
im tryna imagine Ra over In Da Club and eeeehh,i guess i could see him over it if i never heard 50 over it. But after hearin 50 on it i cant say i think Rakim could do it more justice than 50 did to its full potential.He can rip alotta beats but i don't think In Da Club would compliment him,it would just be nice rapper nice beat which is almost ALWAYS passable. But not what classics are made of

...Back DOwn would be cool for him to rap over tho,i think hed handle that easy.
But i gotta agree Dre probaly shoulda been able to craft beats that suited Rakim, but Dre has a legacy of producing which INCLUDES giving rappers instruction on what he thinks they should rap about,and what kinda delivery he thinks they should use etc....he takes on all those responsibilitys of a producer and has made classics doing that...he gives that instruction and his young pupils take it. Can i blame him for wanting to stick with a recipe that has created classic after classic,especially since its HIS LABEL and hes Dr Dre?hell nah i cant blame em
Then on the other hand you have Rakim,and can i really blame him for not wanting to take instruction from ANYBODY on HOW to rap or what he should be rapping about

?absolutely not,no way in hell you can blame him either.
creative differences does seem like the best way to describe this

...who do you ask to bend in this scenario?its Dres label,hes Dr Dre so its hard to question results. Rakim is Rakim and its hard to argue with the results of him rapping without anybodys help. End of the day its Dres label though,id prefer Rakim bend but respect him for not bending if that makes sense. it probaly wouldn't have sounded like an authentic Rakim talkin about what Dre wanted which could have made for a bad album just as well. sounded great on paper though
Far as west coast production whoever said Quik was a better fit was right,and i think Johnny J woulda been a great fit too. but neither sound as good as Rakim and DRe,and neither could sign Rakim