Wild Self;5812792 said:Lab Baby;5812769 said:I will say this tho... when Young Jeezy said "rappin ass niggas, you better do numbers" and people ran with it, that to me marked the beginning of the end of lyricism in the mainstream. You can say it started with 50, but at least he cosigned spitters that were primarily known for rapping. I wouldn't single out the south as a whole, but that particular generation of rappers led by Jeezy and Gucci definitely ushered in the era of rap where you didn't have to be lyrical. Proof: when Waka says "we don't wanna hear that dictionary rap" or some shit like that... then again, he's a fucking idiot in general anyway.
that was 2005 aka the dark ages of rap. Now in 2013, the lyrical cats sell the most and make the most money from bigger tours than their non-lyrical counterparts.
True. The new generation (Drake, Wale, K Dot and them) is definitely more lyrical, but it's still muddy to me. To the point even some of those cats purposely dumb down their lyrics to appeal to that crowd. The labels are still tryna push simple Jack be nimble ass niggas like French and Future cuz they THINK that it will still sell. I say in 5-10 years, lyricism will be back in the forefront and ghostwriting will become a trend again.
Muhannad X;5812796 said:Lab Baby;5812769 said:I will say this tho... when Young Jeezy said "rappin ass niggas, you better do numbers" and people ran with it, that to me marked the beginning of the end of lyricism in the mainstream. You can say it started with 50, but at least he cosigned spitters that were primarily known for rapping. I wouldn't single out the south as a whole, but that particular generation of rappers led by Jeezy and Gucci definitely ushered in the era of rap where you didn't have to be lyrical. Proof: when Waka says "we don't wanna hear that dictionary rap" or some shit like that... then again, he's a fucking idiot in general anyway.
Agreed but the Young Jeezy's, Gucci's and Waka's wouldn't be here without Master P. He lowered the bar as far as emceeing and made that brand of hip hop acceptable. P was doing what these rappers do now in the mid and late 90ties. P paved the way for 'em.
It's like these n*ggas got a disdain for rapping eventhough they been trying to get on way before they blew up and tried different styles till they found what worked for them. All that pseudo nonchalant "I'm not a rapper" attitude is a facade. "Yeah, miss me with that rap sh*t". "Rappin' a@s n*gga, you just getting show money"...
Atleast Jeezy and Gucci have been rapping before they blew and grinded. Waka got on strictly through affiliations, in his case his mom. I always felt like this n*gga's like namond from The Wire.
Dam, forgot about Master P. Come to think about it, I don't know why this thread went on so long... them Wu Tang vs No Limit/CMB threads that been poppin off lately is proof of the OP. How the fuck did No Limit sell all them records, and them shits ain't even memorable or playable today. At least the Wu gets referenced or sampled every now and then (Ghost on New God Flow for example).