West Coast Connection Forum

DUBCC - Tha Connection => West Coast Classics => Topic started by: Black Excellence on March 25, 2015, 05:39:02 PM

Title: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 25, 2015, 05:39:02 PM
startin' this thread a day earlier so give it up for the real king of the west coast eazy-e...without him there'd be no west coast.

(http://wac.450f.edgecastcdn.net/80450F/thedrop.fm/files/2013/05/Eazy-E.jpg)

https://youtu.be/sr80nGMPBo4  8)
https://youtu.be/GZtt7qH8xiI  8)
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Hack Wilson - real on March 25, 2015, 06:07:11 PM
RIP
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: U.N.T.O.U.C.H.A.B.L.E. on March 25, 2015, 09:20:41 PM
startin' this thread a day earlier so give it up for the real king of the west coast eazy-e...without him there'd be no west coast.

(http://wac.450f.edgecastcdn.net/80450F/thedrop.fm/files/2013/05/Eazy-E.jpg)

https://youtu.be/sr80nGMPBo4  8)
https://youtu.be/GZtt7qH8xiI  8)

the only time well ever agree on anything, RIP E
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Blood$ on March 25, 2015, 09:55:05 PM
sparking one for the homie to "Tha Muthaphukkin Real"  8)
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: CORREA on March 25, 2015, 11:40:23 PM
RIP

but dude was overrated
lol @ without him there'd be no west coast
please explain
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: doggfather on March 26, 2015, 12:26:55 AM
rip
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Blood$ on March 26, 2015, 07:37:30 AM
but dude was overrated
lol @ without him there'd be no west coast

definitely agree with this even though I respect Eazy, dude never even wrote his own raps lol

now if we were talking ICE CUBE there definitely would be no West for there is no Eazy without Cube
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Blood$ on March 26, 2015, 07:41:49 AM
Cube is overrated as fuck tho :D

anything after his 4th album - yes
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: CORREA on March 26, 2015, 08:04:50 AM
Wright supported himself primarily by selling drugs, introduced to the occupation by his cousin.[8] Wright's friend Jerry Heller admits that he witnessed Wright selling marijuana, but says that he never saw him sell cocaine. As Heller noted in his book Ruthless: A Memoir, Wright's "dope dealer" label was part of his "self-forged armor".[10] Wright was also labeled as a "thug". Heller explains: "The hood where he grew up was a dangerous place. He was a small guy. 'Thug' was a role that was widely understood on the street; it gave you a certain level of protection in the sense that people hesitated to fuck with you. Likewise, 'dope dealer' was a role that accorded you certain privileges and respect."[10]

In 1986, at the age of 22, Wright had allegedly earned as much as US$250,000 from dealing drugs. However, after his cousin was shot and killed, he decided that he could make a better living in the Los Angeles hip-hop scene, which was growing rapidly in popularity.[11] He started recording songs during the mid-1980s in his parents' garage.[9]

The original idea for Ruthless Records came when Wright asked Heller to go into business with him. Wright suggested a half-ownership company, but it was later decided that Wright would get eighty percent of the company's income, and Heller would only get twenty percent. According to Heller, he told Wright, "Every dollar comes into Ruthless, I take twenty cents. That's industry standard for a manager of my caliber. I take twenty, you take eighty percent. I am responsible for my expenses, and you're responsible for yours. You own the company. I work for you."[10] Along with Heller, Wright invested much of his money into Ruthless Records.[12] Heller claims that he invested the first $250,000, and would eventually put up to $1,000,000 into the company


eazy e was more like a gimmick just like suge i dont think eazy even been arrested before
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 26, 2015, 08:56:57 AM
RIP

but dude was overrated
lol @ without him there'd be no west coast
please explain
without eazy there would have been no dre, cube, snoop, etc. if u blind to those facts u trippin'.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 26, 2015, 08:59:30 AM
but dude was overrated
lol @ without him there'd be no west coast

definitely agree with this even though I respect Eazy, dude never even wrote his own raps lol

now if we were talking ICE CUBE there definitely would be no West for there is no Eazy without Cube
eazy wrote some of his shit including that song u posted above. he even produced don't try to discredit eazy bruh.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: CORREA on March 26, 2015, 09:03:29 AM
RIP

but dude was overrated
lol @ without him there'd be no west coast
please explain
without eazy there would have been no dre, cube, snoop, etc. if u blind to those facts u trippin'.

