You have a good point, but I'm only talking about after breaking out and sustaining his spot with the amount of venom sent in his direction. That was only So Far Gone, his third or fourth tape, after dude had already been picked up by Wayne and co. He got the right cosign, that cosigned believed in him, and they made the right moves. The speed at which that happened is crazy but that's also the industry going through transitions to facilitate that sort of thing. People were dying to sign him because they saw him coming, I don't really believe the idea that he paid his way to the top.For me, Kendrick has a couple of those moments. It didn't really materialize in a single song for me till GKMC (Sing About Me) but already on section 80 he was showing off a combo of crazy wordplay, subject matter and flashes of brilliance in overall technical breadth and depth. When people started taking Drake a little more seriously as a rapper I think it was in between Take Care and NWTS and he started dropping more fire throwaway tracks on soundcloud and his radio dominance became clear. Anyway Marvin's Room might be that moment for him, maybe.
undebateable greatest of all time artist
Barrage of opposition? He already had a presence and contacts in the entertainment industry before he ever dropped a verse. His mixtapes had Kanye West, 9th Wonder, Boi-1da production.... Lil Wayne, Bun features... Compare that to say, Hov himself, who was getting kicked out of A&R meetings and had to actually sell drugs to muster enough money to break into the music industry. Of course there were a lot of heads sticking up their nose at Drake, but they don't matter too much in a market sense and haven't since the 90s.
Either way IMO he's not seeing Jay on trajectory, he has no Reasonable Doubt level album and I don't really see him dropping a Blueprint either really.
I think where it really breaks down is his legacy as an MC
I feel like albums are kind of general, like we always talk about what the greatest album in the last x amount of years.Albums count? Or are moments songs?
Your legacy as an artist and as an MC are completely different. Especially in an era with more genre crossover than there has ever been since the beginning of hip-hop. There's also a ton of stuff from great MCs that is completely unlistenable today.i think where this rapper's legacy really breaks down is his skill as a rapper?? wtf ru talm bout?
You have a good point, but I'm only talking about after breaking out and sustaining his spot with the amount of venom sent in his direction. That was only So Far Gone, his third or fourth tape, after dude had already been picked up by Wayne and co. He got the right cosign, that cosigned believed in him, and they made the right moves. The speed at which that happened is crazy but that's also the industry going through transitions to facilitate that sort of thing. People were dying to sign him because they saw him coming, I don't really believe the idea that he paid his way to the top.
If I had to pick, Drake's moment would probably be Marvin's Room for me too. Kendrick probably Keisha's Song IMO.
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I think this is a good thing to talk about, there's been discussion of this sort of thing in battle rap recently, where MCs have that "god moment." That shit that solidifies them in your eyes and no matter how far they fall off in the back of your head you're like "but he made Thriller. Thriller."
Y'all feel like any MC has done that for you in the last decade or so? Let's say, post GRODT?
Heads up!
Sadistik X kno - Phantom Limbs
I think this is a good thing to talk about, there's been discussion of this sort of thing in battle rap recently, where MCs have that "god moment." That shit that solidifies them in your eyes and no matter how far they fall off in the back of your head you're like "but he made Thriller. Thriller."
Y'all feel like any MC has done that for you in the last decade or so? Let's say, post GRODT?
Wouldn't personally call it a god moment or whatever, but this is probably my favourite moment of Danny's career. The buildup to it through his delivery and lyrics is basically perfect on that song. And then the beat slowly strips itself away.The last line of XXX was when the whole thing hit me. Took me a few listens to appreciate the album as a whole but that last track made me play it again.
Your legacy as an artist and as an MC are completely different. Especially in an era with more genre crossover than there has ever been since the beginning of hip-hop. There's also a ton of stuff from great MCs that is completely unlistenable today.
As are your reading skills, evidently.nah, crossover is nothing new, word to epmd, ur mental gymnastics to arrive at this point are medal worthy
Going strictly by this definition I would say Below The Heavens. That shit blew my mind when I first heard it and is one of my all-time favourites, even if Blu fell off the face of the earth after.That shit that solidifies them in your eyes and no matter how far they fall off in the back of your head you're like "but he made Thriller. Thriller."
As are your reading skills, evidently.
your are hedging when you say he is an all time great artist but not MC, as if he were a painter or fashion designer
Y'all feel like any MC has done that for you in the last decade or so? Let's say, post GRODT?
wait, are you applying this to kendrick or someone else?
Powerful.Kendrick denies the title of "Rapper" too. they can try to separate themselves from rap all they want, it's the genre they exist in. there is no more or less crossover now than historically. walk this way, came out in 1986
your are hedging when you say he is an all time great artist but not MC, as if he were a painter or fashion designer
When Lil' Wayne dropped this verse.
Tha Carter dropped at around that time and Wayne went from the 'wobbity wobbity' kid from Cash Money to legit MC to, for a time, the biggest rapper in the world.
Marvin's Room was where I started taking notice of Drake. I didn't really fuck with Thank Me Later or his mixtapes (never thought they were bad, just never bothered to check them out).
im just saying this is gaf-hop not gaf-artist. you dont get to say "well this rapper:
bars = 1/10
singing ability = 8/10
adversity overcomance = 10/10
influence = 10/10
average = GOAT"
is he a great rapper or not? that's what im interested in.
im gonna take that as a "no, that doesn't apply to kendrick since he definitely scores higher than 1/10 on bars" lol
First time I realized Wayne leveled up was when I heard his 1st verse on Neck of The Woods. Still like it, actually.
I'm more of a "Block is Hot" to "500 Degrees" type of Wayne fan. Dude didn't pick up on the flow until Gillie started writing for him. I can't take him serious as one of the best when dude just emulated Philly's style, when he used to be on some wobbily wobbily shit.
Seeing Wayne in Bape just reminded me that him and Clipse were actually beefing over clothes haha
I still give him credit, look at when Jay came out with that skippidydippidy flow before he started biting BIG. Wayne owned his new style just like Jay did.
Kendrick (those Bone Thugs harmonized backing vocals)
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Well, firstly hip-hop is not just rap, I think production crossover has just as big of an effect on pop culture.Kendrick denies the title of "Rapper" too. they can try to separate themselves from rap all they want, it's the genre they exist in. there is no more or less crossover now than historically. walk this way, came out in 1986
your are hedging when you say he is an all time great artist but not MC, as if he were a painter or fashion designer
I'm more of a "Block is Hot" to "500 Degrees" type of Wayne fan. Dude didn't pick up on the flow until Gillie started writing for him. I can't take him serious as one of the best when dude just emulated Philly's style, when he used to be on some wobbily wobbily shit.
The Hot Boyz sucked