OP sounds like a playa hatah ya heard me.
OP sounds like a playa hatah ya heard me.
Yeah I forgot about Slim. I always confuse him with Cash Money for some reason. Young Bleed was cool too. Anyways, anyone that over exaggerates their vowels is a Pac clone to me. And the dudes u named weren’t big like the others were. I will say I still listen to Mr. Ice Cream Man and I’m Bout It soundtrack to this day. Not sure if they’re considered classics, but their personal favorites for me.Pun did the song with Serv. A lot of them weren't Pac wannabes. Fiend, Soulja Slim, Big Ed, nor Kane & Abel sounded like Pac. Prime Suspects, the Gambinos, nor Ghetto Commission sounded like Pac either. I will say the Gambinos did seem like they modeled their style after the Outlawz though.
Yeah I forgot about Slim. I always confuse him with Cash Money for some reason. Young Bleed was cool too. Anyways, anyone that over exaggerates their vowels is a Pac clone to me. And the dudes u named weren’t big like the others were. I will say I still listen to Mr. Ice Cream Man and I’m Bout It soundtrack to this day. Not sure if they’re considered classics, but their personal favorites for me.
That whole album is Cali Master P that’s my favorite album of hisThat never ending song he’s got. The way he came on there was coo. Never heard it before.
No beat, simply talking and flows into a rap then the beat hits. It was raw.
No Limit the first nation wide southern rap staple, everything else was regional or at least hit the midwest. P & Puffy rode that wave that Death Row & Bad Boy started.This.
I'm still trying to figure out the whole "Hip Hop wasn't developed yet" as well. Master P's dominance came at a time when Hip Hop was opening up bigger budgets and we were seeing multiple Hip Hop releases have massive first week sales and multiple albums sell 5 million and over. Then there's The South. P came out a time when Southern Hip Hop was thriving on a national level. P blew up at a time when No Limit's Southern raw, rugged, more gangsta sound was the answer to Bad Boy's East Coast polished, more mainstreamed sound. This was when "gangsta rap" was written off in favor of a more party friendly, mainstream sound.
P was in his 30s rocking those braids lmao!

C- Murder was really the Pac biter. He actually remade his whole song damn near word for word on Ride my enemies. But nonetheless No limit was enjoyable to me. I was certified in my love for No Limit.“Them nikkas ain't real
Must'a started smokin' rocks
It all fell down
Cause they was bitin' too much Pac”Can’t cap I fell on my ass when Pimp C said that, cause it was lowkey true. What Master P did was important for southern hip hop, but outside Mac, Mystikal, and Mia X, them nikkas were 2Pac wannabes. Cash Money came in and destroyed all of that momentum; they sounded more New Orleans too, P was bitin too much bay music. Even Pun who did a song with that child molestor Skull Duggery, did his worst verse cause he had no respect for them; think NORE said some shyt on Endangered Species like Pun was just there trying to get a check, he didn’t like him.



