B-Real: 'Insane in the Brain' was a Kid Frost & Chubb Rock Diss, Vlad was in the Video

pawdalaw

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Chubb Rock ranks absolutely nowhere as a lyricist. And I don’t give a fukk whether you give a fukk where I’m from. Nobody ever discussed Chubb Rock or his albums as anything worth shyt. nikka had a couple party jams and that was that.
:russ:Remove Chubbs name and insert B Reals.
 

Walt

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Wait to you find out that @DonKnock is my alias, and I've been negging you all this time for your Harden slander.

InexperiencedIllustriousAfricangroundhornbill-max-1mb.gif

It’d be easier to believe that lame was a character you created than an actual individual. One of the few posters I’ve put on the block list sheerly because his posts made me feel secondhand embarrassment.
 

Yaboysix

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that's red hot lover tone who was the worst grand puba biter in the game lol. he dropped the red hot lover and just kept it at tone, quit rapping (thank god!), and became one of the illest commercial urban music producers in the game as tone and poke of trackmasters. check him at 1:05 and on with ya boy kellz and nas the don


of


you can also hear him talking at the beginning of shawty by hov and kellz off best of both worlds

Hell nawl! Lol
 

Yaboysix

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First guy is Red Hot Lover Tone bka Tone from the Trackmasters. He produced a lot of Chubb Rock's early 90s stuff before they blew up in the mid 90s. The other nikka is Rob Swinga from the rap group ATEEM with Hot Dog (Chubb Rock's dancer) and FM. Trackmasters used to be their producers too.

Hot Dog is on Black Sheep's first album on the song "Pass the 40" and unquestionably has the worst verse in Hip Hop history imo.

:russ:
 

Walt

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True.

Howie Tee was killing shyt with Special Ed and Chubb Rock around that time. A lot of classic material. Dude was really dope.

Special Ed was actual ahead of his time as a talent back then! Chubb Rock just had voice and delivery. He was a much better Rob Base. Cut from the Nice & Smooth cloth, but with worse albums.
 

SAJ!!

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Well then don't speak on things in 1991. :dahell:

Everyone on this board wanna claim to be young but speak as if they have first hand knowledge of things from 30 years ago.



It doesn't matter if they were checking for Cypress specifically because of B-Real. It's a group.

But yeah, people were quoting B-Real's verses and/or hooks when I was in high school.
You're acting like "Hand On The Pump" and "How I Could Just Kill A Man" ain't iconic hip-hop songs. :gucci:

You're acting like Erick Sermon didn't sample B-Real on Redman's debut. :gucci:

People fukked with Cypress music as a whole, more than Chubb Rock. By a wide margin too. Chubb Rock was the guy you went to for a couple solid songs and/or guest spots. Nobody was checking for his albums like that.

Fred.
Truth.

Folks always kill me with this revisionist history.

There was more anticipation for Black Sunday than there was for I Gotta Get Mine Yo!/Book Of Rhymes.

Chubb had the party joints, but that's where it stops.
 

Robbie3000

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Cypress def more important to the culture, but Chubb is washing B-Real lyrically.

After going back and relisting to those early Cypress HIll albums, I was wilding out. When you take in consistency, song writing, concepts and different flows, I have to go back and give it to B-Real.

I forgot how dope those early Cypress albums were.
 
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