha Damaja and Ghostface & Rae dissed him on Cuban Link for a reason.
A lot of "real Hip-Hop heads" did not like the beginnings of the champagne jiggy raps that Biggie & Puffy were bringing to the East Coast in '94-'95
When Pac was in jail, Q-Tip and tons of East Coast artists dissed him.
Why do you think he went so hard at New York?
With the exception of Boot Camp & Wu-Tang cats who always fukked with Pac
The Jersey people also held him down. Treach, Queen Latifah, and the Outlawz held him down.
I'd say this about Yo! and MTV Jams, but Rap City not so much. Rap City (pre-Basement) was playing pretty much anything that was out there, sometimes to a fault
One of the biggest misconceptions is that "back then you had to have lyrical skills/be original to get signed" and shyt along those lines. There was a LOT of wack/subpar nikkas out there. Not only did you not need skills/originality to get signed, you didn't need it to make a hit or get airplay either. There was a fair share of gimmickry, biting, and mediocrity. We don't celebrate any of those MFs today, but if you were there, you know they existed.
I always say there's a reason why songs like "I Used To Love HER", "Paparazzi", "Time's Up", "Come Clean", etc. existed... they were all more or less commentaries on the wack shyt that was going on in hip-hop. It wasn't just ALL dope shyt ALL the time as folks would like to believe.
I don't think anybody said that everybody had to be dope, just that you had a higher standard in general.
The Common, Xzibit, Jeru stuff was about about them trying to uphold a standard.
I mean, Jeru dissed Biggie for being to commercial and now we'd kill to have a guy like Biggie today.
He would be considered an underground New York rapper or something
Common was dissing the popularity of gangsta rap, but we'd kill to have anybody as good as NWA or Ice Cube or Ice-T today in the mainstream
Now, when Xzibit puts out "Paparazzi", that right there was where Hip-Hop was starting to go off the rails
People like Wendy Williams and Vibe Magazine had created this "East Coast/West Coast" war that they overdramatized and rappers were playing into it.
We'd be better off if we had guys policing the culture like we had back then. Calling out cats for selling out instead of saying, "Well, so & so wasn't perfect, so now none of us have to have any standards", which is where we're at now
Rappers having more “substance” than this generation. A lot of those 90s rappers had the same money, hoes, and clothes material rappers talk about now. And then there were the super lyrical miracle rappers who spent their whole careers rapping about how good they rapped and thought that made them more righteous than the money, hoes, and clothes rappers.
Rapping about how good you are at rapping does make you more righteous than being a heathen
And making music for the hood instead of the suburban white kids does make you does make you more righteous than those shucking and jiving so CACs and Mexicans will buy their records.
