Life and Nas were good

mson

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New York emcee. Gone, too, are the late nights when my college buddy, Himieh, would call to ramble in his lisping Liberian accent about the latest work of Queensbridge rapper Nasir "Nas" Jones.

When I met Himieh in 1997 at the decidedly non-urban University of Kansas, he could barely believe that he'd found someone who ieh's parents worshipped Liberian soccer apostle George Weah, but in a testament to generational culture shifts, the smiling Himieh is a hip-hop guy. He favors Usher on his dress-up days, Mike Tyson on his hungover ones.

During and after college, we spent countless nights poring over Nas' releases—I Am..., Nastradamus, Stillmatic and The Lost Tapes. For both of us, Illmatic, released in 1994, was a sacred text, and subsequent albums were corollaries. Himieh would call me at all hours of the night, preaching to the previously converted about how Nas' rap repertoire was the best.

But in 2003, those calls began to dwindle, and I understood why: Just before Christmas of 2002, Nas issued God's Son. Himieh had begun to disregard Nas' new material as a bunch of street-poet rigmarole, lacking authentic New York street swing.

But Himieh didn't know that a young Durham producer named 9th Wonder had chased God's Son with an unofficial remix titled God's Stepson. The makeover was enough to make me fantasize that Nas would hear the project and return to the glossy boom-bap roots that had energized people around Illmatic. Maybe he would work with 9th Wonder. Maybe he'd do another project with Pete Rock or DJ Premier. A decade later, though, none of that has happened.

For the former faithful, Nas was the all-time liberator of beats, not the rapper who might own a small percentage of a professional basketball team or become a fashion mogul or a big-time label head. No, Nas was a writer, a rapper to inspire spoken-word poets and aspiring emcees alike, a hip-hop celebrity to model oneself after. In her essay "'It Ain't Hard to Tell': A Story of Lyrical Transcendence," Princeton University professor Imani Perry describes Illmatic as "ars poetica, a definitive statement for the art of hip-hop poetry." Nas wrote like a thinker, not a bankroller.

After the turn of the millennium, that was one takeaway from the feud between Nas the brains and Jay-Z the bank. One of hip-hop's nastiest battles, the quarrel fueled two righteous diss tracks ("The Takeover" and "Ether") and led to noticeable factions within hip-hop at large. The two subsequently squashed the beef, and Nas signed to Def Jam during Jay-Z's reign. The two even recorded a song, "Black Republicans," for Nas' 2006 Def Jam debut, Hip Hop Is Dead.

In the end, Jay-Z won that war: Hip Hop Is Dead surrounded Nas with an A-list of rap celebrities, including will.i.am, The Game and Snoop Dogg. He felt comfortable as one of them, not something better. This wasn't the brainy, brawny emcee that Himieh and I had worshiped.

During the last decade, Nas has either depended upon hackneyed political statements (the Untitled "******" album, the "hip-hop is dead" mantra, the Distant Relatives project with Damian Marley) or broadcast his personal life on tracks. Last year's Life Is Good teased with the brilliant flashes of the emcee Himieh and I used to worship, especially on "Locomotive" and "Nasty."

But it was too little too late, or so I reckoned as Nas simply sat in his chair while Drake climbed the stage to accept the Grammy for Best Rap Album for Take Care. Nas lost in three other categories, too. There was a time when the hip-hop world seemed to be his, but this was the 13th time he'd been nominated for a Grammy and not walked away with a gold trophy. It could have been different. For a
 

mson

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But it was too little too late, or so I reckoned as Nas simply sat in his chair while Drake climbed the stage to accept the Grammy for Best Rap Album for Take Care. Nas lost in three other categories, too. There was a time when the hip-hop world seemed to be his, but this was the 13th time he'd been nominated for a Grammy and not walked away with a gold trophy. It could have been different. For a a time it was.

Life and Nas were good | Music Essay | Indy Week
 

Professor Polo

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Fuuuck this article... basically stating Nas' newer work isn't good because its not Illmatic... When will people learn that there will never be another illmatic. How about praising Nas for pushing the envelope and trying something different as opposed to brag rap and swag. Lets praisethe rappers that rap about money, material possessions, weed, or fuuucking women.. Lets criticize the ones the ones that write intimate lyrics and discuss their personal life on a record.
 

