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![]()
Nah, I've LEGIT heard/seen people say stuff like that... especially talking about wack current rappers and saying they woulda never gotten signed back in the day, as if a record label owner would've bypassed them for not having "bars" nshyt. There were a lotta bar-less nikkas out there either floppin' or scoring fluke hits. MOST record label guys still were about $ first and foremost, signing all kinda half-ass rappers thinking they could blow up.
I definitely agree that there was a lot less fans and artists caping for trash like there are now. But that doesn't mean the trash wasn't being put out there.
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