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Thread started 09/03/07 3:35pm

Najee

Vainandy -- is THIS the father of shit-hop music?

MASTER P



The reason why I'm asking is because stylistically it seems like the current elements dominating popular contemporary black music today draw a direct line to Percy Miller's music. It seems like with the dominance of his craptacular sound, the rap community (and later the "soul music" sound) went from sampling every song possible in all wholesale manners and straight to the Casio keyboard-sounding, simple-ass beats and programs he used.

[Edited 9/3/07 23:37pm]
THE TRAFFIC JAMMERS, The Org's house band: VAINANDY -- lead singer; NAJEE -- bass; THE AUDIENCE -- guitar; PHUNKDADDY -- rhythm guitar; ALEX de PARIS -- keyboards; Da PRETTYMAN -- keyboards; FUNKENSTEIN -- drums. HOLD ON TO YOUR DRAWERS!
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Reply #1 posted 09/03/07 3:50pm

LittleBLUECorv
ette

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Hey ... don't talk about Master P and No Limit Records, you got it.
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Reply #2 posted 09/03/07 3:51pm

Najee

LittleBLUECorvette said:

Hey ... don't talk about Master P and No Limit Records, you got it.


Or WHAT ...?
THE TRAFFIC JAMMERS, The Org's house band: VAINANDY -- lead singer; NAJEE -- bass; THE AUDIENCE -- guitar; PHUNKDADDY -- rhythm guitar; ALEX de PARIS -- keyboards; Da PRETTYMAN -- keyboards; FUNKENSTEIN -- drums. HOLD ON TO YOUR DRAWERS!
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Reply #3 posted 09/03/07 3:55pm

LittleBLUECorv
ette

avatar

Najee said:

LittleBLUECorvette said:

Hey ... don't talk about Master P and No Limit Records, you got it.


Or WHAT ...?

All call my boys up from the NO and start some trouble, ya heard me! wink
PRINCE: Always and Forever
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-----
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Reply #4 posted 09/03/07 4:01pm

Najee

LittleBLUECorvette said:

All call my boys up from the NO and start some trouble, ya heard me! wink


And once I get them some government jobs, they'll all run away like neutered kittens.
[Edited 9/3/07 16:09pm]
THE TRAFFIC JAMMERS, The Org's house band: VAINANDY -- lead singer; NAJEE -- bass; THE AUDIENCE -- guitar; PHUNKDADDY -- rhythm guitar; ALEX de PARIS -- keyboards; Da PRETTYMAN -- keyboards; FUNKENSTEIN -- drums. HOLD ON TO YOUR DRAWERS!
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Reply #5 posted 09/03/07 4:13pm

LittleBLUECorv
ette

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Alright, back to the topic. lol


I get what you're saying and Master P starting this whole thing, and you may be right. P was a pretty big force in the Hip-Hop game from about 95 to 2000. More people might take from P's bidness smart then his music and what "Beats By the Pound" produced.


Along with Master P, you gotta look and Manie Fresh at Cash Money Records, and the Booty Bass sound out of Miami.
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Reply #6 posted 09/03/07 4:18pm

Najee

I look at that Miami bass sound as one that's been around since the days of 2 Live Crew. It has some longstanding underground-level credibility but it's never been that prevalent, even when Luther Campbell and crew were in their prime.

Master P's influence was so prevalent in the second half of the 1990s, and when you listen to songs like "Crank That" and "It's Goin' Down" they sound like the brainchild of Master P's music.

[Edited 9/3/07 16:48pm]
THE TRAFFIC JAMMERS, The Org's house band: VAINANDY -- lead singer; NAJEE -- bass; THE AUDIENCE -- guitar; PHUNKDADDY -- rhythm guitar; ALEX de PARIS -- keyboards; Da PRETTYMAN -- keyboards; FUNKENSTEIN -- drums. HOLD ON TO YOUR DRAWERS!
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Reply #7 posted 09/03/07 4:34pm

LittleBLUECorv
ette

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Najee said:

I look at that Miami bass sound as one that's been around since the days of 2 Live Crew. It has some longstanding underground-level credibility but it's never been that prevalent, even when Luther Campbell and crew in their prime.

