#Hip Hop track
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muzicpromotionclub · 2 months ago
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🎤🔥 Dive into the heart of hip-hop with 'M.I.A' by Showgenn! 🎶 This track brings gritty lyricism and raw flows, showcasing the essence of hip-hop music at its finest. 🌆💯 From the streets to the speakers, feel the energy of this fire anthem! 🚀 Don’t miss the official video – it’s live now!
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spacedoutsheepy · 7 months ago
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Some disses are made for clout, or industry drama, or to further a career, build a rep, or promote an upcoming project. Others are made because you deadass fucking HATE a man. Drake is turning to the crowd for approval after every bar, Kendrick is holding direct eye contact and not blinking.
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kcyars99 · 7 months ago
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hanvanmusic · 2 years ago
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🔥 Alternative Hip Hop: Unleash Your Inner Rhythm! #AlternativeHipHop #Music
Embark on a musical journey with this alternative hip hop track, designed to liberate your inner rhythm and ignite your passion for music. This unique blend of beats and melodies represents the innovative spirit of alternative hip hop. Don't forget to like, share, and subscribe for more tunes! #AlternativeHipHop #Music #HipHop 🎵 Parts List: https:https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLyCzCWN9gRLw7dlc9dCU8d2F0WvZdnp-V 🔔 Don't forget to subscribe and turn on notifications so you can be notified of new videos! 🎧 Enjoy this video and please give your comments and thoughts. It is important for us to communicate with you!
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thetunesclub · 2 years ago
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ytcomments-archive · 7 months ago
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superdynamo · 7 months ago
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saintescuderia · 7 months ago
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some thoughts on the beef...
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now, i will preface this by the admission: i did my masters thesis on kendrick lamar.
so the bias runs deep. from the moment in 2013 when i first listened to bitch, don't kill my vibe and realised he'd perfectly encapsulated the idea of get your noise away from me, kendrick became a key figure for me. my entire adolescence was characterised by the releases of to pimp a butterfly and DAMN.
i was born and raised christian, but i only started to fully explore that after listening to faith.
i was born and raised in an egyptian household, but i only started to fully identify with what that means after complexion.
my highschool teacher once said to us that there will be no amount of growth in a time period unlike from your 18th to your 21st. and i can testify this. DAMN came out when i turned 18. mr morale and the big steppers came out after i finished being 21.
and, as always, kendrick knew what i needed. that a song about the lifelong affects of trauma and dealing with grief, with pain, with shame. i remember listening to mother i sober for the first time and bursting into tears on my bedroom floor because i never thought he would actually go where i needed him the most.
and now, we're here. that dr*ke is a pedophile. i won't censor that word, but i will censor his name. his artist name deserves no more respect. if anything, it should be that aubrey is a pedophile. and whilst these allegations still need to be proved to be true with evidence, i think it's worth noting something.
kendrick's suffered from the affects of abuse. why would he make light of it and throw them around so carelessly?
if anything, we've seen how nothing he does is careless. everything is so carefully thought out, so methodically thought out with even the most minute details being considered with the utmost deliberation.
aside from that, there's too much pain for that to be the case.
this could've been a good example of the sport. it's what it started out as. it's not worth going through all the subtle disses kendrick has dished out in his career. if anything, his pulitzer prize should be enough proof that a rap diss could remain as is; a rap diss.
but this wasn't a mere rap diss. this was mr morale in action and providing a real life example of the stories and themes he explores in his songs. the affects of unchecked corruption within the self. the affects of generational trauma and how the cycle continues - unless you stop and look in the mirror.
-- + -- + --
we should've known
how a son was finally shown
like the apple with the bruise
it's all coming loose
treat the world like your whore
only for it to reveal
your rotten core
(pls, seek him. heal.)
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asherousstuff · 7 months ago
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"No, You not a colleague, you a fuckin' colonizer" - Kendrick Lamar (Not Like Us)
I keep going back to that line since Lamar isn't wrong. Drake colonized what hip-hop used to be.
Back in the 70s, 80s, and maybe 90s, hip-hop was a culture revolution. It was anti-drug and anti-violence. It was where black people specifically could air out their anger. It was a form of empowerment and self-expression while simultaneously calling out political, social, and economic issues, media did demonised hip-hop during this time a lot due to this, which wasn't palpable to a lot of white people, (not saying that white people didn't enjoy it or also sang hip-hop). It was primarily seen as Black-American music, something they could claim as their own
Then, after the 2000s and the start of 2010, there was a change due to some people, and one of them was Drake. He didn't really understand what hip-hop (also known as rap) actually meant. So when he used it, his lyrics were mostly about women, sex and that. Sure, there were some times that Drake songs were serious, but it wasn't what it was before.
And since Drake became popular, it also dragged hip-hop into popularity, which led to what hip-hop actually meant and stood for to fade. Intentionally or not, Drake colonised what hip-hop stood for with his own meaning, and other rappers followed suit. It also meant it became more palpable to white people. (Media stopped demonising hip-hop after this because it lost the roots of political and social activism it had)
If you're wondering why hip-hop started to have a white rapper problem, this is kind of why, but there are also other reasons. Drake isn't the sole reason, but he is a cause in it.
Lamar ain't wrong that Drake was a colonizer because he colonised what hip-hop meant.
Added: Someone reblog that Drake is a popstar. While he is considered a popstar and does pop music now, he's started in hip-hop music, and the main inspiration came from hip-hop that influenced his style. Drake even has the most number one singles in R&B and hip-hop charts. It was a style he did steal from.
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cyarskj1899 · 4 months ago
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muzicpromotionclub · 2 months ago
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🎤🔥 Experience the raw energy of hip-hop with 'City Lyfe' by Born Divine ft. Janese! 🏙️ This track brings the streets to life with hard-hitting bars and smooth flows, capturing the grind and hustle of the city. 🌆💯 Don’t sleep on this one – the official video is out now! 🚀🎶
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lookin4serenity · 7 months ago
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Drake vs Kendrick
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kcyars99 · 7 months ago
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& Did!!! Give that woman her credit for dissing Nicki, Drake, Tory supporters, her old dudes all in ONE SONG and going #1. That shit was EPIC!!
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iaminpossesionofheadtrauma · 7 months ago
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kendrick’s pr team rn
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90363462 · 7 months ago
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Haley Joel Osment and Joel Osteen after hearing “euphoria “
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todayinhiphophistory · 11 months ago
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Today in Hip Hop History:
The single Hit ‘Em High by B Real, Busta Rhymes, Coolio, LL Cool J, and Method Man from the Space Jam soundtrack was released January 7, 1997
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