Become a member of the Lil Wayne HQ Forum. Register Today!
Congratulations on finding the biggest and best forum for everything Lil Wayne and Young Money Entertainment.
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ, and to join in discussions with other members of this board you will need to register with us. As a registered member, you will gain access to every forum, able to post, create new threads, send and receive private messages, search and plenty more cool features! Register today!
Smoke good, eat good.
Only fuck a bitch if her throat good, feet good.
Just bought a fleetwood, and imma put some D's on that bitch.
Looking like i gotta diamond disease on my wrist.
im sorry patriarch but i was rapping bout standin up 4 tha South in my rap, that's all AND it was a freestyle. and honestly patriarch every1 raps like that. jay z (1 of my favorite rappers) damn hes from Brooklynn, and if ya listen 2 Hard Knock Life theyre talkin bout tha same shit u sterotype bout tha South. same with The Game. check out "My Life" and shit like that. and Dope Boys is just about nothing. sorry patriarch but they all follow the same things. "Juicy" by Biggie.
(i aint comin down on these rappers, theyre all my favs, but rap isnt really supposed 2 b about anything really)
Perhaps "themes" is too simple a word. What I'm trying to say is that the South as a region produces far more commercialized bullshit than the West and the East. I acknowledge that rappers from the West and East use those themes, but it is more common for them to be presented in a more complex and thoughtful lyrical context when the song comes from those regions. Southern rap seems to be one big get rich quick scheme.
im sorry patriarch but i was rapping bout standin up 4 tha South in my rap, that's all AND it was a freestyle. and honestly patriarch every1 raps like that. jay z (1 of my favorite rappers) damn hes from Brooklynn, and if ya listen 2 Hard Knock Life theyre talkin bout tha same shit u sterotype bout tha South. same with The Game. check out "My Life" and shit like that. and Dope Boys is just about nothing. sorry patriarch but they all follow the same things. "Juicy" by Biggie.
(i aint comin down on these rappers, theyre all my favs, but rap isnt really supposed 2 b about anything really)
Perhaps "themes" is too simple a word. What I'm trying to say is that the South as a region produces far more commercialized bullshit than the West and the East. I acknowledge that rappers from the West and East use those themes, but it is more common for them to be presented in a more complex and thoughtful lyrical context when the song comes from those regions. Southern rap seems to be one big get rich quick scheme.
when u been sayin this i been wonderin, then y r u on a Weezy site. i mean Weezy is tha Southern king
Comment