Master P's influence was so prevalent in the second half of the 1990s, and when you listen to songs like "Crank That" and "It's Goin' Down" they sound like the brainchild of Master P's music.

Yu might be right.

I think No Limit realy changed arounf early 1998 (more specifically the producers "Beats by the Pound")


Listen to Snoops "Woof" and Silkk the Shockers "It Ain't My Fault" both from 1998

Woof http://youtube.com/watch?v=gHCDllTiMuo
It Ain'y My Faulthttp://youtube.com/watch?v=K1fx02MANo8


And then check out their earlier material from 97 and earlier:

Heaven for a Gansta (1997) http://youtube.com/watch?v=Eu1y58hzEEM
the Shocker (1996) http://youtube.com/watch?v=p99EIbi6DIY
Ganstafied (1996) http://youtube.com/watch?v=jcxn7D1P1mc
Moobin' through the Hood (1995) http://youtube.com/watch?v=9Byc04XlAkM


Their earlier material was produced better, hell Master P had a couple of musicians under No Limit. But once they signed that deal to Priority in January of 1998, it was all down heel. They started released albums every other week, I thinnk in 98 alone No Limit released 20 albums. The more releasing the more material you have to produce. Since it was so much , they did the cheapeast way possible.
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Reply #8 posted 09/03/07 5:02pm

Najee

Yeah, you listen to the Master P stuff in the late 1990s and early part of the decade and it seemed like that became the blueprint for today's popular black music (hip-hop and soul). As least producers like P. Diddy and Dr. Dre's rap stuff was decidedly uptempo; Master P.'s stuff was basically 60 beats-per-minute. Combined with the increasingly slowed-down music on the soul side, it was easy to see why some of those acts (R. Kelly, namely) started incorporating those elements into their music.
[Edited 9/3/07 17:33pm]
THE TRAFFIC JAMMERS, The Org's house band: VAINANDY -- lead singer; NAJEE -- bass; THE AUDIENCE -- guitar; PHUNKDADDY -- rhythm guitar; ALEX de PARIS -- keyboards; Da PRETTYMAN -- keyboards; FUNKENSTEIN -- drums. HOLD ON TO YOUR DRAWERS!
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Reply #9 posted 09/03/07 7:45pm

bboy87

avatar

LittleBLUECorvette said:

Hey ... don't talk about Master P and No Limit Records, you got it.

don't make me call some people from Richmond CA lol He still hasn't been back since they ran him out lol
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Reply #10 posted 09/03/07 8:22pm

TonyVanDam

avatar

To me, THIS is still a hip-hop classic album:



But for Vainandy, THIS is Shit-hop 101! lol I was honest to him by bring this album up in an old thread about why & how the tempo in hip-hop started to slow down.

G-Funk (a genre invented by Dr. Dre, DJ Quik, & Warren G) is really George Clinton/Bootsy Collins' P-Funk played at a downtempo with highly compressed drum beats, thicker synth bass riffs, and plently of weed to smoke.
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Reply #11 posted 09/03/07 9:40pm

namepeace

TonyVanDam said:



G-Funk (a genre invented by Dr. Dre, DJ Quik, & Warren G) is really George Clinton/Bootsy Collins' P-Funk played at a downtempo with highly compressed drum beats, thicker synth bass riffs, and plently of weed to smoke.


I also mentioned, in a separate thread, the irony that vain's beloved funk laid the groundwork for this album.
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Reply #12 posted 09/03/07 9:42pm

Najee

I still will say it's Master P, TVD. Whenever I hear songs like "Crank That (Superman Dat Ho)" and "It's Going Down," they have the same musical approach to the songs Percy Miller was making 10 years ago. Dr. Dre's music used samples (and to some heavy funk songs, to boot) and some creative studio techniques, while the sound today relies on weak Casio-sound keys and weak drum patterns the No Limit crew embraced at the end of the 1990s.
THE TRAFFIC JAMMERS, The Org's house band: VAINANDY -- lead singer; NAJEE -- bass; THE AUDIENCE -- guitar; PHUNKDADDY -- rhythm guitar; ALEX de PARIS -- keyboards; Da PRETTYMAN -- keyboards; FUNKENSTEIN -- drums. HOLD ON TO YOUR DRAWERS!
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Reply #13 posted 09/03/07 10:19pm

MuthaFunka

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No, the founding father for wack rap is Puffy. Plain and simple. The very moment he decided to fancy himself an MC was the beginning of the end of Hip Hop and the start of "Rap". His many, many, many samples (Obvious from the Biggie tracks) is what started the copy-cats of what you hear today. Puff came with no originality and he was also the starter of the Bling-inspired rap era.(Shiny suits, anyone?)