Awesome Wells

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Fuuuck this article... basically stating Nas' newer work isn't good because its not Illmatic... When will people learn that there will never be another illmatic. How about praising Nas for pushing the envelope and trying something different as opposed to brag rap and swag. Lets praisethe rappers that rap about money, material possessions, weed, or fuuucking women.. Lets criticize the ones the ones that write intimate lyrics and discuss their personal life on a record.

In all honesty, Nas isn't really pushing the envelope at all. What he's doing now, with speaking about his personal life, has been done many times before. And Nas was one of the most visible cats in the late 90's speakin' on material possessions, money, women, swag, weed, etc. He only changed his direction, to be the anti-Hov hero that people wanted him to be. Before that "beef" he spoke more about those things than most rappers did.

The problem with Nas, is not that he's not speaking about what other people are. It's the fact that he's not makin' music on the level that people expect from a Nas. No one cares about topics, people wanted Nas to be Nas! And no one likes to speak on it, but dude has seriously fallen short of who he was supposed to be. There will never be another Illmatic, this is true. But you can't drop that level of greatness, and just coast for the rest of your career. That's what he's done. He hasn't even gotten close to that level again. That's the problem with Nas, not his subject matter.
 

L. Deezy

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In all honesty, Nas isn't really pushing the envelope at all. What he's doing now, with speaking about his personal life, has been done many times before. And Nas was one of the most visible cats in the late 90's speakin' on material possessions, money, women, swag, weed, etc. He only changed his direction, to be the anti-Hov hero that people wanted him to be. Before that "beef" he spoke more about those things than most rappers did.

The problem with Nas, is not that he's not speaking about what other people are. It's the fact that he's not makin' music on the level that people expect from a Nas. No one cares about topics, people wanted Nas to be Nas! And no one likes to speak on it, but dude has seriously fallen short of who he was supposed to be. There will never be another Illmatic, this is true. But you can't drop that level of greatness, and just coast for the rest of your career. That's what he's done. He hasn't even gotten close to that level again. That's the problem with Nas, not his subject matter.

HEEES 39-40 dude.. LMAOOOO

ya'll type some of the most outrageous bullshyt about dude and dont know him

He came out in 91. Album in 94. He still here. lol

y'all kill me on here.
 

Awesome Wells

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HEEES 39-40 dude.. LMAOOOO

ya'll type some of the most outrageous bullshyt about dude and dont know him

He came out in 91. Album in 94. He still here. lol

y'all kill me on here.

What does any of those things have to do with what I posted?

His age means he can't make the kind of music that people would expect from an artist of his talent?
 

L. Deezy

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Your post is stupid.. like beyond stupid

You basically saying dude is not allowed to age, Be an adult, Change his thinking??

This nygga was 24-25 making shyt you talking about.

Jay dont rap Reasonable Doubt either. These dudes are older and have seen the world many times over. Nas has a kid in college man.

Its a reason why Nas and Jay have lasted so long. Everybody else on a fukkin milk carton but you trying to A&R careers? lol
 

Awesome Wells

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Your post is stupid.. like beyond stupid

You basically saying dude is not allowed to age, Be an adult, Change his thinking??

This nygga was 24-25 making shyt you talking about.

Jay dont rap Reasonable Doubt either. These dudes are older and have seen the world many times over. Nas has a kid in college man.

Its a reason why Nas and Jay have lasted so long. Everybody else on a fukkin milk carton but you trying to A&R careers? lol

I didn't say that at all.

What I said was he's spoken about the same shyt that people act like he hasn't. I also said that people expect more from him, than he's given us over his career.

Read, my dude. Read.
 

L. Deezy

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I didn't say that at all.

What I said was he's spoken about the same shyt that people act like he hasn't. I also said that people expect more from him, than he's given us over his career.

Read, my dude. Read.

"And Nas was one of the most visible cats in the late 90's speakin' on material possessions, money, women, swag, weed, etc. He only changed his direction, to be the anti-Hov hero that people wanted him to be."

^^^^Um thats you mayne..:stopitslime:
 

L. Deezy

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dont get me wrong.. IWW Nas was his best. From albums to unreleased mixtape shyt. But you HAVE to change direction for the most part.

Example
Look at nyggas screamin on Ross RIGHT NOW for doing the same thing over and over. The key for Ross now is how can he transition into different topics.

Nas and Jay did for the most part. At a certain point, your music has to be your REAL life at that moment.
 
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