- Jan 5, 2013
- 23,529
- 38,127
Flow when the beat change crazy, I don’t care. She flow better than most of the new **** posted in here
Nah I feel you. That song is classic
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Flow when the beat change crazy, I don’t care. She flow better than most of the new **** posted in here
Nah I feel you. That song is classic
Been listening to a lot of old Miami Bass inspired ATL **** lately, crazy to think about how much that spilled in and influenced the culture, Freaknik etc
My boy Kilo a legend, _'s was not ready for this outside of ATL, MIA etc especially Pre - Outkast
Obvious ATL/Bass inspired classic
and a bonus deep cut from the City Boys
Unfortunately I did during middle school and high school dances
Hell no
As your OG, I remember playing this for you many years ago.
Good interviews. I like the Genius cat. He asks the right questions, and does his homework and creates a good rapor. Interview made me check out a few of them Benny tracks. I rock with it.
Why can’t he say that? He’s not wrong and I’m sure he’s aware of Rapsody and any other real rapping broad. When it comes to mainstream and the radio, we only hearing one type of sound from women. Offbeat stripper music.
There’s always a particular sound that’s popular on the radio. This isn’t new
Radio is more one sided than ever now
Why can’t he say that? He’s not wrong and I’m sure he’s aware of Rapsody and any other real rapping broad. When it comes to mainstream and the radio, we only hearing one type of sound from women. Offbeat stripper music.
But that’s clearly what he’s talking about. Radio, TV, social media and lounges. He’s not saying every female rapper is about stripping. **** like that needs to be said
The radio no longer dictates what's hot, some of the most popular music/albums out you'll never hear on stations.But is the radio the main way we consume music anymore? Sure it's an accurate statement but it's also low hanging fruit. With minimal effort you can find a woman artist who has a different sound.
The radio no longer dictates what's hot, some of the most popular music/albums out you'll never hear on stations.
All types of female artists are available, but the people happen to want the stripper raps. Clubs and social media are pumping what's hot, women love this stuff.
Hottest meaning what's streaming, some songs get 10s of millions of streams on SoundCloud/streaming platforms without ever touching radio.When you say "hot" or "most popular" are you talking about what's charting?
Can't say I agree with "the people want the stripper raps". The people are used to the radio and the hosts telling them what's the best song out and that stripper rap is what's being pushed. We aren't used to curating our own music at the current scale. We rely on somebody else to put together the radio show or the streaming sites' playlists. There's thousands of women artists out there but the vast majority of them are basically hidden gems
Hottest meaning what's streaming, some songs get 10s of millions of streams on SoundCloud/streaming platforms without ever touching radio.
I've never heard XXX or Slump God on NYC radio but amongst the youth they were some of the most popular rappers of the decade. Meg and City Girls had huge buzz before being on Top 40 radio.
Hell even in the last 5-10 years DatPiff has been a better source of discovery for rap than major stations or TV. At this point only old heads still discover music from the radio, dudes barely even own cars anymore.
Right now Dreamville is the top album streaming, and I'm sure the radio isn't playing songs off of it everywhere. Chance was A list in rap popularity without any radio singles before coloring book, Russ is packing stadiums and we never hear his music on the radio.
Yeah, JD was wrong all across the board. He spoke out of ignorance and isn't really in tune with what's out.Okay, yea I agree. Radio these days is basically a list of the songs that "THEY" want you to listen to and is not a reliable tool to measure quality of music at all.
That's why the whole "He was talking about mainstream" isn't even a decent excuse