bullshit im sure they would have found their way into the rap game some way or fashion if not who cares 
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Blood$ on March 26, 2015, 09:11:50 AM
but dude was overrated
lol @ without him there'd be no west coast

definitely agree with this even though I respect Eazy, dude never even wrote his own raps lol

now if we were talking ICE CUBE there definitely would be no West for there is no Eazy without Cube
eazy wrote some of his shit including that song u posted above. he even produced don't try to discredit eazy bruh.

"Ice Cube writes the rhymes, that I say...."

and you know the rest I'm sure lol pretty sure BG KO and Dres'ta wrote that entire Str8 Of The Streetz album too, nobody's discrediting for what he did contribute to the game which was Ruthless
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 26, 2015, 09:24:12 AM
but dude was overrated
lol @ without him there'd be no west coast

definitely agree with this even though I respect Eazy, dude never even wrote his own raps lol

now if we were talking ICE CUBE there definitely would be no West for there is no Eazy without Cube
eazy wrote some of his shit including that song u posted above. he even produced don't try to discredit eazy bruh.

"Ice Cube writes the rhymes, that I say...."

and you know the rest I'm sure lol pretty sure BG KO and Dres'ta wrote that entire Str8 Of The Streetz album too, nobody's discrediting for what he did contribute to the game which was Ruthless
that was back in 88 when said that... I suggest you check the credits on str.8 off tha streetz.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: MUHFUKKA on March 26, 2015, 10:41:50 AM
there would be westcoast rap without eazy, there was before him but it wouldnt be the same
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Mr. Theo on March 26, 2015, 11:27:13 AM
R.I.P Eric "Eazy-E" Wright, from the CPT (of course) .

Gone but not Forgotten!

Gangsta Rap Godfather..

West Coast finest.

Rollin Down Streetz in my 64! 4ever.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Blood$ on March 26, 2015, 02:20:38 PM
but dude was overrated
lol @ without him there'd be no west coast

definitely agree with this even though I respect Eazy, dude never even wrote his own raps lol

now if we were talking ICE CUBE there definitely would be no West for there is no Eazy without Cube
eazy wrote some of his shit including that song u posted above. he even produced don't try to discredit eazy bruh.

"Ice Cube writes the rhymes, that I say...."

and you know the rest I'm sure lol pretty sure BG KO and Dres'ta wrote that entire Str8 Of The Streetz album too, nobody's discrediting for what he did contribute to the game which was Ruthless
that was back in 88 when said that... I suggest you check the credits on str.8 off tha streetz.

B.G. Knocc Out and Dre'sta all over those credits bro lol
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Sccit on March 26, 2015, 03:12:20 PM
rip
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Sccit on March 26, 2015, 03:13:04 PM
dude never even wrote his own raps lol


not true
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Desert Lord on March 26, 2015, 03:17:49 PM
RIP to the king of the westcoast !

Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 26, 2015, 03:35:42 PM
but dude was overrated
lol @ without him there'd be no west coast

definitely agree with this even though I respect Eazy, dude never even wrote his own raps lol

now if we were talking ICE CUBE there definitely would be no West for there is no Eazy without Cube
eazy wrote some of his shit including that song u posted above. he even produced don't try to discredit eazy bruh.

"Ice Cube writes the rhymes, that I say...."

and you know the rest I'm sure lol pretty sure BG KO and Dres'ta wrote that entire Str8 Of The Streetz album too, nobody's discrediting for what he did contribute to the game which was Ruthless
that was back in 88 when said that... I suggest you check the credits on str.8 off tha streetz.

B.G. Knocc Out and Dre'sta all over those credits bro lol
and so is eric wright...dresta has written for him. did you forget he also wrote his verse on foe tha luv of $ ? that wasn't his first time writn' his own shit. cube and ren been confirmed that eazy could write his own rhymes.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 26, 2015, 03:36:01 PM
RIP to the king of the westcoast !


Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: iDontTrip on March 26, 2015, 03:40:48 PM
Lol even on a RIP post clowns still tryna discredit the one who started it all  :D

RIP to the Original  8) 8) 8)
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: xinno on March 26, 2015, 07:43:26 PM
RIP Eazy MF E
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: CORREA on March 26, 2015, 08:16:30 PM
Lol even on a RIP post clowns still tryna discredit the one who started it all  :D

RIP to the Original  8) 8) 8)

lol start what?
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: ruthless95rip on March 26, 2015, 11:01:42 PM
RIP

20 Year Anniversary tribute video #eazye
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qFKTSJwYYYg
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: iDontTrip on March 26, 2015, 11:59:21 PM
Lol even on a RIP post clowns still tryna discredit the one who started it all  :D

RIP to the Original  8) 8) 8)

lol start what?

He started the shit ppl still rappin about these days..tf is ur arguement?  :D..go listen to some cia ice cube or some world class wreckin cru if u dont agree  ;D
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: CORREA on March 27, 2015, 12:20:53 AM
Lol even on a RIP post clowns still tryna discredit the one who started it all  :D

RIP to the Original  8) 8) 8)

lol start what?

He started the shit ppl still rappin about these days..tf is ur arguement?  :D..go listen to some cia ice cube or some world class wreckin cru if u dont agree  ;D

im not going to listen to none of that shit u one sided fucks here act like he started shit
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gangsta_rap read that ya can learn something
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Blood$ on March 27, 2015, 08:36:34 AM
people are too sensitive on here and take simple facts being pointed out as hate or disrespect

I could post up a photo of both the Eazy albums I bought and still own, zoom in on the credits, and somehow that will still be called "discrediting"  :P

Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Blood$ on March 27, 2015, 08:40:38 AM
but dude was overrated
lol @ without him there'd be no west coast

definitely agree with this even though I respect Eazy, dude never even wrote his own raps lol

now if we were talking ICE CUBE there definitely would be no West for there is no Eazy without Cube
eazy wrote some of his shit including that song u posted above. he even produced don't try to discredit eazy bruh.

"Ice Cube writes the rhymes, that I say...."

and you know the rest I'm sure lol pretty sure BG KO and Dres'ta wrote that entire Str8 Of The Streetz album too, nobody's discrediting for what he did contribute to the game which was Ruthless
that was back in 88 when said that... I suggest you check the credits on str.8 off tha streetz.

B.G. Knocc Out and Dre'sta all over those credits bro lol
and so is eric wright...dresta has written for him. did you forget he also wrote his verse on foe tha luv of $ ? that wasn't his first time writn' his own shit. cube and ren been confirmed that eazy could write his own rhymes.

aiight, you got me on that Bone verse but that's really it... I believe I did hear he freestyled that one somewhere too
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: iDontTrip on March 27, 2015, 10:16:12 AM
^ lol what u talkin bout? u said he "never ever" wrote a rap but "simple facts" show he did  ::)
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: iDontTrip on March 27, 2015, 10:18:28 AM
Lol even on a RIP post clowns still tryna discredit the one who started it all  :D

RIP to the Original  8) 8) 8)

lol start what?

He started the shit ppl still rappin about these days..tf is ur arguement?  :D..go listen to some cia ice cube or some world class wreckin cru if u dont agree  ;D

im not going to listen to none of that shit u one sided fucks here act like he started shit
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gangsta_rap read that ya can learn something

Fuck ur article clown, aint u the same nigga postin up shit pics?   :-X :-X anything u say is invalid.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: The Predator on March 27, 2015, 11:30:04 AM
Caesar of Compton, salute

(https://41.media.tumblr.com/17251e10ab4a28a0aff23f4168fa3a91/tumblr_nismaa1nIo1s8txb3o1_500.jpg)
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: K-MACC on March 27, 2015, 11:32:49 AM
rip 1 verse written e
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 27, 2015, 11:38:38 AM
rip 1 verse written e
yo don't disrespect eazy-e bruh.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 27, 2015, 11:40:15 AM
Lol even on a RIP post clowns still tryna discredit the one who started it all  :D

RIP to the Original  8) 8) 8)

lol start what?

