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Where would you place LL Cool J in terms of great rappers? Top 10, Top 20 or Top 5 or do you even think he is a great rapper? "Lack of home training crosses all boundaries." | |
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none To make a thief, make an owner; to create crime, create laws. | |
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Top 10 He's an icon. Best rapper? No one of Most influential -- heck yeah | |
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4 some strange reason I don't associate rap and great in the same sentence. That said, LL would be in my top 10 rappers. | |
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Top 5 for me. Maybe #2. I think Rakim is probably #1 on my list of Great Rappers. Both have made lots of amazing songs without being smutty and vulgar. Both are class acts, IMO. "It's not nice to fuck with K.B.! All you haters will see!" - Kitbradley
"The only true wisdom is knowing you know nothing." - Socrates | |
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Fury, why wouldn't you say LL is a great rapper? and how is he influential? "Lack of home training crosses all boundaries." | |
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Great question.
I think LL is one of the greats. However, I do believe he damaged his music career by overplaying the "Ladies Love" half of his name. By catering so much to his female base (singles wise) he alienated the men. Just my humble opinion.
Oh...can't forget about the typical industry ageism playing a role too. [Edited 3/11/13 9:52am] | |
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number 1, not a big fan of rap, but I listen to LL now and then. I need love was one of the first songs I bought.
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I would place hm between the toilet paper and the disposable toilet seat sanitary guard. So that might make him a tampon. To make a thief, make an owner; to create crime, create laws. | |
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Top 5 and I totally AGREE with Kitbradley! "A Man Can't Ride Your Back Unless It's Bent" MLK 4/3/68 | |
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Top 20-25.
In nor order:
BDK Eric B Rakim Public Enemy NWA Wu Tang Pac Biggie Nas Jay Z Geto Boys Grandmaster Flash Kool Moe D Boogie Down Tribaled Called Quest De La Soul Outkast Ice Cube Slick Ric Gang Starr EPMD Ice T Busta Redman Blow [Edited 3/11/13 11:51am] PRINCE: Always and Forever
MICHAEL JACKSON: Always and Forever ----- Live Your Life How U Wanna Live It | |
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I would put LL Cool J somewhere between a ball sac and an anus. So that means right about at taint. To make a thief, make an owner; to create crime, create laws. | |
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a member of the TOP5 BEST commercial hip-hop artists
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To make a thief, make an owner; to create crime, create laws. | |
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and what Graycap sez too.
He was the first legitimate crossover solo MC and is very influential. He was the prototype for the MC-as-pop-star. 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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I 100% agree!! I would not place him in the same catagory as a Biggie, Rakim, or even a Jay-Z. "Love is like peeing in your pants, everyone sees it but only you feel its warmth" | |
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The man had skills and he looked like this:
He could have called himself Boo Boo Shitface J and the outcome would have been the same. I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart. | |
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80's and early 90's LL is some of the finest hip-hop you can find.
His 00's work is doo doo but his classics will always reign.
He had a smooth flow, great vibe, good stories to tell and those hats [Edited 3/13/13 13:57pm] Pistols sounded like "Fuck off," wheras The Clash sounded like "Fuck Off, but here's why.."- Thedigitialgardener
All music is shit music and no music is real- gunsnhalen Datdonkeydick- Asherfierce Gary Hunts Album Isn't That Good- Soulalive | |
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I hear ya. He was bound to be a heart throb regardless of his name. But I still say he probably could've remained relevant even longer if there wasn't so much emphasis on the "tracks for the ladies" becoming paramount in his singles selections to promote his records. There was always a balance before. Think about it, we got "Radio" "Rock The Bells" well before "I Need Love".
LL was one of my favorites back in the 80's. I think his flow, voice, and energy is one of best. He was also one of the hardest among commercial emcees. He's definitely in my Top 20. | |
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I can't argue with that at all. Agreed! | |
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Great and Rappers is NOT an oxymoron by a LONG shot. But such a list needs diverse criteria such as pioneering certain aspects of the genre. For me that's huge. PPL need to understand what a pioneer does even if said pioneer isn't your personal cup of tea. LL makes the top 10 in terms of longetivity amongst a few other reasons. Hell, he singlehandedly pioneered "emo-rap". I Need Love was the FIRST rap ballad. Vulnerability and hip hop don't go together. Top 10 pop hit! Its interesting that its in HIS catalogue given the machismo associated with him. LL along with others like EPMD showed how you could be HARD, RUGGED and NOT profane. "Gangsta rap" was still years away. Mama Said Knock U Out, and Going Back to Cali in terms of production were ahead of their time! Also when you look at the "female vote" (he was aptly named indeed) and what they BUY, and hip hop being a genre that was/is built on sales, LL was one of the first (if not the first to leverage his swag into $$ as a hip hop sex symbol). No shirts off rappers in endless vids, if no LL, so these things speak to his influence which is underestimated. But I remember b4 and after LL. | |
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There ain't shit he can do to alienate me! "It's not nice to fuck with K.B.! All you haters will see!" - Kitbradley
"The only true wisdom is knowing you know nothing." - Socrates | |
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Disagree. Slightly.
LL was a legit MC who happened to have the star power to "cross over," with platinum albums. Not just singles.
"Rock The Bells," "I Can't Live Without My Radio," "I'm Bad," "Jack The Ripper," "Goin' Back To Cali," etc. Those are legit hip-hop tracks.
Jay-Z is more of a crossover artist now than LL was in the 80s and early 90s.
So he didn't establish himself as a "commercial" hip-hop artist. He established himself as an MC who could sell records. Slight but significant distinction.
Not saying he lives on the same street as any of those MCs -- as long as Rakim draws breath he's the best -- but he lives in the same neighborhood. 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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Interesting. Rakim never moved me with his material. I'll take KRS1 all day long. | |
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Yeah, I feel you. I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart. | |
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Amen! I knew from the start that I loved you with all my heart. | |
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In my humble opinion, once he did stuff like, "I Need Love" and "Hey Lover", he went commercial and lost his street cred as an MC. As far as him being from the same neighborhood as those you mentioned, he couldn't, even if he had a GPS device....
"Love is like peeing in your pants, everyone sees it but only you feel its warmth" | |
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At the risk of making too big a case for him, he's kind of the Elvis of rap. He wan't the first or the most hardcore but he's one of the poeple that made that music universally popular at the time it was trying to bust out of the underground. His records are some of the earliest ones that go beyond the Sugar Hill sound of old sunk records - "I Need A Beat" was like nothing else I had ever heard when it came out, the first one that was that hard. | |
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Amen brother! People like to sleep on the original "R" but not me. I recognize real skills when I hear them.
I don't think anybody can argue LL wasn't a legitmate MC. That's more a sign of either ignorance or taste. He was our first major solo Hip Hop star outside of Kurtis Blow. But Kurtis never crossed over like LL.
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and the fact that MC's like Kurtis and Rakim never crossed over, is the reason why I hold them in higher esteem than I do L.L. "Love is like peeing in your pants, everyone sees it but only you feel its warmth" | |
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