U right his cosign probably not as big as it would seem in retrospect but it’s still more than what 3-6 had. I’m sure Eazy knowledge of the game helped BTNH in some. And true I guess I forgot to mention the buzz the beef with Bone would give them. I could say the same thing you did about Eazy tho. 3-6 might’ve been first associated with the whole mid-west/mid-south rap beef against Bone over rapping fast but most of their success comes from their crunk shyt. But I think we making similar points. 3-6 were mainly underground independent artists for the most of the 90s. They signed to Relativity and dropped Chapter 2 which did alright but they started to see more mainstream success with the next album which dropped in 2000 and they just gradually got bigger as the landscape of rap changed to match their sound. Bone were huge in the 90s and seems like they had the game in a chokehold that’s something I wasn’t there for but I gotta give respect for that. If we going off just the 90s yea Bone winning easily but I just feel like 3-6 done put so much work in from 2000 to now that it almost evens out the playing field.
lol.
3-6 mafia moving up to the b-list for a lil bit aftter hip-hop fell off, does NOT even out the playing field at all.
and youre bragging about 3-6 mafia in 2000 w/ sizzurrp and all that, but bone thugs were still hotter in 2000.
bone thugs ressurrection went platinum in 2 weeks and alot of people consider in their 2nd best LP/3rd best release.
they were still bigger & better than 3-6 mafia in 2000.
and truth be told, "when the smoke clears" was prolly the last official 3-6 mafia album that was any good.
i aprreciate the fact that you admit to not living thru it all, but yea, 3-6 has no business on stage with bone.
Man if you don't gone with this BS. You can't put an OutKast as B level, place Three Six on C Level all while saying No Limit was A Level before 3-6 dropped a major label debut. Keeping it regional, before anybody ever heard about No Limit, Kast was an A Level Southern act. This never changed. You couldn't place anyone on No Limit on an A Level until 1997. OutKast was wildly popular before, during, and after No Limit's run.
I got Bone above Three Six, but Three Six's buzz had nothing to do with Bone and everything to do with "Tear Da Club Up '97". Do or Die, Crucial, and Twista all had their own sound which was nothing like Bone. The closest to Bone was Crucial and they had this country style to them. Only common thread was tongue twisting flows, which Twista pioneered before Bone even became Bone.
And LOL at Silkk The Shocker being a double time rapper. He struggled with that flow and that's why people to this day think he's wack. None of the songs that Silkk is actually known for has him using double time.
In terms of double time, you might as well throw Busta in the hat too. He was definitely doing double time on "Ginme Some More" and "What's It Gonna Be" and "Iz They Wildin".
i understand the confusion, but i wasnt ranking southern levels. i was ranking overall levels.
3-6 mafia dropped their major debut at the end of '97.
outkast was never "wildly popular", but whatever. im not getting into that with you.
"tear da club up" was NOT an across-the-board hit.
and i was on the forums back then. the main buzz about them leading up to their relativity debut was their beef with bone thugs. the main topics with all of those acts that i mentioned, usually revolved around bone. and when those names were brought up offline to the general jaded fan, their word association was with bone. however you want to classify them stylistically is neither here nor there.
silkk the shocker outshined bone thugs on a track............by a wide-margin.