He started the shit ppl still rappin about these days..tf is ur arguement?  :D..go listen to some cia ice cube or some world class wreckin cru if u dont agree  ;D
real talk !
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 27, 2015, 11:42:45 AM
but dude was overrated
lol @ without him there'd be no west coast

definitely agree with this even though I respect Eazy, dude never even wrote his own raps lol

now if we were talking ICE CUBE there definitely would be no West for there is no Eazy without Cube
eazy wrote some of his shit including that song u posted above. he even produced don't try to discredit eazy bruh.

"Ice Cube writes the rhymes, that I say...."

and you know the rest I'm sure lol pretty sure BG KO and Dres'ta wrote that entire Str8 Of The Streetz album too, nobody's discrediting for what he did contribute to the game which was Ruthless
that was back in 88 when said that... I suggest you check the credits on str.8 off tha streetz.

B.G. Knocc Out and Dre'sta all over those credits bro lol
and so is eric wright...dresta has written for him. did you forget he also wrote his verse on foe tha luv of $ ? that wasn't his first time writn' his own shit. cube and ren been confirmed that eazy could write his own rhymes.

aiight, you got me on that Bone verse but that's really it... I believe I did hear he freestyled that one somewhere too
u trippin' if eazy couldn't write his own shit.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: K-MACC on March 27, 2015, 11:44:09 AM
rip 1 verse written e
yo don't disrespect eazy-e bruh.
its the truth no disrespect my nigga blue
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 27, 2015, 11:45:09 AM
DJ YELLA interview 1996:

 You are probably the least profiled member of the group NWA, and it's typical of Hip Hop to have their DJ's play the back, so tell us about yourself.

DJ Yella: I'm not married, ain't got no kids. I was born and raised in Compton. I'm an original member of NWA and I was here until the end. I'm a producer. I don't play any music instruments except for drums.

 When I was growing up, there was no Hip Hop, just funk like George Clinton. I used to DJ in a club in LA as a teenager. Then Dre came along and we hit it off from the beginning. We deejayed together for years before we even got into the music industry. Hip Hop was like Grandmaster Flash back then. Rap was something from the east coast. We almost originally started west coast Hip Hop when we were in the World Class Wrecking Cru. We were broke but we stuck together.

 We'd seen a show with Run DMC for the first time. It was their first time in California. We sat back and looked at the show and it wasn't nothin'! It was two people rapping and a DJ! We said, 'That's it! We can do that!' That's when we started trying to make records. That's when we put out Surgery. It did okay and we sold a few but me and Dre were getting tired of the Wrecking Cru cuz the money situation wasn't right and we were always broke. Dre knew Eazy from his old neighborhood.

 As you know, the first song from NWA was Boyz In The Hood but it was originally written for two other guys from New York who were rappers. They felt they couldn't rap that way so Dre convinced Eazy into rapping it. It wasn't meant for him because Eazy wasn't a rapper! That's when I met Eazy. Right then, we all clicked and then Ren came into the picture. Of course, Cube was around because he was in another group which was a subsidary of the Wrecking Cru called CIA.

If Eazy was around at this time and he accepted his friend Dre when he wore flashy clothes and cosmetics for the World Class Wrecking Cru, why did he use it as a point to dis Dre on the 'It's On (Dr. Dre) 187um Killa' album?

DJ Yella: He only did it because Dre came at him first. But deep down, he was kinda hurt when Dre first left and the true animosity had worn off by the time that record came out. Dre put out Nuttin' But A G Thang so Eazy had to come back. That was just for show. I think deep down, they didn't really want to do it but he just had to do it. They did have real beef, but over the years, it just wore out.

What it was like to be in the group during itís heyday?

