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u got any music online?blackgod813;6272948 said:i got this rap shit locked i got u on the rev shit i got charges pendin now but before im gone im gone im soul bleed
str8 soulja;6273054 said:ZAztec_Kang;6272976 said:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SfhpompJmtg
Who dat?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E4K6mmhhMlc
Wild Self;6271567 said:Blame it on the old heads that shitted on Public Enemy, but ran with NWA's image and "Niggas4Life" album that promoted "real nigga shit." It really harmed HIp Hop's creativity and eventually its spirit of rebellion. Before then, everyone wanted to be different. Since then, every nigga screams that they are a "real nigga" and they are "true to the streets" instead of being individuals.
aladdin1978;6276760 said:I'm with T/S. niggas need someone to motivate them and get that fire in their belly again....that's one reason why the LA riots happened, niggas had P.E, king sun, cube and others shouting black power.
loch121;6277046 said:Wild Self;6271567 said:Blame it on the old heads that shitted on Public Enemy, but ran with NWA's image and "Niggas4Life" album that promoted "real nigga shit." It really harmed HIp Hop's creativity and eventually its spirit of rebellion. Before then, everyone wanted to be different. Since then, every nigga screams that they are a "real nigga" and they are "true to the streets" instead of being individuals.
Can't blame the old heads because there was way more positive shit out then and it wasn't looked down upon
I don't blame NWA for shit because 1 they started as a parody and 2 they were representing a lifestyle that was really going on.
You can't have ying w/out yang
The streets are real
icecoldstew;6271995 said:http://youtu.be/6lIqNjC1RKU
loch121;6277046 said:Wild Self;6271567 said:Blame it on the old heads that shitted on Public Enemy, but ran with NWA's image and "Niggas4Life" album that promoted "real nigga shit." It really harmed HIp Hop's creativity and eventually its spirit of rebellion. Before then, everyone wanted to be different. Since then, every nigga screams that they are a "real nigga" and they are "true to the streets" instead of being individuals.
Can't blame the old heads because there was way more positive shit out then and it wasn't looked down upon
I don't blame NWA for shit because 1 they started as a parody and 2 they were representing a lifestyle that was really going on.
You can't have ying w/out yang
The streets are real
5 Grand;6280076 said:Newsflash. We got a black president (albeit lightskinned). Public Enemy, BDP and Ice T were just a throwback of the civil rights era. You gotta remember 80s rap was really just 20 years removed from the civil rights era of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X. So the 80s rappers were just reflecting that last twilight of the revolution.
One of the issues of the civil rights movement was immediate change vs slow gradual change. Back in the 50s and 60s Blacks were demanding immidiate change. Right now! But the change was gradual. By the 80s we had the Cosby Show, Arsenio Hall, Yo! MTV Raps. Also Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Bo Jackson were all getting these sweet endorsement deals. Oprah had her daytime talk show. Spike Lee started producing and directing his own movies. Russell Simmons started his own rap label and released It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back and Fear of a Black Planet on said label.
Bottom line, all of the change that people wanted has happenned. There's the odd George Zimmerman/Treyvon Martin case but for the most part, the racism of the early 20th century is over. We got a black Pres. We've had a Black Secretary of State. There's alot of Black CEOs. I remember hearing the CEO of American Express was Black a few years ago.
At the Million Man March Farrakhan said we need Atonement, which means we need to stop what we're doing and take a deep breath. We need to pray and make positive moves to do the right thing.
Honestly, I love Public Enemy and early Cube, but Black America just isn't in that place anymore. What we need isn't some angry, militant rapper. What we need is more college educated rappers who can put the world in perspective for the younger generation and saying "f*ck the police" isn't going to produce any positive results. Anybody can go to a community college and get a degree. If you don't have the money the government will pay for you to go to school and get an education. Thats what rappers need to rap about. Going to college and getting an education [But can you picture 50 Cent sitting at a board room meeting explaining to Jimmy Iovine that his next album is about how young Black males need to go to college?]