Nasty Nas---King Of Schooling Other Rappers

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ca21;4232906 said:
How the fuck are those lines separate when the second part starts out with the word "calling"?

Let me school you delusional Nas stans on the use of the past progressive:

"1. If an action happened while another action took place. The past simple is used for the short action and the past progressive for the long action.

2. Two past actions happen at the same time."

they are separate. jay knew what nas was talking about.
 
ca21;4232906 said:
How the fuck are those lines separate when the second part starts out with the word "calling"?

cause it's a rap song you fucking idiot, not a scholarly article you're reading. It's two different fucking incidents he's referring to.
 
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Agrv2385;4232929 said:
oh my bad didnt see that. dont forget about Dont body yaself tho he did get at 50 and mobb deep in that one

good point

Code:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zcQ-xxGuoVk

 
alphajjc;4232855 said:
Original verses included in Ether..........fuck you Colombia Records for making Nas tone down the whole song:

Verse 1:

So you call yourself god mc... J-hova\

drunk the glass of blasphemy & forgot to pray over\

your games over\ crossed the warpath of a brave soldier\

you`re a makeover\ my protege trying to takeover\

I was the sheperd that led you\ But you bit the hand that fed you\

mad cause since I met you i never did respect you\ and as hard as it seems\ you know that I fathered your dreams\

you was a groupie always begging to be part of my team\

another case of a boy and his teacher\

I was the first to poison your speakers\

so kill all that noise that your preaching\

I understand\ all your plans to underhand\

aired threats of you pullin my card next summerjam\

let me make this clear hova\ You had my left overs\

she told me your little problem of the day when you slept over\

but that`s another subject homey\ ***** you phony\

I`m coming to collect the debt from the years that you owe me\

so what you capitlized... only cause i allowed\

I`m taking aim at your dome\ and reclaiming my throne\

"Who said I that i aint still nasty"

Verse 2:

How you planned on facing\ the half man half-amazing\

Don`t need a fam, Nas is a one man invasion\

claim you hot but you flopped with your roc-familia\ cause real recognize real and you`re not familiar\

call yourself gansta but you were begging for pardon\

that night in carbon\ when terror squad flipped on your squadron\

Tried to front on their checks\ till pun put a gun to your chest\

YOu said it yourself dog, Nas is one of the best\

Don`t need to search for some dirt to expose you\

I leave it up to the flow dispose you\ when i oppose you\

This is it I`m calling ya\ come out and play like "warriors"\

studied my blueprint then pieced together your formula\

Guess the knowledge I speak too deep to follow\

that`s why your stomach to weak to swallow\ The real truth

that Nas is\ the greates of all timers\

f*ck skeletons, keep only weaponry in my closets

^:)^ ^:)^ ^:)^

About this post on second thought I am not sure if it is legit or not, but at the same time I would not be surprised if it was
 
alphajjc;4232813 said:
MC The Rapper;4232779 said:
alphajjc;4232720 said:
What does Nas say that is not true?

Now watch this


You still have not really said what Nas has said that is untrue.

Even if what Nas said on "Stillmatic" really happened to Cormega in 1991, how does that matter in any way?

Do you hear anyone say that Prodigy having ballet pics does not "count" because he was younger? Or any other random rapper who is acting gangsta now, and was revealed to have snitched in the past, does not "count' because it was ages ago.

I know these two are cool now but It's funny how Cormega was acting like Nas was some bully who was "trying to stop guys from eating" when Mega himself is the one who kind of instigated the whole situation by being cocky and saying that Nas respects him way too much for him to say my name in a record(before Stillmatic came out).

I mean seriously what do you call that?


Well Nas tried to misrepresent facts to diss someone , He used events from 91 in a 2001 diss record as if they happened recently to discredit someone. He said someone snuffed Mega but Mega didn't get snuffed. He said he got him a deal he didn't. He tired to play 50 etc etc . Now this is shit I can't respect now if you wanna rock with dude thats on you but I can not.
 
He also shit on Camron on Zone Out from God's Son.

You got a house in Virginia, the only way you sicker than us

Gettin bagged with 22's, now yous a rediculous fuck
 
MC The Rapper;4233018 said:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s_XRsDHm5gs&feature=related

just posting something for yall to think about

I am sure that Nas and Rakim have addressed this matter privately though....

MTV: Rakim, Nas paid you the ultimate compliment in 2004 by recording "U.B.R. (Unauthorized Biography of Rakim)" [on Street's Disciple]. What was it like when you heard that song breaking down your whole life?

"He kind of opened my eyes, like, 'OK, people's watching. People really know about Rakim.' It kind of let me know where I was in the world." — Rakim

Rakim: That kind of puts things in perspective. You got this far and somebody that you respect, somebody that's on a high plateau, took time and showed you love. And to hear a lot of it, I was like, "Where did he get that from? How did he know that?" He does put things in perspective, man. He kind of opened my eyes, like, "OK, people's watching. People really know about Rakim." It kind of let me know where I was in the world.