And remember..... Puffy brought us Mase. Nuff said.

Look at that bitch-made mothafucka.

All Master P did as kinda combine Suge's thug vibe with Puffy's bling vibe and added some dirty south flavor.
[Edited 9/3/07 22:26pm]
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Reply #14 posted 09/03/07 10:46pm

Najee

P. Diddy is also the person who introduced us to The Notorious B.I.G., Faith Evans and 112, so that more than makes up for Mase. P. Diddy was wack overall, but his biggest legacy is that he playing a major role in making rap crossover music.

But at least P. Diddy's music and style was high-gloss; with the songs you hear now, most of them have a low-class production style. Songs like "It's Goin' Down" and "Crank That (Superman Dat Ho)" are straight ghetto sound-alike carryovers from the No Limit camp.

[Edited 9/3/07 23:07pm]
THE TRAFFIC JAMMERS, The Org's house band: VAINANDY -- lead singer; NAJEE -- bass; THE AUDIENCE -- guitar; PHUNKDADDY -- rhythm guitar; ALEX de PARIS -- keyboards; Da PRETTYMAN -- keyboards; FUNKENSTEIN -- drums. HOLD ON TO YOUR DRAWERS!
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Reply #15 posted 09/03/07 11:18pm

bboy87

avatar

MuthaFunka said:


And remember..... Puffy brought us Mase. Nuff said.

Look at that bitch-made mothafucka.

That fool's IQ made a blind snail look fast
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Reply #16 posted 09/03/07 11:28pm

MuthaFunka

avatar

Najee said:

P. Diddy is also the person who introduced us to The Notorious B.I.G., Faith Evans and 112, so that more than makes up for Mase. P. Diddy was wack overall, but his biggest legacy is that he playing a major role in making rap crossover music.

But at least P. Diddy's music and style was high-gloss; with the songs you hear now, most of them have a low-class production style. Songs like "It's Goin' Down" and "Crank That (Superman Dat Ho)" are straight ghetto sound-alike carryovers from the No Limit camp.

[Edited 9/3/07 23:07pm]


Regardless of his R&B contributions, Puffy's STILL responsible for the start of the downfall of Hip Hop and the rise of the shit we hear today known SIMPLY as Rap.
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Reply #17 posted 09/03/07 11:37pm

Najee

MuthaFunka said:

Regardless of his R&B contributions, Puffy's STILL responsible for the start of the downfall of Hip Hop and the rise of the shit we hear today known SIMPLY as Rap.


Well, I wasn't praising P. Diddy (and I'm missing the R&B reference certainly, because I said pop -- as white-dominated -- music markets). I'm countering your comments with Mase as a discovery vs. Biggie Smalls (who is considered one of the most respected, prominent and revered of the rap MCs), Faith Evans (an above-average vocalist with some level of success and credibility) and 112 (a decent vocal act).
[Edited 9/3/07 23:39pm]
THE TRAFFIC JAMMERS, The Org's house band: VAINANDY -- lead singer; NAJEE -- bass; THE AUDIENCE -- guitar; PHUNKDADDY -- rhythm guitar; ALEX de PARIS -- keyboards; Da PRETTYMAN -- keyboards; FUNKENSTEIN -- drums. HOLD ON TO YOUR DRAWERS!
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Reply #18 posted 09/03/07 11:49pm

MuthaFunka

avatar

Najee said:

MuthaFunka said:

Regardless of his R&B contributions, Puffy's STILL responsible for the start of the downfall of Hip Hop and the rise of the shit we hear today known SIMPLY as Rap.


