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Thread started 06/29/17 9:17pm

mjscarousal

Nas- The World is Yours

Remember the time of REAL HIP HOP and SONGWRITING? How the hell did he not get inducted!? He was robbed! Genius and compelling songwriter, greatest rap songwriter no question.

JRRznA.gif

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Reply #1 posted 06/29/17 10:25pm

LittleBLUECorv
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One of the best Hip-Hop albums ever. The production is top notch.
PRINCE: Always and Forever
MICHAEL JACKSON: Always and Forever
-----
Live Your Life How U Wanna Live It
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Reply #2 posted 06/30/17 5:42am

Musicslave

Nasir is one of my faves. Truly gifted writer. In the past his biggest detriment was his poor beat/track selection.... I've always imagined an album where he had some of the best producers behind him. Here's a glimpse of what it might have sounded like....

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Reply #3 posted 06/30/17 12:30pm

mjscarousal

Musicslave said:

Nasir is one of my faves. Truly gifted writer. In the past his biggest detriment was his poor beat/track selection.... I've always imagined an album where he had some of the best producers behind him. Here's a glimpse of what it might have sounded like....

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music

Thanks for posting!

He was a exceptionally gifted songwriter

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Reply #4 posted 06/30/17 12:33pm

Musicslave

mjscarousal said:

Musicslave said:

Nasir is one of my faves. Truly gifted writer. In the past his biggest detriment was his poor beat/track selection.... I've always imagined an album where he had some of the best producers behind him. Here's a glimpse of what it might have sounded like....

-

music

Thanks for posting!

He was a exceptionally gifted songwriter

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Thankfully he's still with us. lol

-

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Reply #5 posted 06/30/17 12:40pm

namepeace

One of the many reasons why I think 1994 was the greatest year in hip-hop history.

Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #6 posted 06/30/17 1:01pm

LittleBLUECorv
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namepeace said:

One of the many reasons why I think 1994 was the greatest year in hip-hop history.


To me, 94 was the last year Hip-Hop got away from that old school style. Guys like Kane, Rakim, PE, Run, Heavy D were on their way out and the new breed of Wu, Bad Boy, Death Row, 2Pac, Nas, Outkast were taking over.
PRINCE: Always and Forever
MICHAEL JACKSON: Always and Forever
-----
Live Your Life How U Wanna Live It
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Reply #7 posted 06/30/17 1:06pm

smoothcriminal
12

music

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Reply #8 posted 06/30/17 1:07pm

mjscarousal

Musicslave said:

mjscarousal said:

music

Thanks for posting!

He was a exceptionally gifted songwriter

-

Thankfully he's still with us. lol

-

He ISSSSSSSSSSSS an exceptionally gifted songwriter lol razz

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Reply #9 posted 06/30/17 1:55pm

Musicslave

mjscarousal said:

Musicslave said:

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Thankfully he's still with us. lol

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He ISSSSSSSSSSSS an exceptionally gifted songwriter lol razz

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cool

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Reply #10 posted 06/30/17 5:27pm

namepeace

LittleBLUECorvette said:

namepeace said:

One of the many reasons why I think 1994 was the greatest year in hip-hop history.

To me, 94 was the last year Hip-Hop got away from that old school style. Guys like Kane, Rakim, PE, Run, Heavy D were on their way out and the new breed of Wu, Bad Boy, Death Row, 2Pac, Nas, Outkast were taking over.


That, and also, in terms of the breadth and diversity of quality releases, in every region of the country, hip-hop hit creative and commercial highs not seen since, imo. That includes the great releases that bled over from the end of '93, including Black Moon and De La Soul.

Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #11 posted 06/30/17 5:55pm

LittleBLUECorv
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namepeace said:



LittleBLUECorvette said:


namepeace said:

One of the many reasons why I think 1994 was the greatest year in hip-hop history.



To me, 94 was the last year Hip-Hop got away from that old school style. Guys like Kane, Rakim, PE, Run, Heavy D were on their way out and the new breed of Wu, Bad Boy, Death Row, 2Pac, Nas, Outkast were taking over.


That, and also, in terms of the breadth and diversity of quality releases, in every region of the country, hip-hop hit creative and commercial highs not seen since, imo. That includes the great releases that bled over from the end of '93, including Black Moon and De La Soul.


