OVOUNRULY: Popcaan wants attn whore and opportunist, Mr. Vegas, to keep his name out his mouth.

2manyFCKNrappers

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:russell:

You sound like one of those bytches on Oh No They Didn't.


And Baka's a real one, that's all you need to know. :heh:

Yes. A real certified human sex trafficker. I don't know what Oh No He didn't is, but apparently you do so I'll let you keep that reference. Stan on.
 

Unknown Poster

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Dancehall artists are the last few real black artists that are protective of their craft. They saw what happened to every other genre black artists have created and don't want the same to happen to it.

Personally, as a West Indian (St. Croix, St.Kitts, Fredricksted, represent) man who grew up on this music and culture, Drake needs to find another genre to jack, won't happen here. Sorry.
 

Vilhena

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Dancehall artists are the last few real black artists that are protective of their craft. They saw what happened to every other genre black artists have created and don't want the same to happen to it.

Personally, as a West Indian (St. Croix, St.Kitts, Fredricksted, represent) man who grew up on this music and culture, Drake needs to find another genre to jack, won't happen here. Sorry.

Spot on.
 

WickedGames

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Dancehall artists are the last few real black artists that are protective of their craft. They saw what happened to every other genre black artists have created and don't want the same to happen to it.

Personally, as a West Indian (St. Croix, St.Kitts, Fredricksted, represent) man who grew up on this music and culture, Drake needs to find another genre to jack, won't happen here. Sorry.

As long as you've felt the same every other time a Hip Hop artist has flipped some dancehall reggae this is a fair opinion

From what I've seen the dancehall scene are very cool with people showing the genre love as long as genuine love is shown.
 

Krazy

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Dancehall artists are the last few real black artists that are protective of their craft. They saw what happened to every other genre black artists have created and don't want the same to happen to it.

Personally, as a West Indian (St. Croix, St.Kitts, Fredricksted, represent) man who grew up on this music and culture, Drake needs to find another genre to jack, won't happen here. Sorry.
Beautiful island.
 

TheRtist

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Dancehall artists are the last few real black artists that are protective of their craft. They saw what happened to every other genre black artists have created and don't want the same to happen to it.

Personally, as a West Indian (St. Croix, St.Kitts, Fredricksted, represent) man who grew up on this music and culture, Drake needs to find another genre to jack, won't happen here. Sorry.

very true. I've seen Sean Paul get bottles thrown at him in Jamaica cuz he went mainstream.

Mind you; the crowd seem to force themselves to dance to "Gimmie The Light", :yeshrug:"Temprature"...etc.

but when he got to the 2015+ stuff (Got To Love You) I swear I even saw a baby with the :stopitslime: face.
 

Fani Willis fan

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very true. I've seen Sean Paul get bottles thrown at him in Jamaica cuz he went mainstream.

Mind you; the crowd seem to force themselves to dance to "Gimmie The Light", :yeshrug:"Temprature"...etc.

but when he got to the 2015+ stuff (Got To Love You) I swear I even saw a baby with the :stopitslime: face.
Gimme the light is not no sellout shyt,
Dutty Rock is well liked dancehall album in ja

Its around Trinity were he became too western friendly with it
 

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As long as you've felt the same every other time a Hip Hop artist has flipped some dancehall reggae this is a fair opinion

From what I've seen the dancehall scene are very cool with people showing the genre love as long as genuine love is shown.
I mean, don't get me wrong, I've always felt that there was and still is a very strong connection between dancehall and hip-hop not just as black usic but because many of its participants were of west indian decent. And even if you weren't jamaican, as a black person the celebration of african roots and culture and introspective religion (rastafari) and the lifestyle would be enough to attract each other even with the cultural differences. Like you've said as long as people are cool with people showing love to the genre and general respect back to the artists there hasn't been an issue. Yardcore (hardcore hip-hop/reggae inb the 90s) was a great example.

The problem with what you said in your former comment, is that it doesn't apply EVERY other time simply because of who that music reaches...

Sean Paul and Rihanna I consider just watered down island sounds for pop audiences. Major Lazer honestly is EDM for racist white American kids & Euro culture vultures who like to go to Negril to fukk each other and get drunk smoke weed and do drugs. Drake is appealing to that same audience. That same audience eventually cannibalizes and destroys every black genre and turns it into watered down bullshyt and only wants to see themselves in it...NOT US. Cause they hate us but love our music, our style, but not us. So they would rather just take as much from us as possible without wanting to be around us.

You're in London, you should know how that shyt goes...that's why I'm shocked your riding for Drake this hard like this. West Indians/Carribbeans and AFricans make up the MAJORITY of black people there. Jamaica is a BRITISH colony. You should be aware of that cross pollination between jamaican and UK culture from white working class "skinnhead" (not racist "skinhead", the ones descended from Mod culture in the 50s) culture that was all about appropriating Reggae and where punk subsquently came from. You should also be aware of how hipsters and other tourists to our culture love to take our creations and take us out of the picture.

Controversy over all-white lineup cancels Awesome Tapes From Africa DJ night in Toronto

This is what happens when you don't protect your art and culture.

That article will NEVER stop being relevant.
:banderas:
 

WickedGames

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I mean, don't get me wrong, I've always felt that there was and still is a very strong connection between dancehall and hip-hop not just as black usic but because many of its participants were of west indian decent. And even if you weren't jamaican, as a black person the celebration of african roots and culture and introspective religion (rastafari) and the lifestyle would be enough to attract each other even with the cultural differences. Like you've said as long as people are cool with people showing love to the genre and general respect back to the artists there hasn't been an issue. Yardcore (hardcore hip-hop/reggae inb the 90s) was a great example.

The problem with what you said in your former comment, is that it doesn't apply EVERY other time simply because of who that music reaches...

Sean Paul and Rihanna I consider just watered down island sounds for pop audiences. Major Lazer honestly is EDM for racist white American kids & Euro culture vultures who like to go to Negril to fukk each other and get drunk smoke weed and do drugs. Drake is appealing to that same audience. That same audience eventually cannibalizes and destroys every black genre and turns it into watered down bullshyt and only wants to see themselves in it...NOT US. Cause they hate us but love our music, our style, but not us. So they would rather just take as much from us as possible without wanting to be around us.

You're in London, you should know how that shyt goes...that's why I'm shocked your riding for Drake this hard like this. West Indians/Carribbeans and AFricans make up the MAJORITY of black people there. Jamaica is a BRITISH colony. You should be aware of that cross pollination between jamaican and UK culture from white working class "skinnhead" (not racist "skinhead", the ones descended from Mod culture in the 50s) culture that was all about appropriating Reggae and where punk subsquently came from. You should also be aware of how hipsters and other tourists to our culture love to take our creations and take us out of the picture.

Controversy over all-white lineup cancels Awesome Tapes From Africa DJ night in Toronto

This is what happens when you don't protect your art and culture.

That article will NEVER stop being relevant.
:banderas:

Hmmmm nah, the same Jamaican girls I know from Brixton who love dancehall in the UK enjoy Drake Controlla and Rihanna Work. He might appeal to a wider audience but I don't know why people act like Drake is just an artist who appeals to white audiences lol.

The simple fact is drake is an artist who genuinely has a history of loving dancehall, has been out to Jamaica years ago fukkin with Beenie Man etc, comes from a city that is very Carribean influenced anyway . Him having one (maybedancehall influenced singles on his new album doesn't bother me.
 
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