wow after an interview about togetherness you say some divisive you nikkas are hopelessGood thing drake will never be considered lyrical eh fakkit?![]()
There's two types of writers, Class 1 and Class 2. Class 1 are more cinematic and straightforward, so people enjoy them because they're simple to understand and have easy to follow plot lines. Like books that get on a best seller's list. Like Biggie's "Warning". These types make straight forward music videos/movie scripts.they won't. They know that if they did, no one would listen to them because most can't pull it off. Better to be a fraud and cacs like you.
There's two types of writers, Class 1 and Class 2. Class 1 are more cinematic and straightforward, so people enjoy them because they're simple to understand and have easy to follow plot lines. Like books that get on a best seller's list. Like Biggie's "Warning". These types make straight forward music videos/movie scripts.
Class 2 writers focus more on the artistic merits of words themselves. They inherently sell less, because they have different artistic intentions and the audience has to work more for satisfaction by having to pay more attention to the individual words. So it doesn't make sense to point out someone like Joey Bada$$ or Nas' record sales, because they have completely different artistic intentions. They're making pieces of art that are inherently not-best seller potential, for their own specific reasons.
It's not a matter of 'not being able to pull it off', everyone just has a subjective perspective of what the purpose of "art" is, and they embody these different ideas in separate ways using different techniques to achieve their goals. If everyone had the same homogeneous view of what hip-hop is supposed to be, it would completely go against the original intent of hip-hop/art in general which is to express your inner creativity.
Telling a lyrical rapper to be less literary is like telling a poet to write a movie script.
There's two types of writers, Class 1 and Class 2. Class 1 are more cinematic and straightforward, so people enjoy them because they're simple to understand and have easy to follow plot lines. Like books that get on a best seller's list. Like Biggie's "Warning". These types make straight forward music videos/movie scripts.
Class 2 writers focus more on the artistic merits of words themselves. They inherently sell less, because they have different artistic intentions and the audience has to work more for satisfaction by having to pay more attention to the individual words. So it doesn't make sense to point out someone like Joey Bada$$ or Nas' record sales, because they have completely different artistic intentions. They're making pieces of art that are inherently not-best seller potential, for their own specific reasons.
It's not a matter of 'not being able to pull it off', everyone just has a subjective perspective of what the purpose of "art" is, and they embody these different ideas in separate ways using different techniques to achieve their goals. If everyone had the same homogeneous view of what hip-hop is supposed to be, it would completely go against the original intent of hip-hop/art in general which is to express your inner creativity.
Telling a lyrical rapper to be less literary is like telling a poet to write a movie script.
It's okay if you prefer one style over the other, but engaging in some frivolous war against lyricism in threads all over these boards like I see you do is a complete waste of time and energy.
There's two types of writers, Class 1 and Class 2. Class 1 are more cinematic and straightforward, so people enjoy them because they're simple to understand and have easy to follow plot lines. Like books that get on a best seller's list. Like Biggie's "Warning". These types make straight forward music videos/movie scripts.
Class 2 writers focus more on the artistic merits of words themselves. They inherently sell less, because they have different artistic intentions and the audience has to work more for satisfaction by having to pay more attention to the individual words. So it doesn't make sense to point out someone like Joey Bada$$ or Nas' record sales, because they have completely different artistic intentions. They're making pieces of art that are inherently not-best seller potential, for their own specific reasons.
It's not a matter of 'not being able to pull it off', everyone just has a subjective perspective of what the purpose of "art" is, and they embody these different ideas in separate ways using different techniques to achieve their goals. If everyone had the same homogeneous view of what hip-hop is supposed to be, it would completely go against the original intent of hip-hop/art in general which is to express your inner creativity.
Telling a lyrical rapper to be less literary is like telling a poet to write a movie script.
It's okay if you prefer one style over the other, but engaging in some frivolous war against lyricism in threads all over these boards like I see you do is a complete waste of time and energy.
Naw the point is that if you're making music then it needs to succeed on the level of being MUSIC first. A lot of underground rappers in the "lyricist" category write 16s without writing to a beat and then try to match a beat to the verse later which is why they don't have their own sound. Same thing with freestyles over jacked beats, its always hundreds of nikkas spitting "dope bars" on top of popular beats who completely ignore factoring in the actual direction of the music. It's a reason why the original version was a hit... It's not because they had the craziest pop culture references or the dopest flips, it's because the vocals and the music clicked in a way that was dope.