Well, I wasn't praising P. Diddy (and I'm missing the R&B reference certainly, because I said pop -- as white-dominated -- music markets). I'm countering your comments with Mase as a discovery vs. Biggie Smalls (who is considered one of the most respected, prominent and revered of the rap MCs), Faith Evans (an above-average vocalist with some level of success and credibility) and 112 (a decent vocal act).
[Edited 9/3/07 23:39pm]


Only those (and I'm not saying you) that truly don't know Hip-Hop consider Biggie as one the best/top MCs ever. Biggie was 1-dimensional. The reason he took off was because he copied gangsta rap and then Puffy combined it with the Bling-shiny suit steelo and the complete sample of an old hit. Biggie was more of a "generated act" than "style and skills MC".

And I don't let people slide. Puffy brought us Mase and THEN brought us Loon. Puffy needs to be held responsible for those weak ass rappers, including himself.
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Reply #19 posted 09/04/07 5:49am

midnightmover

Najee said:

MuthaFunka said:

Regardless of his R&B contributions, Puffy's STILL responsible for the start of the downfall of Hip Hop and the rise of the shit we hear today known SIMPLY as Rap.


Well, I wasn't praising P. Diddy (and I'm missing the R&B reference certainly, because I said pop -- as white-dominated -- music markets). I'm countering your comments with Mase as a discovery vs. Biggie Smalls (who is considered one of the most respected, prominent and revered of the rap MCs), Faith Evans (an above-average vocalist with some level of success and credibility) and 112 (a decent vocal act).
[Edited 9/3/07 23:39pm]

I was already disilusioned with R&B by the mid to late 90s so I'd stopped paying attention, but my memory of 112 is that they were a pretty shit group who made really weak music. The tracks I heard of theirs I wouldn't even call music. Just casio beats and cheap sounds with some pointless singing on it.
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Reply #20 posted 09/04/07 6:28am

nd33

MuthaFunka said:


Only those (and I'm not saying you) that truly don't know Hip-Hop consider Biggie as one the best/top MCs ever. Biggie was 1-dimensional. The reason he took off was because he copied gangsta rap and then Puffy combined it with the Bling-shiny suit steelo and the complete sample of an old hit. Biggie was more of a "generated act" than "style and skills MC".

And I don't let people slide. Puffy brought us Mase and THEN brought us Loon. Puffy needs to be held responsible for those weak ass rappers, including himself.


Whoa easy there tiger!
I know some absolute hip hop heads that adore biggie. These are the type of guys that I can look through their collection and barely find anything I've heard of. That's kind of the thing that's different about biggie. He seems to have universal appeal (between passing fans and the hardcore).
Within his 2 albums he covered more stylistically than just about any MC. Hell, he toasted Bone Thugs on their own style of track on his second album.
He painted some fantastic vivid imagery with his lyrics. Try "skys the limit", "i got a story to tell", "niggas bleed", "warning", everyday struggle".
These aren't sampling "hits".

As for "copying gangsta rap", please listen to "ready to die". That shit almost defines gangsta rap. Right in next to "straight outta compton" and "chronic".
In fact it's probably the best of the lot IMO.
I almost have to laugh at the one dimensional comment!
He only released 2 albums and they are "ready to die" from '94 and "life after death" from 97'. Anything other than those 2 albums are bullshit, trying to make money off him after he passed.


As for puffy. Yeah I agree, he really fucked it up by bringing the focus to simple rhymes about bullshit and bling!

_
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Reply #21 posted 09/04/07 7:43am

namepeace

nd33 said:

MuthaFunka said:


Only those (and I'm not saying you) that truly don't know Hip-Hop consider Biggie as one the best/top MCs ever. Biggie was 1-dimensional. The reason he took off was because he copied gangsta rap and then Puffy combined it with the Bling-shiny suit steelo and the complete sample of an old hit. Biggie was more of a "generated act" than "style and skills MC".

And I don't let people slide. Puffy brought us Mase and THEN brought us Loon. Puffy needs to be held responsible for those weak ass rappers, including himself.


Whoa easy there tiger!
I know some absolute hip hop heads that adore biggie. These are the type of guys that I can look through their collection and barely find anything I've heard of. That's kind of the thing that's different about biggie. He seems to have universal appeal (between passing fans and the hardcore).
Within his 2 albums he covered more stylistically than just about any MC. Hell, he toasted Bone Thugs on their own style of track on his second album.
He painted some fantastic vivid imagery with his lyrics. Try "skys the limit", "i got a story to tell", "niggas bleed", "warning", everyday struggle".
These aren't sampling "hits".