DJ Yella: On the first maxi-single, before the Straight Outta Compton album, Cube was in school in Arizona for a year. So me, Ren, Dre, and Eric worked the whole single promotion-wise for a whole year. Cube had a scholarship or something so he was gone. The four of us put in a lot of free hours before we made the actual album. Cube was writing a lot of Eazy's stuff that Eazy didn't like because it wasn't him, he wasn't a rapper! We liked Eazy because originally, he had the money, but also because the sound of his voice sold. He sounded and looked like a little kid. That's why we pushed him out front; he was the image. When you thought of NWA, you thought of Eazy-E first. It was just a look. I was always in the background through all the production and everything. But the real problems came when we started making money.

What about what Ice-T said about starting gangsta rap?

DJ Yella: Ice-T was rapping but some people didn't know where he was from. Some people thought he was from New York. He had a different style from us. We were almost the first ones to cuss on a rap record, because that's how we talk so I think we started 'street music' first. We were just different from him. NWA started a legend and that legend has now opened the doors for all these gangsta rappers or whatever you want to call them. We didn't think of it as gangsta rap. To us, it was just street music. We rapped about what we knew. We couldn't rap about New York because we didn't know nothing about it.

When Cube and Dre left claiming that they were not being compensated properly by Eazy, what really happened?

DJ Yella: Everybody was getting paid. It was really about more personal stuff. Cube, for example, wanted to do a solo album but we told him 'Not now, we're going to work on Eazy's album '. He wanted to do his first. Plus, somebody was in his ear at the time telling him this and that. That was his major problem.

 As for Dre, it was the same thing. He was getting paid, he was living in a million-dollar house so money was coming from somewhere! We weren't being ripped off. I think the reason they left is because they were listening to other people. Thatís the real issue. Me, I just stayed neutral. I was down with Eazy, but I wasn't in any of his videos when he was dissing Dre.

How did you get the name 'Yella'?

DJ Yella: When I was just deejayin', there was a song by the Tom Tom Club called Mr. Yellow. The Unknown DJ heard it and said 'that's what your name should be!' and from that day on, that was my name! You'd be amazed at how much West Coast Hip Hop today has been derived from us in that era. Just from that time, 61 million records have been sold as a result. There was a core group of people including Ice-T, MC Eiht, who all started at the same time as us. From that era, a lot of the west coast acts have been derived.

Why did you name your new album 'One Mo Nigga To Go'?

DJ Yella: It means Iím the last NWA member to come out solo. I'm the last of the real niggaz. I'm dedicating my album to Eazy because I was down with him from day one and I never turned my back on him, even when times weren't so good, I was always there. I was there for friendship, not money. Even when things were slow, I was still there.

I think a lot of people may compare you to Quincy Jones and the way he's done his last two albums. How do you feel about that?

DJ Yella: Good, 'cuz if you really think about it, thatís how Quincy Jones has always been. I used to think Quincy was a singer, but he's a producer and that's what I am. I'm not going to embarrass myself trying to rap because that would be wack. I don't rap. I put things together, like the last Eazy album. On the album, I'm working with BG Knocc Out, Dresta, Tracy Nelson, Dirty Red, Kokane, and Leicy Loc. I wanted to have people that Iíve worked with before who are down and these people have been down since Eazy was around.

Who are the people who speak about Eazy on the interludes of your album?

DJ Yella: A buddy of mine named Big Man, his wife, and his kids. They knew Eric pretty well so I wanted them to talk for real. It wasn't rehearsed or nothing. I had a little camera and asked them questions and captured what they said. People say so much about Eazy that I wanted them to hear about the good side of him, the normal side of Eric Wright. They knew him before NWA started.

One of the ladies talking on an interlude said that Eazy-E was originally known as Casual! Tell us about that.

DJ Yella: That was a shock to me! He probably had a little name in the neighborhood and he was called Casual. I didn't know it until I heard that interview myself.

So much of your album is about Eazy-E. Would your album exist at all if not for Eazy's passing?

DJ Yella: Eazy and I were going to put a record out together, but he got so caught up in other stuff that he never got around to it. I put this out because other people have said a lot of things about Eazy-E, but nobody really did anything nice for him. The first video out, For Tha E shows the way he should have went out, not the way it was with court and the crazy stuff. Some of the money I'll make, I'll give to his kids because they're not getting taken care of.

