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XXL said it best, in their article about whether or not Pac was the greatest. They said he had mastered flow, talking about how the way he rapped his lyrics and the energy and emotion put into how he presented them. But as far as lyricism, Pac was generally average, with most rhymes being one, maybe two syllables (and the multi-syllabic ones were either simple or repetitive, like the Hennessy/enemies/remember me type of shit) with a lot of his metaphors and similes being very basic, for the most part. Obviously a song like Me and My Girlfriend was a pretty dope concept, plus he was getting better toward the end of his life (as I personally always quote First to Bomb as proof), but his lyrics were mostly dope because he brought them to life. His shit when rapped by other people just wasn't nearly as good -- i.e. Napolean rapping his verse on U Can Be Touched, Ja Rule rapping his lyrics on So Much Pain, C-Murder rapping his lyrics on On My Enemies, Snoop rapping his lyrics on Life's So Hard -- and we probably would think it was wack if we had never heard (or at least knew) that Pac wrote it. But of course Pac stans cream over stuff like his verse on Got My Mind Made Up or when he used alliteration on If I Die 2Nite.
Quote from: DeeezNuuuts83 on March 29, 2012, 10:51:57 AMXXL said it best, in their article about whether or not Pac was the greatest. They said he had mastered flow, talking about how the way he rapped his lyrics and the energy and emotion put into how he presented them. But as far as lyricism, Pac was generally average, with most rhymes being one, maybe two syllables (and the multi-syllabic ones were either simple or repetitive, like the Hennessy/enemies/remember me type of shit) with a lot of his metaphors and similes being very basic, for the most part. Obviously a song like Me and My Girlfriend was a pretty dope concept, plus he was getting better toward the end of his life (as I personally always quote First to Bomb as proof), but his lyrics were mostly dope because he brought them to life. His shit when rapped by other people just wasn't nearly as good -- i.e. Napolean rapping his verse on U Can Be Touched, Ja Rule rapping his lyrics on So Much Pain, C-Murder rapping his lyrics on On My Enemies, Snoop rapping his lyrics on Life's So Hard -- and we probably would think it was wack if we had never heard (or at least knew) that Pac wrote it. But of course Pac stans cream over stuff like his verse on Got My Mind Made Up or when he used alliteration on If I Die 2Nite.Meh, its the other way around in my mind. Biggie was the one who mastered flow. His lyrics aren't particularly complex at all. Pac used way more metaphors, similes and alliteration AND he actually said something doing it. Yeah he got lazy on some songs with the hennessey/enemies, but there's a lot of songs where he straight owns it. I've never heard anyone from another music genre using multi-syllables to describe how lyrical an artist is. Singers don't care about the number of syllables period. That's someone internet rap fans came up with a few years back.
If you think the greatest rapper of all time is the one who has quotables such as "ill bisexually reck ya", "im out the closet i been lyin my ass off, all this time me and dre been fuckin with hats off", "bend over and take it like a slut, okay mom" then hiphop has been nothing short of a failure. If thats the case, Tyler the Creator > Nas. Lil B > Jay-Z.
Quote from: Spice 2 sees the bitch in you on March 29, 2012, 03:26:01 PMQuote from: DeeezNuuuts83 on March 29, 2012, 10:51:57 AMXXL said it best, in their article about whether or not Pac was the greatest. They said he had mastered flow, talking about how the way he rapped his lyrics and the energy and emotion put into how he presented them. But as far as lyricism, Pac was generally average, with most rhymes being one, maybe two syllables (and the multi-syllabic ones were either simple or repetitive, like the Hennessy/enemies/remember me type of shit) with a lot of his metaphors and similes being very basic, for the most part. Obviously a song like Me and My Girlfriend was a pretty dope concept, plus he was getting better toward the end of his life (as I personally always quote First to Bomb as proof), but his lyrics were mostly dope because he brought them to life. His shit when rapped by other people just wasn't nearly as good -- i.e. Napolean rapping his verse on U Can Be Touched, Ja Rule rapping his lyrics on So Much Pain, C-Murder rapping his lyrics on On My Enemies, Snoop rapping his lyrics on Life's So Hard -- and we probably would think it was wack if we had never heard (or at least knew) that Pac wrote it. But of course Pac stans cream over stuff like his verse on Got My Mind Made Up or when he used alliteration on If I Die 2Nite.Meh, its the other way around in my mind. Biggie was the one who mastered flow. His lyrics aren't particularly complex at all. Pac used way more metaphors, similes and alliteration AND he actually said something doing it. Yeah he got lazy on some songs with the hennessey/enemies, but there's a lot of songs where he straight owns it. I've never heard anyone from another music genre using multi-syllables to describe how lyrical an artist is. Singers don't care about the number of syllables period. That's someone internet rap fans came up with a few years back.please tell me your fucking joking. The reason it's a thing in rap is because that's a defining trademark of the genre. If you truly think people on the internet came up with that shit, then I guess the god MC wasn't worth a damn thing then? Complex Lyrics were always being praised, hell that was one of the main criticisms of the G-Funk Era. The word play had been stripped of complexity for clarity, Despite the fact Snoop Dogg was at the time of his debut the biggiest rapper at the time, he garnered acclaim for his smooth flow, and was noted for his simplistic lyrics. However that's always been the controversy, what makes a good MC, his lyrical abilities? his flow? subject matter? Charisma?
Not as stupid as Em's tho. He goes overboard with the silly gay lines.
em has fruitfied the game, he put dressing up as a female on the map and now u have lil wayne and kanye wearing skirts and leggings lmao
Meh, its the other way around in my mind. Biggie was the one who mastered flow. His lyrics aren't particularly complex at all. Pac used way more metaphors, similes and alliteration AND he actually said something doing it. Yeah he got lazy on some songs with the hennessey/enemies, but there's a lot of songs where he straight owns it.
