mr marcus
Banned
- 26,572
- 5,415
Ludacris/Tyrese jokes were
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Agree on both parts, but this isn't 1997 or 2002, where you can have one hit and literally never be heard from again. The massive increase in social media usage has given guys people may consider subpar or outright garbage lifelines, extending their careers far past their expiration date. Soulja Boy and YouTube started that in 2005, then exploded in 2009 with the rise of twitter all the way up til what you see today. People may not like it, but some of the artists you [we] detest very well may still be here come 2020
Out of all the music I've listened to, there's seriously only 3 people u can listen to over crappy/mediocre beats --- Common, Nas, and Payroll.
Here's where the timeless part comes in:
The majority of mainstream pop/rap being made today has a shelf life. You won't be going to the Migos YRN 30th anniversary live concert like our parents can still go see Frankie Beverly and Maze every year at the essence music festival. 40 years from Nicki Minaj or Miley Cyrus won't be performing for the pope like Aretha Franklin. The music is not timeless. Which means it will die the older it gets. chances are when we all get old, drake crooning about strippers and futures 4 minute lean jingles won't really resonate with us the way it does now.
If you're an 80s baby like myself, you see how much the artists we grew up on are now scrambling to figure out how to still monetize their celebrity and a lot of them are trying to do it in other industries.
Cam'ron can only eat off that dip set legacy until these year 2000 kids start asking "what's a dip set?".
So while the Internet gave artists the power to connect directly with the people and manage their own brands to an extent....how long is it really going to live in the long run?
While I agree that the majority of mainstream music isn't timeless these days, and pop music overall has dropped in quality considerably b/c of the influx of edm/techno music...timeless music is relevant first to the generation that enjoyed it the most, and secondly the generations after. Very few artist can make timeless music.
Would you have considered "Back that AXX Up" timeless in 99"? I doubt it. But it is. People who were born in 99 still turn up to that song in 2015. I say let the music grown and mature and then wait and see.
While I agree that the majority of mainstream music isn't timeless these days, and pop music overall has dropped in quality considerably b/c of the influx of edm/techno music...timeless music is relevant first to the generation that enjoyed it the most, and secondly the generations after. Very few artist can make timeless music.
Would you have considered "Back that AXX Up" timeless in 99"? I doubt it. But it is. People who were born in 99 still turn up to that song in 2015. I say let the music grown and mature and then wait and see.
Wayne from Squad up to the Drought 3 was the best Wayne. That's roughly 02-07.
He was AMAZING at rapping then. Wayne had a legit argument for best rapper alive after Carter 1 - Carter 2. I don't recognize the guy from Carter 3 to today. The fall off was something real to the true fans, while the new fans ate those corny cringeworthy raps up
of course back dat *** up is still going to hit. Depending on how you perceive time....it's really not that old of a song.
I was speaking in majorities. Using one of the biggest rap songs of all time doesn't really speak to that.
I'm saying ON average. MOST of the music today is trapped in the collective consciousness of today's youth. It won't resonate with us at all at a certain point. Or one would hope not.
If you were to look at time by decades...you'll notice there is a steadily decline of what would be considered timeless music.
Hood Hop is one of the hardest beats ever.
Glad the rap city used it when Banks came thru
Wait a min yall not gonna discuss Hood Hop and not Tipsy.
J-kwon might be in contention for Top 20 (2 hit wonders of all time)
Kanye doesn't produce **** and hasn't in a very long time. He doesn't write his raps either. But he's a "Genius"
I don't know anyone who has Puff on their list of legendary producers.