Nas: Thanks, man. I always wanted to know how you felt about that, 'cause if somebody made a song talking about me and stuff like that, I wouldn't know how to react. I just had to make a song about Ra 'cause if we in there making songs in the studio, let's make songs about things that are important. The dude is important right now, so I made a song about how he inspired [people] a great deal. I used to look at Ra like, "This dude's an alien. He's an alien. He's not from here." That's how I feel to this day.

MTV: How much research did you do for that record?

Nas: It took me a day. I went online. I was up on Rakim forever, though — you ain't up on Rakim, then you don't belong in rap. I was always up on Ra and I met him as a kid. I was a young teen getting into the game and I met Ra. He came in the studio by himself, put the [medallion] on the table. With the cables, two beepers — it was crazy. I [hadn't] never seen a cell phone, really. I seen them on the TV, "Magnum P.I." and "Miami Vice." But I never seen the big, crazy joint — the joint you beat somebody over the head with. The dude was cool then, same as he is now. This brother has always been a cool brother.

MTV: Nas, five years ago we were doing an interview, and we were talking about some of the greats: Slick Rick, Rakim, KRS-One. When did you start feeling comfortable being mentioned in the same breath as some of those people you came up watching?

Nas: You know what it's like? You can only fight it for so long. Then, when your influence is so great on so many artists, you gotta accept it. Nah mean? God don't give you a gift. For you, you can't turn your lights down on your shine. You can't dim your lights for nobody. It just took its natural course.

MTV: With the climate of rap changing now, how does that affect you when putting out new material? The focus is not on lyrics, as it was back in the day.

Rakim: I'll answer that right quick, Nas. That's why it's up to brothers like me and him to keep it going. 'Cause if we turn around and fall victim to what's going on, then it's a wrap. Nas is doing an album, I'm doing an album. We can make a big statement right here. When this man drops an album, they already looking for it. Nas — you know he's gonna say something, and the same thing for Rakim. So if we stay focused and do what we do, I think everybody wants that real hip-hop back.
 
you niggas stupid gay!

goddamn!

i ain't seen this much dickriding since skyy black, cherokee d'ass, and beauty dior did a scene together

sheesh!
 
BackInWhite;4233510 said:
you niggas stupid gay!

goddamn!

i ain't seen this much dickriding since skyy black, cherokee d'ass, and beauty dior did a scene together

sheesh!

Its 2012.......people are still calling something dickriding if people are showing support for an artist?

No Im pretty straight, I dont have any gay thoughts about Nas

If you dont like a discussion then what is the point of popping up in here again? Sorry that I'm not saying "fuck Nas"

Seriously get out of here with the high school BS, calling any and every type of support "dickriding"

 
alphajjc;4233538 said:
BackInWhite;4233510 said:
you niggas stupid gay!

goddamn!

i ain't seen this much dickriding since skyy black, cherokee d'ass, and beauty dior did a scene together

sheesh!

Its 2012.......people are still calling something dickriding if people are showing support for an artist?

No Im pretty straight, I dont have any gay thoughts about Nas

If you dont like a discussion then what is the point of popping up in here again? Sorry that I'm not saying "fuck Nas"

Seriously get out of here with the high school BS, calling any and every type of support "dickriding"

support is cool but a couple of you niggas is blatantly cock gobbling in here

 
As said by sdotdub

Nas addresses Camron:

Code:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PA73Es3uZck

The "House In Virginia" line about Camron was in reference to the HIV rumors about him. It looks like he also did something similar in "Money Over Bullshit" (MOB) with Jim Jones by reference his blood set.
 
alphajjc;4233502 said:
MC The Rapper;4233018 said:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s_XRsDHm5gs&feature=related

just posting something for yall to think about

I am sure that Nas and Rakim have addressed this matter privately though....

MTV: Rakim, Nas paid you the ultimate compliment in 2004 by recording "U.B.R. (Unauthorized Biography of Rakim)" [on Street's Disciple]. What was it like when you heard that song breaking down your whole life?

"He kind of opened my eyes, like, 'OK, people's watching. People really know about Rakim.' It kind of let me know where I was in the world." — Rakim

Rakim: That kind of puts things in perspective. You got this far and somebody that you respect, somebody that's on a high plateau, took time and showed you love. And to hear a lot of it, I was like, "Where did he get that from? How did he know that?" He does put things in perspective, man. He kind of opened my eyes, like, "OK, people's watching. People really know about Rakim." It kind of let me know where I was in the world.

Nas: Thanks, man. I always wanted to know how you felt about that, 'cause if somebody made a song talking about me and stuff like that, I wouldn't know how to react. I just had to make a song about Ra 'cause if we in there making songs in the studio, let's make songs about things that are important. The dude is important right now, so I made a song about how he inspired [people] a great deal. I used to look at Ra like, "This dude's an alien. He's an alien. He's not from here." That's how I feel to this day.

MTV: How much research did you do for that record?

Nas: It took me a day. I went online. I was up on Rakim forever, though — you ain't up on Rakim, then you don't belong in rap. I was always up on Ra and I met him as a kid. I was a young teen getting into the game and I met Ra. He came in the studio by himself, put the [medallion] on the table. With the cables, two beepers — it was crazy. I [hadn't] never seen a cell phone, really. I seen them on the TV, "Magnum P.I." and "Miami Vice." But I never seen the big, crazy joint — the joint you beat somebody over the head with. The dude was cool then, same as he is now. This brother has always been a cool brother.