And ATCQ and Wu all late 93 releases.
PRINCE: Always and Forever
MICHAEL JACKSON: Always and Forever
-----
Live Your Life How U Wanna Live It
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Reply #12 posted 06/30/17 8:28pm

mjscarousal

I wish we had this type of hip hop again. When hip hop was about art, geniuneness, authenticity, heart and passion. Now its all about making money.

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Reply #13 posted 06/30/17 8:44pm

RJOrion

"...mechanical movement, understandable smooth shit, that murderers move with..."

^that shit sounded so ill...and the beat was a classic Pete Rock joint, while Pete Rock was in his prime...

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Reply #14 posted 07/01/17 7:36am

COMPUTERBLUE19
84

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The album grew on me over time. Being a teenager back then, the hip hop scene had a little bit of something for everybody.

"Ain't hard to tell" was the perfect marriage of lyrics/sample/mood. Just breezy and smooth!
"Old man's gotta be the old man. Fish has got to be the fish."
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Reply #15 posted 07/02/17 10:01pm

mjscarousal

RJOrion said:

"...mechanical movement, understandable smooth shit, that murderers move with..."

^that shit sounded so ill...and the beat was a classic Pete Rock joint, while Pete Rock was in his prime...

Real hip hop touches the soul!nod

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Reply #16 posted 07/02/17 10:03pm

mjscarousal

COMPUTERBLUE1984 said:

The album grew on me over time. Being a teenager back then, the hip hop scene had a little bit of something for everybody. "Ain't hard to tell" was the perfect marriage of lyrics/sample/mood. Just breezy and smooth!

I wish I had a time machine! The song is so genius, it totally defines the 90s.

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Reply #17 posted 07/03/17 9:35am

kygermo

IMHO, there's only a handful of albums I've come into contact with during my life that are absoltuely flawless, top to bottom, all-killer-zero-filler. Illmatic is one of them. Illmatic is over before you know it, so it doesnt really allow itself to be whack. Not to mention that it's unique because a good chunk of hip-hop albums historically are filled to the cd time limit with intermissions, guest spots, etc. Not here, though. 9 tracks (with the intro of course) of this 20 year old kid just RIPPING shit. I'm still hearing lines from it I've somehow missed. It's a shame he peaked that early on in his career. He just could never top it, even though he almost came close with It Was Written. Somebody above mentioned Nas' habit of picking pretty terrible beats and too many of them. I couldnt agree more. But the good thing with his catalog is that even though most of his albums aren't particularly great, each and every one post-It Was Written has at the very least 2-3 dope tracks on them. I was pleasantly surprised with Life is Good, however. That was his best album in years and years.

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Reply #18 posted 07/03/17 9:54am

LittleBLUECorv
ette

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kygermo said:

IMHO, there's only a handful of albums I've come into contact with during my life that are absoltuely flawless, top to bottom, all-killer-zero-filler. Illmatic is one of them. Illmatic is over before you know it, so it doesnt really allow itself to be whack. Not to mention that it's unique because a good chunk of hip-hop albums historically are filled to the cd time limit with intermissions, guest spots, etc. Not here, though. 9 tracks (with the intro of course) of this 20 year old kid just RIPPING shit. I'm still hearing lines from it I've somehow missed. It's a shame he peaked that early on in his career. He just could never top it, even though he almost came close with It Was Written. Somebody above mentioned Nas' habit of picking pretty terrible beats and too many of them. I couldnt agree more. But the good thing with his catalog is that even though most of his albums aren't particularly great, each and every one post-It Was Written has at the very least 2-3 dope tracks on them. I was pleasantly surprised with Life is Good, however. That was his best album in years and years.


Nas tried to go commercial in the late 90s-early 2000s with songs like Ochie Wally (wack) and You Owe Me (cool, but not Nas.) He still had goods like One Mic and Made You Look.
PRINCE: Always and Forever
MICHAEL JACKSON: Always and Forever
-----
Live Your Life How U Wanna Live It
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Reply #19 posted 07/03/17 11:57am

paisleypark4

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NaS is one of my favorite rappers of all time. He is not one you put on in the clubs but one you take in personally and digest. I was not a fan of his first couple albums...Illmatic was okay but it may have came out at a time I wasnt really listening to rap music. His later albums are criminally overlooked especially Streets Desciple, God's Son, Stillmatic and Life Is Good.

