There's showing respect and there's dikk ridingShowing respect to your peers, elders and greats is apparently reserved to Latinos, cacs and Chinese
To too many black pride and love is only relevant when it’s anti-white, disgusting.
There's showing respect and there's dikk ridingShowing respect to your peers, elders and greats is apparently reserved to Latinos, cacs and Chinese
To too many black pride and love is only relevant when it’s anti-white, disgusting.
That is true but to you dudes, it's obviously the same.There's showing respect and there's dikk riding
I'm from BK. I've seen astonishing amount of dikk riding for Jay Z. More than any other NY artist besides BIGThat is true but to you dudes, it's obviously the same.
The amount of respect people show the two greatest MCs from the burough is astonishing?I'm from BK. I've seen astonishing amount of dikk riding for Jay Z. More than any other NY artist besides BIG
What about 50 or Cam?I'm from BK. I've seen astonishing amount of dikk riding for Jay Z. More than any other NY artist besides BIG
What about 50 or Cam?
This is facts though.YO!
That's the thing that gets me about it! OK, y'all weren't rockin' to Smif n Wessun, GangStarr, or whatever the fukk back in the '90s, your prerogative... but let a MF from the East Coast say they never listened to Kingpin Skinny Pimp or Ghetto Mafia or some song that only got played in three states during the spring of '98, and "BIAS!" is the first thing that comes outta nikkas' mouths!
Well, Gipp's whole argument against Jay Z disqualifies his whole premise. He vehemently says Jay Z wasn't getting play like that based on the fact that the T.I.'s and Jeezy's give Jay Z props and cite him as influences. T.I. thinks highly of Jay as does Jeezy. You'd even see DF members like Big Boi give Jay props.
Sure, there was point in like '96-'97 where Jay Z wasn't really a big deal here, but of course it changed with "Money Ain't A Thang". That's pretty much the history.
I don't think his issue is with Jay Z, but with how the industry plays him up in his eyes. I mean, even in Atlanta, it kind of looks funny when you have a native like Jermaine Dupri have a huge single with Jay Z, but you got Dungeon Family right there in the city and it was like really late in the game before JD collaborated with any of them. Not saying, he was obligated to doing songs with them, but it is what it is. Then there's the fact that ATL artists were bigging up Jay when there's direct influences in the city on their styles. Again, T.I. nor Jeezy or any ATL artist is obligated to cite any of them as influences, but it is what it is. To their credit, they always give credit to Outkast and T.I. shouted out Goodie Mob's Soul Food on "Top Back".
Then he goes on to completely abandon the art form to make movies about him and Tyrese flying stolen cars in outer space.And this was corny cause Nas wasn't speaking on the South and he coulda hit Nas up personally being that they was close and Nas always shown him the utmost respect as an emcee. shyt was all clout chasing.
that album had Jay, Nas, Mase, Lil Kim, Keith Sweat, Madd Rapper, DMX, Slick Rick, and Mariah Carey on it.. that’s nine artists from New York lmaoooooYup.
One of their own gave Jay a decent shot in the arm back then on that Life in 1472 album (and it was a good album for its time).
that album had Jay, Nas, Mase, Lil Kim, Keith Sweat, Madd Rapper, DMX, Slick Rick, and Mariah Carey on it.. that’s nine artists from New York lmaooooo
YO!
That's the thing that gets me about it! OK, y'all weren't rockin' to Smif n Wessun, GangStarr, or whatever the fukk back in the '90s, your prerogative... but let a MF from the East Coast say they never listened to Kingpin Skinny Pimp or Ghetto Mafia or some song that only got played in three states during the spring of '98, and "BIAS!" is the first thing that comes outta nikkas' mouths!
Son that was live on MTV. A whole media segment. Nas also spoke on it on his radio interviews as well. Them ATL nikkas IGNORED it and still shytted on him for it.
that album had Jay, Nas, Mase, Lil Kim, Keith Sweat, Madd Rapper, DMX, Slick Rick, and Mariah Carey on it.. that’s nine artists from New York lmaooooo