Tell us what went on behind the scenes after Eazy passed away in terms of the legal battles.

DJ Yella:A lot of it is still in court. By the time they finish, I think the company will be broke. The only people who will be making money will be the lawyers. That's why the last thing I did over there at Ruthless was his album. I didn't want nobody else to put it together.

When was Eazy's album, 'Straight Off The Streets of Muthaphukkin' Compton' actually completed?

DJ Yella: The last song he made was with me, him, and Ren. That was The Muthaphukkin' Real done in December of 1994, just three months before he died. 

Was it was eerie to hear him say 'when I die, niggaz bury me, make sure my shit reads Eazy muthaphukkin' E. And it's a fact, to be exact, my tombstone should read 'he put Compton on that map'...' in that song?

DJYella: When we did the song, I never paid attention to his words. I didnít hear the actual words until months after he had died. Ain't that crazy? I remember, though, that he just came up with the words right then off the top of his head. I don't know if those words were significant at the time.

Did you leave Ruthless because you don't think they'll survive the legal battles?

DJ Yella: My contract ran out in early 1994, but I was still around him because we were down, not because of the money. I didn't care. That contract was signed way back in 1989. But when he died, to me, Ruthless died. All Ruthless Records is now is just a name. The real ruthless person is not here so I'd rather not be stuck up with a bunch of court-appointed people, I'd rather be on my own and do my own thing.

When did you first learn that Eazy had aids and what was your reaction?

DJ Yella: It was actually the night before the press conference. Everybody just about knew on that night. I never even knew. And by the time the press conference happened in the morning, he was already in a coma. He just kept it to himself. He was only in the hospital for two or three weeks before that press conference and that's when he found out. I had talked to him while he was in the hospital, but we weren't talking about that, we were just talking normally about business and joking around. He didn't sound down or nothin'. He was talking like he was gonna be out next week and that's what we thought. We knew he had bronchitis, but we didn't think nothin' about it. Then, our buddy Big Man called me and told me that it was true that he got it. That night, my whole night was messed up. When he told me, I knew he wasn't playin'. I knew it was true. I was shocked because I had already been hearing rumors for the past two weeks.

 What originally happened was that somebody who worked in the hospital told somebody else that Eazy was in there with AIDS. They weren't supposed to tell, but once they told one person, it got around. That's why they had to come out with a press conference because the rumors were already in the streets. When they read that famous letter at the press conference, Eazy was already in a coma the day before. I don't know who actually wrote the letter. Those aren't his words because he would've cussed in his regular way. Once I heard the first couple of lines I knew that it wasn't him. He was in a coma. When I finally saw him, it was right after the press conference. He already had tubes in his mouth and everything. He couldn't talk no more but he could see me and he knew I was there. He wasn't in a coma and but he was on a machine with tubes in his mouth so he couldn't talk. I didn't know at the time that they had paralyzed him from the neck down with medicine so he wouldn't move. When he first got on the machine, he didn't like it so he was moving around. After that, a day later, everybody was cut off and nobody could get to see him. He knew I was there when I talked to him and that was about the last time anybody got to see him. Cube didn't get to see him. I think Dre went in, but I think he was sleeping at the time.

I heard reports at the time that Cube and Dre were at his bedside, but nobody mentioned Yella and Ren.

DJ Yella: I was there! For the next few days I was there, but I wasnít allowed to see him. I was the only one from the group who was there. The others weren't. I don't know why. I asked Cube and he said he was out of town and couldn't get back. As for Dre, I don't have the slightest idea. I talked to Dre for about two minutes on the phone not long ago but we didn't talk about that. I haven't seen Dre in years. There's nothing between us, I just haven't seen them. I haven't seen Cube since '89. I haven't seen Dre since '92. And Ren, he lives around the corner from me and I still don't see him. He lives around the corner and he can't stop by or call?

Not to be disrespectful in any way, but a comment was made to me a few months back from someone who claimed to have been down with the NWA in the eighties that there were orgies with all kinds of women back in tha day. His point was that if Eazy caught it because he wasnít using protection, could his crew be far behind?

