It's August 27, 2025, 11:25:17 AM
Total Members Voted: 49
when people say "back" do they mean 92-95, because i got news for yall, its never gonna be like that again.so many of those classic albums went platinum plus, but now the big record labels want to keep it all commerical which makes it extremely hard for up-and-comming talent to sell like they used to, especially on the west coast where the majority of the national media doesnt even know whats going on.not only that, but rap is much more diverse with the south doin its thing in a real big way, so i dont think you'll see the national spotlight dominated by one certain area like LA was doing back then
Quote from: FragMasterGen on March 21, 2006, 12:18:32 PMwhen people say "back" do they mean 92-95, because i got news for yall, its never gonna be like that again.so many of those classic albums went platinum plus, but now the big record labels want to keep it all commerical which makes it extremely hard for up-and-comming talent to sell like they used to, especially on the west coast where the majority of the national media doesnt even know whats going on.not only that, but rap is much more diverse with the south doin its thing in a real big way, so i dont think you'll see the national spotlight dominated by one certain area like LA was doing back then Yeah people do mean "back" meaning 92-95, but most of us know that it will be a lot different if we do come "back". Many people always say how "Rap is commercialized" and "rap is wack now", but the people sayin that are the ones who grew up in the 90s...thing is, for people who grew up on 80s rap, the "gangsta rap" and all else was just as commercial to them as the "lean wit it rock wit it" is to many of us. We had the MC Hammers, Vanilla Ices, Sir Mix-a-lots who were highly "commercial" back then, and they were very entertaining and what they did. As far as the national spotlight bein dominated, even when we were "runnin shit", ALL the attention in the nation has never been on us. NY still had an overall advantage on us back then. The south may not have had as much of a presense back then, but the number of black people and those who were into hip hop in the south still had as much of an interest in rap as they do now, even though their cities and states weren't doin as much.The west was on top for hundreds of reasons, even aside from Rap itself. The L.A. riots, hood movies, and even the OJ case just kept people interested in what was goin on in L.A., and that brought attention to all of California and not just L.A. I feel that we will probably never be back in the spotlight to that extent, but that we could at least have some influence in culture and music. L.A.'s culture itself has been washed away, and I see more cats in L.A. tryin to be east coast than anything else from their style of dress and rappin, which shows that we don't have what it takes to have that influence at this moment. The Bay's culture is strong as hell, and it is already gettin MAJOR attention right now in other states outside of CA, so that is a step
No...It will take many artists and time to bring the west back