As for "copying gangsta rap", please listen to "ready to die". That shit almost defines gangsta rap. Right in next to "straight outta compton" and "chronic".
In fact it's probably the best of the lot IMO.
I almost have to laugh at the one dimensional comment!
He only released 2 albums and they are "ready to die" from '94 and "life after death" from 97'. Anything other than those 2 albums are bullshit, trying to make money off him after he passed.


As for puffy. Yeah I agree, he really fucked it up by bringing the focus to simple rhymes about bullshit and bling!

_


I'm leaning towards nd33 here. Biggie's lyrics were often insightful and his delivery and flow were clever. He was a great MC in his own right.

The death of Christopher Wallace made Sean Combs. Period. Sean Combs almost basked in the aftermath of his friend's death. That's how he got over.
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 #22 posted 09/04/07 9:10am

MuthaFunka

avatar

midnightmover said:

Najee said:



Well, I wasn't praising P. Diddy (and I'm missing the R&B reference certainly, because I said pop -- as white-dominated -- music markets). I'm countering your comments with Mase as a discovery vs. Biggie Smalls (who is considered one of the most respected, prominent and revered of the rap MCs), Faith Evans (an above-average vocalist with some level of success and credibility) and 112 (a decent vocal act).
[Edited 9/3/07 23:39pm]

I was already disilusioned with R&B by the mid to late 90s so I'd stopped paying attention, but my memory of 112 is that they were a pretty shit group who made really weak music. The tracks I heard of theirs I wouldn't even call music. Just casio beats and cheap sounds with some pointless singing on it.


If those dude - at the peak of their popularity - had walked down the middle of the street in NY, L.A. or Anywhere, USA, NO ONE would even know who they were. lol
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Reply #23 posted 09/04/07 9:12am

bboy87

avatar

MuthaFunka said:

midnightmover said:


I was already disilusioned with R&B by the mid to late 90s so I'd stopped paying attention, but my memory of 112 is that they were a pretty shit group who made really weak music. The tracks I heard of theirs I wouldn't even call music. Just casio beats and cheap sounds with some pointless singing on it.


If those dude - at the peak of their popularity - had walked down the middle of the street in NY, L.A. or Anywhere, USA, NO ONE would even know who they were. lol

Am I the only one who didn't know the difference between 112, Next, and Jagged Edge? lol
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Reply #24 posted 09/04/07 9:13am

MuthaFunka

avatar

nd33 said:

MuthaFunka said:


Only those (and I'm not saying you) that truly don't know Hip-Hop consider Biggie as one the best/top MCs ever. Biggie was 1-dimensional. The reason he took off was because he copied gangsta rap and then Puffy combined it with the Bling-shiny suit steelo and the complete sample of an old hit. Biggie was more of a "generated act" than "style and skills MC".

And I don't let people slide. Puffy brought us Mase and THEN brought us Loon. Puffy needs to be held responsible for those weak ass rappers, including himself.


Whoa easy there tiger!
I know some absolute hip hop heads that adore biggie. These are the type of guys that I can look through their collection and barely find anything I've heard of. That's kind of the thing that's different about biggie. He seems to have universal appeal (between passing fans and the hardcore).
Within his 2 albums he covered more stylistically than just about any MC. Hell, he toasted Bone Thugs on their own style of track on his second album.
He painted some fantastic vivid imagery with his lyrics. Try "skys the limit", "i got a story to tell", "niggas bleed", "warning", everyday struggle".
These aren't sampling "hits".

As for "copying gangsta rap", please listen to "ready to die". That shit almost defines gangsta rap. Right in next to "straight outta compton" and "chronic".
In fact it's probably the best of the lot IMO.
I almost have to laugh at the one dimensional comment!
He only released 2 albums and they are "ready to die" from '94 and "life after death" from 97'. Anything other than those 2 albums are bullshit, trying to make money off him after he passed.