DJ Yella: We had two parties. Two pool parties. One party was for a video. There wasn't no orgies going on. We don't know where or when Eric caught it. That was the thing about Eazy-E. He was a very private person. You would never see him in public with a girl, that wasn't his style. He went behind the doors, that's how he was. We ain't never sat in a room and just passed a girl around or nothing like that, or if it happened, I missed it!

From what I gather, you're the only member of NWA that has never taken a shot a Eazy. Can you tell me about your friendship?

DJ Yella: We were always together. Like me and Dre were buddies since '81. I'd rather see Dre on a normal level, not in a club with bodyguards, just the two of us. Me and Eazy were always together. I never turned my back on him. Anything I wanted, he gave me. If I said 'I want more money on this project'.. it wasn't a problem. That was just him. He was one of the nicest people if you knew him personally. We just stuck together. I was with him until the end so I can sleep at night and say I was there with no regrets.

What about Ren's off-and-on beef with Eazy?

DJ Yella: That I don't know about and never understood. He was down and he swerved off for awhile. I was really surprised and shocked that he rapped on Eazy's last song together.

Is there a possibility of a reunion now that Eazy's gone?

DJ Yella: Yes and no. The No is the question 'why wait until now?' Why didn't they talk about this two years ago? The Yes is that I would do it, but nobody has approached me. If I did do it, I'd only do it on a neutral label. Dre won't do it if it's on Ruthless and neither will Cube. I won't do it if itís on Death Row. It's got to be a neutral label with five shares owning the label (Eazyís share too) because I want his kids to get money. Nobody's thinking about Eazy's kids, but I'm always thinking about them. One of his sons, my godson Derek, who was always in his videos is in my video too. People have been talking about a reunion, but nobody has talked to me about it. If they leave me out, no problem. But if I did it, I'd be doing it for real, not for the money.

How about the possibility of making a song with the remaining members of NWA rapping around unreleased Eazy material like the Beatles did with Lennon?

DJ Yella:I'm the only one with a master copy of some still-unreleased Eazy material. One of the songs that is not released is a song called Still Fuckin'. I didn't really finish the song and that song could be set up for other rappers. It's like a Fuck The Police-type song. Ren and Eazy's vocals are on it but it's still got room for the other two guys. I have another song that's not released that nobody else has. I've been down so long I feel I deserve to keep it.

Whatís in the future for you?

DJ Yella: I want a big production facility and get a production deal with the label. On the back of this album, I'm the executive producer. Thatís how Eric used to be. I wanna be in control. Who knows, in the future it might be another Ruthless or Death Row!

I gotta give you props for two tracks in particular, the first one was the last cut of Eazy's album, 'Eternal E' and the other is your last cut 'Not Long Ago' where you really share yourself with the audience. Tell me about those songs.

DJ Yella: That last song, the way I say it is just like how I would talk to him. The last time we talked was on the plane to Vegas just talking business. If I had known, we would have been talking much more differently. I would have said 'get your company in order' so it wouldn't be in the shape it's in now. I miss hanging out, doing shows, and his entire presence. To me, it's like he's still around. He'll be missing for weeks or I won't hear from him for a month, then he'll call and say 'Whatcha all doin'?' It's like he'll call me in the studio or something. To me it's like he's not really gone until I walk out to the cemetery.

Is that photo of you beside Eazy's tombstone an actual photo of his burial site?

DJ Yella: No. His actual tombstone wasn't made when we took the shot. His actual one is flat. I was gonna used the actual gravesite but it was sacred and I didn't want to touch it.

Any last thoughts about Eazy-E?

DJ Yella: He was one of those people who did so much for others and started so much, if he wasn't around, a lot of this west coast Hip Hop would be so different now. There wouldn't have been NWA as we know it and it might have died out by now. -
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 27, 2015, 11:46:14 AM
rip 1 verse written e
yo don't disrespect eazy-e bruh.
its the truth no disrespect my nigga blue
it's not true cause many people have said different and you weren't there...cut that shit out !
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 27, 2015, 11:57:10 AM
Today marks a significant but very sad anniversary in the world of hip-hop: 20 years ago, on March 26, 1995, Eazy-E died at 31.

