6. "Yawn....the 90's is dead." In response to Reply # 0
People are amazed that he can rap like wack ass boom bap rappers that never moved units back in the day. A 7 year old could listen to an old LL Cool J video on Youtube and do this.
SMH @ gullible stans of 90's rap. Mickey Mouse ass music. That shit was always weak to me. Dudes rapping with 50 syllables in a bar and never saying nothing important.
Thank God the South took over the game. East Coast heads lookin' like Frank Lucas dope fiends in the game now. Hungry for a hit. LMFAO!
11. "What is the last instrumental he rhymes over here?" In response to Reply # 0 Tue Dec-30-14 04:20 AM by spirit
I seem to remember the title as "Man In These Streets" but can't recall exactly, nor do I remember the artist (Jeezy?)
my favorite bars here are what Waka did over Flava in Ya Ear
"a new page need to turn/need to save what we earn/you could slave every day/or live a little while you learn" (interesting balance between "saving" and "living a little"...Waka, the patron saint of restrained spending...who knew? LOL).
-DJ R-Tistic- Member since Nov 06th 2008 51986 posts
Tue Jan-06-15 04:55 AM
17. "You can hear the slight struggle that even 2 Chainz and Juicy J have" In response to Reply # 0
when they rap over 95 BPM type beats....a lot of Southern rappers are accustomed to ONLY spitting on 60-75 BPM tracks, so you can tell they're focusing HARD to ride the beat right. He sounded pretty good though, way better than we'd expect.
19. "Eh, sounds like something u say because u know he's a "southern" rapper" In response to Reply # 17
I mean, what's U-God's excuse? lol Flocka didn't sound like he was struggling at all, to me. Actually he sounded natural and like he was having fun over the beats.
-DJ R-Tistic- Member since Nov 06th 2008 51986 posts
Wed Jan-07-15 10:31 AM
20. "Shit I vouch for the South waaay more than most! On the flip side...." In response to Reply # 19 Wed Jan-07-15 10:35 AM by -DJ R-Tistic-
Nas on "Big things" is the exact same situation for when East Coast rappers were trying to ride those slow Down South beats.
It's not a knock at all, but a lot of these more recent Southern rappers literally ONLY flow to 65 BPM songs...so they gotta switch their whole style up to flow on faster beats. With Flocka, I didn't feel like he was wack at all, the delivery just didn't feel all the way natural to me. It was actually more about the delivery than the flow on here...with Chainz and Juicy, along with others, the flow itself feels more choppy. The "It ain't hard to tell" part stands out most to me with this...."keep pre-vail-ING" and a few other bars.