As for puffy. Yeah I agree, he really fucked it up by bringing the focus to simple rhymes about bullshit and bling!

_


As I was reading your post, I was giving you the benefit of the doubt until I

read THIS:

As for "copying gangsta rap", please listen to "ready to die". That shit almost defines gangsta rap.


eek

That's where I stopped reading.

If I were you, I'd sit this debate out, playa.
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Reply #25 posted 09/04/07 9:15am

MuthaFunka

avatar

namepeace said:

nd33 said:



Whoa easy there tiger!
I know some absolute hip hop heads that adore biggie. These are the type of guys that I can look through their collection and barely find anything I've heard of. That's kind of the thing that's different about biggie. He seems to have universal appeal (between passing fans and the hardcore).
Within his 2 albums he covered more stylistically than just about any MC. Hell, he toasted Bone Thugs on their own style of track on his second album.
He painted some fantastic vivid imagery with his lyrics. Try "skys the limit", "i got a story to tell", "niggas bleed", "warning", everyday struggle".
These aren't sampling "hits".

As for "copying gangsta rap", please listen to "ready to die". That shit almost defines gangsta rap. Right in next to "straight outta compton" and "chronic".
In fact it's probably the best of the lot IMO.
I almost have to laugh at the one dimensional comment!
He only released 2 albums and they are "ready to die" from '94 and "life after death" from 97'. Anything other than those 2 albums are bullshit, trying to make money off him after he passed.


As for puffy. Yeah I agree, he really fucked it up by bringing the focus to simple rhymes about bullshit and bling!

_


I'm leaning towards nd33 here. Biggie's lyrics were often insightful and his delivery and flow were clever. He was a great MC in his own right.

The death of Christopher Wallace made Sean Combs. Period. Sean Combs almost basked in the aftermath of his friend's death. That's how he got over.


Biggie was a decent storyteller and a decent MC. His flow was nasally and garbled at times. He didn't impress me and he easily the most overrated rapper in Hip-Hop history.
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Reply #26 posted 09/04/07 9:15am

MuthaFunka

avatar

bboy87 said:

MuthaFunka said:



If those dude - at the peak of their popularity - had walked down the middle of the street in NY, L.A. or Anywhere, USA, NO ONE would even know who they were. lol

Am I the only one who didn't know the difference between 112, Next, and Jagged Edge? lol

lol
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Reply #27 posted 09/04/07 9:42am

midnightmover

MuthaFunka said:

midnightmover said:


I was already disilusioned with R&B by the mid to late 90s so I'd stopped paying attention, but my memory of 112 is that they were a pretty shit group who made really weak music. The tracks I heard of theirs I wouldn't even call music. Just casio beats and cheap sounds with some pointless singing on it.


If those dude - at the peak of their popularity - had walked down the middle of the street in NY, L.A. or Anywhere, USA, NO ONE would even know who they were. lol

lol Glad to see it's not just me.
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- Thomas Jefferson
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Reply #28 posted 09/04/07 10:29am

namepeace

MuthaFunka said:

Biggie was a decent storyteller and a decent MC. His flow was nasally and garbled at times. He didn't impress me and he easily the most overrated rapper in Hip-Hop history.


Really? I'd concede that Biggie is a tad overrated, but, not THE most overrated. That could go to any number of post-Biggie/'Pac MCs. And maybe 'Pac himself, to the degree that both he and Biggie are great MCs but not really among the very best of the best per se.
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Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder
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Reply #29 posted 09/04/07 10:33am

MuthaFunka

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namepeace said:

MuthaFunka said:

Biggie was a decent storyteller and a decent MC. His flow was nasally and garbled at times. He didn't impress me and he easily the most overrated rapper in Hip-Hop history.


Really? I'd concede that Biggie is a tad overrated, but, not THE most overrated. That could go to any number of post-Biggie/'Pac MCs. And maybe 'Pac himself, to the degree that both he and Biggie are great MCs but not really among the very best of the best per se.


As it relates to public perception and reality, Biggie is the most overrated rapper of all time. His overall skills never matched his deserving of the accolades and the popularity. His timing was great but he was a Puffy-generated act more so than a Hip-Hop artist. The same way Puffy created Mase and the same way Puffy tried to create Loon.
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