Any lil wayne fan here....let hook asap
Eminem, is by far the best!!!
No not a fan of lil weazel
He is a mere electrophone talentless over-rated wannabe be gangster/playa/hustler, rapper
.
Edited by
unknown_romeo
on Wed 04/15/15 01:48 PM
Eminem, is by far the best!!!
how many times those eminem win the best rapper?
No not a fan of lil weazel
He is a mere electrophone talentless over-rated wannabe be gangster/playa/hustler, rapper
.
u just downgrade the rap master...when u are there hustling to become a gangster rapper....your 20year of hustling can never make one percent of him...
No not a fan of lil weazel
He is a mere electrophone talentless over-rated wannabe be gangster/playa/hustler, rapper
.
u just downgrade the rap master...when u are there hustling to become a gangster rapper....your 20year of hustling can never make one percent of him...
Put him in a Boxing ring with me and I'd knock him out within one round and I guarantee that! Romeo, was right? He's a plastic gangster, simple as!!
em shi*s all over wayne, thats not even up for discussion.
I prefer Fresh Prince. Boom Boom Shake the Room!
No not a fan of lil weazel
He is a mere electrophone talentless over-rated wannabe be gangster/playa/hustler, rapper
.
actually they all are!
I always get a kick out of when they are talking about their "MUSIC".
One of the best but not the greatest. :)
your 20year of hustling can never make one percent of him...
No not a fan of lil weazel
He is a mere electrophone talentless over-rated wannabe be gangster/playa/hustler, rapper
.
u just downgrade the rap master...when u are there hustling to become a gangster rapper....your 20year of hustling can never make one percent of him...
Put him in a Boxing ring with me and I'd knock him out within one round and I guarantee that! Romeo, was right? He's a plastic gangster, simple as!!
No not a fan of lil weazel
He is a mere electrophone talentless over-rated wannabe be gangster/playa/hustler, rapper
.
u just downgrade the rap master...when u are there hustling to become a gangster rapper....your 20year of hustling can never make one percent of him...
Put him in a Boxing ring with me and I'd knock him out within one round and I guarantee that! Romeo, was right? He's a plastic gangster, simple as!!
I agreed with u,but If I put both of u in a studio or skateboard....u can never be on the same page with him
oh my gosh,this pic is killing
Tech N9ne - Show Me A God
http://youtu.be/aUx0Cgifx-Y
I can't say Lil Wayne is the best.
Although I'm NOT a fan of today's rap or heavy metal, here's a very informative article about how White music industry executives created fictional, thuggish rap characters to pander to Whites' basest desires and fantasies, and in the process marginalized rappers who rapped about positive things, such as family, love, marriage, etc., and social issues.
They destroyed the genre.
"How Music Executives Created 'Black' Hip Hop For White Suburban Kids."
"White men — specifically young, suburban white men — consume around 80% of hip-hop music.
This became a recognized industry fact in 1991, and since then, the music industry has crafted mainstream hip-hop culture to appeal to that demographic.
Raps containing gangbangers, drug dealers, pimps, and hoes were pushed to the forefront, as executives believed that the sexiness and danger of these lifestyles were what White audiences craved from the genre.
These stories were crafted, packaged, and sold as representing authentic 'blackness.' (JL: most Whites are easily fooled when they're receptive to racism)
Other core attributes of early hip-hop music, such as its political critique, social commentary, comedy, and spirituality — represented by classic groups such as A Tribe Called Quest, Public Enemy, Mos Def, and Talib Kweli — were pushed to the fringe and are now considered 'alternative' uniquely socially engaged, and, sometimes, 'white.'"
For more see:
http://mic.com/articles/78487/how-music-executives-created-black-hip-hop-for-white-suburban-kids
JL: "as executives believed that the sexiness and danger of these lifestyles were what White audiences craved..."
This, no doubt, led to Whites holding even more stereotypical and/or racist beliefs about African Americans.
As the large, White-owned music companies pushed this **negative rap** ****, Classic R&B groups were pushed out of the industry.
Groups where the personnel could actually play an instrument, such as the bass, drums, guitars(lead or rhythm), horns, keyboards, percussion, etc....were pushed out.
However, I'm glad to write that many of these Classic R&B groups still tour in the U.S., Europe, the Middle and Far East, and other countries around the world.