I've never heard anyone from another music genre using multi-syllables to describe how lyrical an artist is. Singers don't care about the number of syllables period. That's someone internet rap fans came up with a few years back.
Complex Lyrics were always being praised, hell that was one of the main criticisms of the G-Funk Era. The word play had been stripped of complexity for clarity, Despite the fact Snoop Dogg was at the time of his debut the biggiest rapper at the time, he garnered acclaim for his smooth flow, and was noted for his simplistic lyrics. However that's always been the controversy, what makes a good MC, his lyrical abilities? his flow? subject matter? Charisma?
Then how come rappers like Chuck D and Ice Cube became great lyricists without being known for multi syllables? Lyricist isn't a rap term, there are great lyricists in every genre. And never has it been defined by how many multi-syllables an artist uses. If Pac ain't a lyricist, neither is Chuck D. And any real hip hop head would laugh at you if you went around saying Chuck D isn't a lyricist.
Quote from: Blasphemy (A) on March 29, 2012, 04:04:29 PMQuote from: Spice 2 sees the bitch in you on March 29, 2012, 03:26:01 PMQuote from: DeeezNuuuts83 on March 29, 2012, 10:51:57 AMXXL said it best, in their article about whether or not Pac was the greatest. They said he had mastered flow, talking about how the way he rapped his lyrics and the energy and emotion put into how he presented them. But as far as lyricism, Pac was generally average, with most rhymes being one, maybe two syllables (and the multi-syllabic ones were either simple or repetitive, like the Hennessy/enemies/remember me type of shit) with a lot of his metaphors and similes being very basic, for the most part. Obviously a song like Me and My Girlfriend was a pretty dope concept, plus he was getting better toward the end of his life (as I personally always quote First to Bomb as proof), but his lyrics were mostly dope because he brought them to life. His shit when rapped by other people just wasn't nearly as good -- i.e. Napolean rapping his verse on U Can Be Touched, Ja Rule rapping his lyrics on So Much Pain, C-Murder rapping his lyrics on On My Enemies, Snoop rapping his lyrics on Life's So Hard -- and we probably would think it was wack if we had never heard (or at least knew) that Pac wrote it. But of course Pac stans cream over stuff like his verse on Got My Mind Made Up or when he used alliteration on If I Die 2Nite.Meh, its the other way around in my mind. Biggie was the one who mastered flow. His lyrics aren't particularly complex at all. Pac used way more metaphors, similes and alliteration AND he actually said something doing it. Yeah he got lazy on some songs with the hennessey/enemies, but there's a lot of songs where he straight owns it. I've never heard anyone from another music genre using multi-syllables to describe how lyrical an artist is. Singers don't care about the number of syllables period. That's someone internet rap fans came up with a few years back.please tell me your fucking joking. The reason it's a thing in rap is because that's a defining trademark of the genre. If you truly think people on the internet came up with that shit, then I guess the god MC wasn't worth a damn thing then? Complex Lyrics were always being praised, hell that was one of the main criticisms of the G-Funk Era. The word play had been stripped of complexity for clarity, Despite the fact Snoop Dogg was at the time of his debut the biggiest rapper at the time, he garnered acclaim for his smooth flow, and was noted for his simplistic lyrics. However that's always been the controversy, what makes a good MC, his lyrical abilities? his flow? subject matter? Charisma? Then how come rappers like Chuck D and Ice Cube became great lyricists without being known for multi syllables? Lyricist isn't a rap term, there are great lyricists in every genre. And never has it been defined by how many multi-syllables an artist uses. If Pac ain't a lyricist, neither is Chuck D. And any real hip hop head would laugh at you if you went around saying Chuck D isn't a lyricist.
I feel like every single bracket ever comes down to Em vs. Pac.
Quote from: DeeezNuuuts83 on March 29, 2012, 02:16:32 PMQuote from: GangstaBoogy on March 29, 2012, 11:42:30 AMIf you think the greatest rapper of all time is the one who has quotables such as "ill bisexually reck ya", "im out the closet i been lyin my ass off, all this time me and dre been fuckin with hats off", "bend over and take it like a slut, okay mom" then hiphop has been nothing short of a failure. If thats the case, Tyler the Creator > Nas. Lil B > Jay-Z. Assuming that you like basketball, do you judge players like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant by their worst performances?I'm sure we can find stupid lines by any rapper, if we look for them.Not as stupid as Em's tho. He goes overboard with the silly gay lines. Anyway Nas>>Jay>>Big>>Pac>>>>>>>>Em. But Em and pac have the two biggest stanbases in HipHop, so i guess it makes sense they are in the top two bracketsWhy is ESPN doing this anyway? what would they know about hip hop?
Quote from: GangstaBoogy on March 29, 2012, 11:42:30 AMIf you think the greatest rapper of all time is the one who has quotables such as "ill bisexually reck ya", "im out the closet i been lyin my ass off, all this time me and dre been fuckin with hats off", "bend over and take it like a slut, okay mom" then hiphop has been nothing short of a failure. If thats the case, Tyler the Creator > Nas. Lil B > Jay-Z. Assuming that you like basketball, do you judge players like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant by their worst performances?I'm sure we can find stupid lines by any rapper, if we look for them.
I think all these kind of polls are bullshit anyway, it always comes down to whos the most popular or who has the most fan base. Hands down 2pac would win (or come in the top 3) of any kind of hip hop vote no matter what it was