I get sick of the 'back in the day' threads when no one is paying attention to that artist's current albums. Yeah they were good and they got those awards and accolades but that artist has grown and made plenty more than their debut....especially when it is just as good if not better.


Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
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Reply #20 posted 07/03/17 12:35pm

Musicslave

In light of paisleypark4 post.... Here's a dope track from STILLmatic that still stands the test of time (that wasn't on Illmatic)...

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"They thought I'd make another Illmatic, but its always forward I'm movin, never backwards stupid here's another classic."

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Another forgotten gem...

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Reply #21 posted 07/03/17 12:46pm

Musicslave

Nas has been on his "grown man flow" for years now...

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Reply #22 posted 07/03/17 4:23pm

paisleypark4

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Musicslave said:

Nas has been on his "grown man flow" for years now...

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oh I bang these songs too. the whole album is good. "Bye Baby" is so good, I love the keys on that one..so warm and deep.

Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
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Reply #23 posted 07/05/17 6:01am

kygermo

LittleBLUECorvette said:

kygermo said:

IMHO, there's only a handful of albums I've come into contact with during my life that are absoltuely flawless, top to bottom, all-killer-zero-filler. Illmatic is one of them. Illmatic is over before you know it, so it doesnt really allow itself to be whack. Not to mention that it's unique because a good chunk of hip-hop albums historically are filled to the cd time limit with intermissions, guest spots, etc. Not here, though. 9 tracks (with the intro of course) of this 20 year old kid just RIPPING shit. I'm still hearing lines from it I've somehow missed. It's a shame he peaked that early on in his career. He just could never top it, even though he almost came close with It Was Written. Somebody above mentioned Nas' habit of picking pretty terrible beats and too many of them. I couldnt agree more. But the good thing with his catalog is that even though most of his albums aren't particularly great, each and every one post-It Was Written has at the very least 2-3 dope tracks on them. I was pleasantly surprised with Life is Good, however. That was his best album in years and years.

Nas tried to go commercial in the late 90s-early 2000s with songs like Ochie Wally (wack) and You Owe Me (cool, but not Nas.) He still had goods like One Mic and Made You Look.

Yep, to very mixed results. I feel like most times he tried something commercial, it just didn't work (for me, at least). He's not that type of soul. It always seemed...beneath him. I still think "Hate Me Now" is just awful. The title track for Nastradamus? loser

.

But like I said before, evey album of his has at least 1-3 absolutely fucking fantastic cuts on them. A perfect example is God's Son. Overall, not a super-strong album of his (but better than Stillmatic IMHO), but it contains two of my favorite Nas cuts ever, Get Down and Heaven. Shit, I'll even go as far as saying Get Down is one of the most badass album openers I've ever heard, hip-hop or otherwise. Stillmatic has Rewind, one of the most clever hip-hop tracks ever. You get my point. When he's inspired and steps up to the plate, Nas is unstoppable. But my man just isn't consistent enough. And you know what Head Detective? I don't hold it against him. It can't be easy being an MC of his pedigree, and making records that can appeal to all the different kinds of fans he has. A little quality control could go a long way is all I'm saying. But still, he's easily in my top 5. Maybe even my top 2.

[Edited 7/5/17 6:11am]

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Reply #24 posted 07/05/17 10:00am

paisleypark4

avatar

kygermo said:

LittleBLUECorvette said:

kygermo said: Nas tried to go commercial in the late 90s-early 2000s with songs like Ochie Wally (wack) and You Owe Me (cool, but not Nas.) He still had goods like One Mic and Made You Look.

Yep, to very mixed results. I feel like most times he tried something commercial, it just didn't work (for me, at least). He's not that type of soul. It always seemed...beneath him. I still think "Hate Me Now" is just awful. The title track for Nastradamus? loser

.

