I skipped some of the thread![]()
Someone really compared it to them
I gotta feeling I know who![]()
read the thread my dude. Dude gives a fukkin thesis on how this album wasnt shytI skipped some of the thread![]()
Someone really compared it to them
I gotta feeling I know who![]()
read the thread my dude. Dude gives a fukkin thesis on how this album wasnt shytread the thread my dude. Dude gives a fukkin thesis on how this album wasnt shyt
I thought it was gonna be someone else
I know this a forum but some shyt you just gotta keep to yourself
Or say it once and keep it moving.Im not saying they werent. But for dude to compare TM101 to those shyts is a reach at best. The sound isnt the same whatsoever.
One thing I noticed that not one person has pointed out in response to my opposition of TM101. Elders that I've touched base with dont approve of the glorifiction of being a drug dealer due to the mental backfire and life altering scars that linger. Either your gonna be a full time animal which results in death or prison or you gain some sort of consciousness that will create a guilt factor where glorifying your past sins is the last thing you'd wanna do . Jeezys music represented the drug dealer, mind you a year prior another rapper named Saigon put out a song called "Color Purple" where he was asking for Bloods and Crips to unite and stop beefing. Saigon in my eyes represented how the real gangsters talk. Real gansgters are on some "scolding uncle" sh*t. Jeezy was on some "nikka on the corner" sh*t. Saigon did 6 years, came out and said he wanted his debut to enlighten the kids not poison them. Jeezys 1st debut wanted to "motivate thugs."....The bar for consciousness wasn't raised when Jeezy took off in 2005. This is all I'm pointing out. Jeezys music represented that drug dealer rap. 2005 definatly marked a new era closing the 90's imprint all together. By 2005 when coke rap should have been already been played out after the likes of Master P, The Lox and The Clipse....Coke Rap saw a rebirth in Trap Musik. This was a new generation so its understandable as to why a new drug dealer rapper would fit right in place in 2005. 2005 was also the year of Hurricanne Katrina. In my eyes Blck folks didnt need "motivated thugs" at such a time.
Again....To many elders I know dont co sign the glorification of being a drug dealer. Only fools glorify it. Bottom line its all entertainment so glorifying being a drug dealer gets a pass......But to me the Drug Dealer rap was at its height with No Limit...To me ....glorifying being a drug dealer was a played out concept in Hip Hop by 2005.....This is why TM101 is just iight to me till this day........The now generation of that era would of course disagree.
Excuse the confusion.....But its not the sound i was refering to...im speaking on the lyrical content. I noticed u keep talking sh*t about the wrong thing so let me correct you. I specificlly meant the lyrical content and I even pointed that out. There's no way u can say the dope dealing lyrical content wasn't already done with No Limit....
Ice Cream Man = Snow Man

If youre gonna shyt on Jeezy for making trap music, and rappin bout drugs and shyt, you may as well go ahead and discredit, Tip, Gotti, Gucci etc etc.
Lyrics is weak...like clock radio speakers.
Singles was ehh.
Production didn't appeal to me.
Go Crazy was great though. That record may be classic. Not the album.

OK.....Now we're getting somewhere.
This "street story" that u are refering to that was told so differently....what did I miss? Point it out cuz it must have went over my head. Dudes "started from the bottom" story sounded like everyone elses but u say otherwise.....
now.....I must point out that when 101 came out...Lil Jon was the king of Ad libs. Jeezy was not touching Lil Jon in that area.
and those 808 drums might have been new to u.....But they were a signature sound in 80's NY Hip Hop(Im assuming u are refering to the drums because the songs u posted "air force ones" and Trap or die" sound like the same beat and u cant scream "innovative" when one song sounds exctly like another song u did).......Also......Let me specify.......I meant to say "Lyrically....it sounded like Late 90's No Limit"
Who was rapping like jeezy before it dropped?
Now look at the all the rappers who was rapping like jeezy after it dropped.
Every street nikka was a jeezy clone after tm101
Even the way he came in the game with BMF and a street movement behind him. Then all of a sudden everyone starts reppin their movement and how rich they was before rap and how they a real nikka this, real nikka that, i dont need rap etc.
Jeezy gave these nikkaz a blueprint to come in the game with and alot of people got rich off of it.
Even Yo Gotti said it in one his songs
and people called him a jeezy clone.
So no one else sounding like him to the 4953543 clones after him doesnt make him groundbreaking?
What would you call that then?
One thing I noticed that not one person has pointed out in response to my opposition of TM101. Elders that I've touched base with dont approve of the glorifiction of being a drug dealer due to the mental backfire and life altering scars that linger. Either your gonna be a full time animal which results in death or prison or you gain some sort of consciousness that will create a guilt factor where glorifying your past sins is the last thing you'd wanna do . Jeezys music represented the drug dealer, mind you a year prior another rapper named Saigon put out a song called "Color Purple" where he was asking for Bloods and Crips to unite and stop beefing. Saigon in my eyes represented how the real gangsters talk. Real gansgters are on some "scolding uncle" sh*t. Jeezy was on some "nikka on the corner" sh*t. Saigon did 6 years, came out and said he wanted his debut to enlighten the kids not poison them. Jeezys 1st debut wanted to "motivate thugs."....The bar for consciousness wasn't raised when Jeezy took off in 2005. This is all I'm pointing out. Jeezys music represented that drug dealer rap. 2005 definatly marked a new era closing the 90's imprint all together. By 2005 when coke rap should have been already been played out after the likes of Master P, The Lox and The Clipse....Coke Rap saw a rebirth in Trap Musik. This was a new generation so its understandable as to why a new drug dealer rapper would fit right in place in 2005. 2005 was also the year of Hurricanne Katrina. In my eyes Blck folks didnt need "motivated thugs" at such a time.
Again....To many elders I know dont co sign the glorification of being a drug dealer. Only fools glorify it. Bottom line its all entertainment so glorifying being a drug dealer gets a pass......But to me the Drug Dealer rap was at its height with No Limit...To me ....glorifying being a drug dealer was a played out concept in Hip Hop by 2005.....This is why TM101 is just iight to me till this day........The now generation of that era would of course disagree.
Excuse the confusion.....But its not the sound i was refering to...im speaking on the lyrical content. I noticed u keep talking sh*t about the wrong thing so let me correct you. I specificlly meant the lyrical content and I even pointed that out. There's no way u can say the dope dealing lyrical content wasn't already done with No Limit....
Ice Cream Man = Snow Man