MTV: Nas, five years ago we were doing an interview, and we were talking about some of the greats: Slick Rick, Rakim, KRS-One. When did you start feeling comfortable being mentioned in the same breath as some of those people you came up watching?

Nas: You know what it's like? You can only fight it for so long. Then, when your influence is so great on so many artists, you gotta accept it. Nah mean? God don't give you a gift. For you, you can't turn your lights down on your shine. You can't dim your lights for nobody. It just took its natural course.

MTV: With the climate of rap changing now, how does that affect you when putting out new material? The focus is not on lyrics, as it was back in the day.

Rakim: I'll answer that right quick, Nas. That's why it's up to brothers like me and him to keep it going. 'Cause if we turn around and fall victim to what's going on, then it's a wrap. Nas is doing an album, I'm doing an album. We can make a big statement right here. When this man drops an album, they already looking for it. Nas — you know he's gonna say something, and the same thing for Rakim. So if we stay focused and do what we do, I think everybody wants that real hip-hop back.

whats ether about that , if you look at the interview Nas never talked to rakim about the song until way after it was released , even if it is an unauthorized biography atleast tell dude you gon do the song before you do it before putting his biz in the streets but this is the person yall look up too
 
MC The Rapper;4233583 said:
alphajjc;4233502 said:
MC The Rapper;4233018 said:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s_XRsDHm5gs&feature=related

just posting something for yall to think about

I am sure that Nas and Rakim have addressed this matter privately though....

MTV: Rakim, Nas paid you the ultimate compliment in 2004 by recording "U.B.R. (Unauthorized Biography of Rakim)" [on Street's Disciple]. What was it like when you heard that song breaking down your whole life?

"He kind of opened my eyes, like, 'OK, people's watching. People really know about Rakim.' It kind of let me know where I was in the world." — Rakim

Rakim: That kind of puts things in perspective. You got this far and somebody that you respect, somebody that's on a high plateau, took time and showed you love. And to hear a lot of it, I was like, "Where did he get that from? How did he know that?" He does put things in perspective, man. He kind of opened my eyes, like, "OK, people's watching. People really know about Rakim." It kind of let me know where I was in the world.

Nas: Thanks, man. I always wanted to know how you felt about that, 'cause if somebody made a song talking about me and stuff like that, I wouldn't know how to react. I just had to make a song about Ra 'cause if we in there making songs in the studio, let's make songs about things that are important. The dude is important right now, so I made a song about how he inspired [people] a great deal. I used to look at Ra like, "This dude's an alien. He's an alien. He's not from here." That's how I feel to this day.

MTV: How much research did you do for that record?

Nas: It took me a day. I went online. I was up on Rakim forever, though — you ain't up on Rakim, then you don't belong in rap. I was always up on Ra and I met him as a kid. I was a young teen getting into the game and I met Ra. He came in the studio by himself, put the [medallion] on the table. With the cables, two beepers — it was crazy. I [hadn't] never seen a cell phone, really. I seen them on the TV, "Magnum P.I." and "Miami Vice." But I never seen the big, crazy joint — the joint you beat somebody over the head with. The dude was cool then, same as he is now. This brother has always been a cool brother.

MTV: Nas, five years ago we were doing an interview, and we were talking about some of the greats: Slick Rick, Rakim, KRS-One. When did you start feeling comfortable being mentioned in the same breath as some of those people you came up watching?

Nas: You know what it's like? You can only fight it for so long. Then, when your influence is so great on so many artists, you gotta accept it. Nah mean? God don't give you a gift. For you, you can't turn your lights down on your shine. You can't dim your lights for nobody. It just took its natural course.

MTV: With the climate of rap changing now, how does that affect you when putting out new material? The focus is not on lyrics, as it was back in the day.

Rakim: I'll answer that right quick, Nas. That's why it's up to brothers like me and him to keep it going. 'Cause if we turn around and fall victim to what's going on, then it's a wrap. Nas is doing an album, I'm doing an album. We can make a big statement right here. When this man drops an album, they already looking for it. Nas — you know he's gonna say something, and the same thing for Rakim. So if we stay focused and do what we do, I think everybody wants that real hip-hop back.

whats ether about that , if you look at the interview Nas never talked to rakim about the song until way after it was released , even if it is an unauthorized biography atleast tell dude you gon do the song before you do it before putting his biz in the streets but this is the person yall look up too

Well obviously I cannot put ether for my own post. I wasn't disagreeing with you or anything I said that I think they both talked about it I was just posting the full article that I came across recently. Trust me man as big a fan I am of Nas, I did not agree with him doing this at all.
 
Nas had a lot unreleased disses on a bunch of DJ Clue mixtape. Here is one where he gets at Tupac. As an added bonus you got Nature getting at Mega. This is what started their beef.

youtube.com/watch?v=zSktw_pVLZk

If somebody could embedd this for me. I forget how to do it
 
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