But like I said before, evey album of his has at least 1-3 absolutely fucking fantastic cuts on them. A perfect example is God's Son. Overall, not a super-strong album of his (but better than Stillmatic IMHO), but it contains two of my favorite Nas cuts ever, Get Down and Heaven. Shit, I'll even go as far as saying Get Down is one of the most badass album openers I've ever heard, hip-hop or otherwise. Stillmatic has Rewind, one of the most clever hip-hop tracks ever. You get my point. When he's inspired and steps up to the plate, Nas is unstoppable. But my man just isn't consistent enough. And you know what Head Detective? I don't hold it against him. It can't be easy being an MC of his pedigree, and making records that can appeal to all the different kinds of fans he has. A little quality control could go a long way is all I'm saying. But still, he's easily in my top 5. Maybe even my top 2.

[Edited 7/5/17 6:11am]

...But that Life Is Good though......

Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
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Reply #25 posted 07/05/17 10:19am

kygermo

paisleypark4 said:

kygermo said:

Yep, to very mixed results. I feel like most times he tried something commercial, it just didn't work (for me, at least). He's not that type of soul. It always seemed...beneath him. I still think "Hate Me Now" is just awful. The title track for Nastradamus? loser

.

But like I said before, evey album of his has at least 1-3 absolutely fucking fantastic cuts on them. A perfect example is God's Son. Overall, not a super-strong album of his (but better than Stillmatic IMHO), but it contains two of my favorite Nas cuts ever, Get Down and Heaven. Shit, I'll even go as far as saying Get Down is one of the most badass album openers I've ever heard, hip-hop or otherwise. Stillmatic has Rewind, one of the most clever hip-hop tracks ever. You get my point. When he's inspired and steps up to the plate, Nas is unstoppable. But my man just isn't consistent enough. And you know what Head Detective? I don't hold it against him. It can't be easy being an MC of his pedigree, and making records that can appeal to all the different kinds of fans he has. A little quality control could go a long way is all I'm saying. But still, he's easily in my top 5. Maybe even my top 2.

[Edited 7/5/17 6:11am]

...But that Life Is Good though......

Oh yeah. In my previous post (before the one you quoted here), I show my love and appreciation for Life is Good, and how it was his best album in years. Some really great stuff on it.

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Reply #26 posted 07/05/17 10:33am

LittleBLUECorv
ette

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Life is Good ia probably his 3rd best record.
PRINCE: Always and Forever
MICHAEL JACKSON: Always and Forever
-----
Live Your Life How U Wanna Live It
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Reply #27 posted 07/05/17 11:00am

namepeace

LittleBLUECorvette said:

namepeace said:


That, and also, in terms of the breadth and diversity of quality releases, in every region of the country, hip-hop hit creative and commercial highs not seen since, imo. That includes the great releases that bled over from the end of '93, including Black Moon and De La Soul.

And ATCQ and Wu all late 93 releases.


Indeed. As I see it, other than maybe '87-'88, we haven't seen a 2-year stretch in hip-hop that had so many creative and commercial successes as '93-'94.

Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016

Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #28 posted 07/05/17 11:25am

mjscarousal

People always say he didn't have good beats but having good beats does not define a MC's rapping or songwriting skills. Nas focused on his artistry, lyricism and story telling since that s where most of his talent was and IS lol. You have to sit down and really listen to rappers like him. You don't dance to Nas and I think partially the reason why some might not like Nas is because they are not intellectually sound. You have to have a high degree of intelligence and insight to listen to appreciate rappers like him.

[Edited 7/5/17 12:04pm]

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Reply #29 posted 07/05/17 1:38pm

paisleypark4

avatar

mjscarousal said:

People always say he didn't have good beats but having good beats does not define a MC's rapping or songwriting skills. Nas focused on his artistry, lyricism and story telling since that s where most of his talent was and IS lol. You have to sit down and really listen to rappers like him. You don't dance to Nas and I think partially the reason why some might not like Nas is because they are not intellectually sound. You have to have a high degree of intelligence and insight to listen to appreciate rappers like him.

[Edited 7/5/17 12:04pm]

Yeah there is like only 3 or 4 NaS songs you can really bump in the club or with your friends like Life's A Bitch, You Wont See Me Tonight or U Owe Me, but those were not essential to his career, it's his deep tracks that make his artistry what it is.

Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records.
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