Naw my guy im already on 94nikka u said u on Connor right ? I’m on Contential and Essex. Turn around, you 3 minutes away
Bout to sip on some hendog
Naw my guy im already on 94nikka u said u on Connor right ? I’m on Contential and Essex. Turn around, you 3 minutes away
South cats cat read breh
Nobody has an issue with this, it's the nikkas that's trying to push this narrative that Jay Z was this dude who was played heavy.No one in NY gave a single fukk about what was going on down there unless they were hustling down there. And it stopped and started with Master P’s “Bout It, Bout It” record—that was it.
Go read them old RZA interviews that guys like Jay Electronica still cry about to see how seriously NY viewed you guys.
You weren’t a serious market until ‘99-‘00, that’s why a dude from New Orleans’ opinion is irrelevant compared to someone who actually experienced the club scene in NY in ‘96.
nikkas like BG and Juvenile were superstars to you guys even back then, why the hell should anyone take someone from a city like yours opinion serious on as to what was actually hitting in the streets back then?
Idiot im from Detroit ain’t no was on the radio all the time
cant knock the hustle got played too
it peaked At number 4 on billboard rap charts
u can’t get that with just one region
Ain't no might have about it. That's why Jay-Z was a mid-tier rapper in 96. He was not a nobody some claim, but there was so much great music from that year that Reasonable Doubt was not a standout. And it's a great album, but 96 was just flooded with dopeness.1996 might have been the most epic year in hip-hop history looking bak at it![]()
I'm from Alabama and Ain't No Nikka got played all the time on the radioTbh I never knew Jay existed until “Money Ain’t a Thing”. I’m from the South tho![]()
I’m from the South as well and was constantly hearing “Ain’t No nikka” with Foxy soooooooo muchTbh I never knew Jay existed until “Money Ain’t a Thing”. I’m from the South tho![]()
Solo rappers, yes. If we’re talking rap acts, Bone Thugs were top 3 from 1994-1997The top 3 rappers in 96 were Pac, Nas & BIG
Next case![]()
I'm from Alabama and Ain't No Nikka got played all the time on the radio
I’m from the South as well and was constantly hearing “Ain’t No nikka” with Foxy soooooooo much![]()
I was going to leave this thread alone, but I'm seeing too much bullshyt being spewed
By December 28, 1996, as @Cloud McFly posted, Jay was a somebody. Reasonable Doubt was not as popular yet
I wasn't even in grade school yet at the time but Ain't No was definitely getting play in Philly. The girls in my class loved rapping Foxy Brown's verse and it was my first time ever hearing Jay but I didn't listen to a full Jay Z album until Vol. 1
I also remember going to Myrtle Beach that summer and it was also getting played down there as well