This is The Future Of RAP The dude everybody going crazy over

NotaPAWG

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Let me find out Chief Keef is really out here influencing these young nikkas:ohhh:

People on here thought I was I crazy and calling me a cac for saying that Keef has a classic and has influenced more these young dudes coming up than Kendrick has but there's so much evidence to back it :yeshrug:



 
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Max B

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I like playboi carti,uzi and kodak but this nikka is wack as fukk,
 

AkaDemiK

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Ia9Jtz5.jpg


:mjlol:

These new school weirdo lookin hipster nikkas are comical to me. nikka look str8 out the burbs with his best "I googled how to dress like a rapper" look on..
 

Unknown Poster

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True, but that is in the streets. You never see Dave East on the blogs or loved by the hipsters or the "tastemakers"......wonder why :patrice:
:mjpls:

This is a new era in rap now.

The streets and the hood mean NOTHING in the gran scheme of things.

XXL and the source hold no weight. The majority of news is posted from Complex, Pitchfork, Vice, Noisey, or The Fader mag in the booth.

Hip-hop has been gentrified and suburbanized. The street rapper is dead. Beause the majority of rap listeners and consumers don't come from the hood. They can't relate to that lifestyle. They want to listen to rappers they can relate to and see themselves in. They never saw themselves in the hood rappers. The white people saw them as the black people to be afraid of. The black people saw them as the people that bullied them and claimed they weren't black enough. Their gone from the equation.

Expect more Lil Uzi Verts and less Dave Easts. Dave East is a niche artist in this era. He'll never get that push.

I'd rather have street rappers spitting that real though...I can't depend on these cats to do anything and lowkey they're embarassing. Emasculated, feminized, safe, non-threatening, and stand up for nothing.
 

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That whole generation been raised off of fast food n drugs. That's why them dudes look like that. :scust:

What we see now is a direct response to what was happening in in rap when lyrics (temporary) came back in late 2010 to end of 2012. At one point, cats like Ross, Drake (before the water game ghost writing shyt), Kanye, Odd Future, Cole, Cudi, Jon Conner, Lupe, Schoolboy Q, Bas and Kendrick were popping off, with crazy buzz. When Kendrick dropped GKMC in September 2012, the powers that be were like "the urban audience is smartening up from the one hit wonder Era of 04 to 09. We can't have that happen again. :demonic: "

Then they dropped Chief Keef. Keef and Kendrick were put against one another, like negative vs positive, ignorance vs conscious, etc.

Kendrick won that battle, where positivity hasn't won directly against negativity in YEARS, against Keef. Interscope wasn't having that; a young black MC dropping positive rap that is lyrical that is getting at the attention where their former cash cow, Fifty, was dead in the water. They needed Keef to blow up and re-establish negative street raps to profit another decade of ignorance.

Keef flopped, but other people weren't happy about that. With cats in that 2012 Era like Lupe, Cole, Kendrick gaining more momentum and sales than 2 chainz, they wanted that ratchet club music back as top dog. "The streets" who were strip club and club focused, can't have the main Dawgs being lyrical and positive.

That's why they pushed Future, Young Thug, Trinidad James and so on from 2013 onwards to drown out the lyrical raps and make autotune and trap regain steam. Ingenious marketing to sabotage the would-be impact that the upcoming kids that loomed up to Cole, Kendrick, Cudi, and Lupe.

The "streets" and corporate worked together to dead any format of intelligence or individual thinking that could have come from the new lyrical movement. Except this time, they pushed the street dudes to rock feminine clothes and do gay trolling to push as "swag" to the kids.

Here we are, In 2016, wondering why a fraud like Drake, a gay appealing Young Thug, and a "rapper" like Future has all the influence and none of the integrity.
At this point, the rap game is wide open for the first openly gay rapper to become famous.
 
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