As the cornerstone of N.W.A and a solo artist, Eazy-E is the Godfather of Gangsta Rap. From Snoop Dogg to Freddie Gibbs, it's hard to imagine hardcore rap without his influence. And it's impossible to imagine where hip-hop would have gone without the impact of the immortal 1988 album Straight Outta Compton (also the title of an upcoming biopic steered by the surviving members).

For the 20th anniversary of his passing, Eazy's N.W.A partner in crime Ice Cube spoke with Billboard about his late comrade, describing everything from the first time they met to their eventual reconciliation after a very public beef -- and why N.W.A would have recorded another album if Eazy hadn't died.

Here's what Cube had to say about his N.W.A co-founder.

When you met Eazy-E, what was the first impression you got of him?

That he was very clean and cool. He was fly. He had a brand new jeep with custom paint on it. He had this Fila sweatsuit on -- I knew he had money. He looked like a little hustler, and he was.

So he was better off than you?

Oh hell yes. He was rich compared to me.

And not long after you wrote "Boyz-in-the-Hood," his pre-N.W.A solo track, for him?

Well, I actually wrote "Boyz-n-the-Hood" for a group of his -- it wasn't for him. He had a group called H.B.O. -- Home Boys Only. He was just gonna be the manager. So I wrote some songs and he was like, "I like the stuff you write, I like what you're talking about. Write a song for my group." So I wrote "Boyz-n-the-Hood" and they turned it down. But [Dr.] Dre convinced Eazy to do it. Eazy just worked hard. He worked hard, hard, and actually became a pretty good rapper.



So you watched his skills progress from managing a rap group to becoming a rapper himself.

He got better every time he got in front of the mic. He got better and better and better until he was a bona fide rapper. Because it's one thing to do it in the studio, but when you can do it on stage, you're a rapper. He could grab the mic -- he wasn't rapping to a track but the instrumental. He could flow on his songs, for sure. He became a good rapper by the time I left [N.W.A].

Did he struggle with the live shows in N.W.A's early days?

Oh yeah, that's natural. It's one thing to do it in the studio and another to do it in front of those people. We were all around him as his support. I think he felt comfortable. We would set the show off first, and then he would make a grand entrance -- the tone was already set. The show was going good, we got a show flowing, and 18 minutes into it, you haven't seen Eazy-E yet. And you're like, "What the fuck? Where's Eazy?" And then at the 20-minute mark he appears and it gives the show a whole 'nother boost until the end. It was just dope.

Could N.W.A have existed without him?

N.W.A would have not existed without Eazy-E. No doubt in my mind. He was bold and not scared of anything. He was 21, 22, I was 16 -- to me he was fearless. That's what he brought. "I don't want to do no corny ass records that try to get on the radio. I want to do hardcore records about what the hell is going on around here."

You left N.W.A and they fired some shots at you on their next couple releases (100 Miles and Runnin' EP and Elif4Zaggin album). When you reconciled, was it more of a truce, or were you on good terms by the time he passed?

We was on great terms. We had finally got it all the way back to where it felt like not just a truce -- not just going along to get along because we in the same space -- but we was actually enjoying each other and talking about old times and laughing at how we did on the bus or making records. It felt like that the last time I seen him. I thought we were really about to get N.W.A back together and rekindle everything back up. And then he passed away.

If he hadn't, would N.W.A have gotten together for another album?



Yes, definitely. It was other circumstances that tore us apart. It was more than each other, more than us not liking or loving each other. It was just the fog of being new in the business. All the money and all the fame creates a fog. You can run into each other like helicopters crashing in the desert. You're on a mission together and when the fog comes in, you can actually run into each other and crash and burn. Or separate or whatever. So after coming out of that fog with clarity, we realized, "We are some super-talented motherfuckers, man. And we can get back together. We can do special things on our own, or get together and do something world-shaking."

With the Straight Outta Compton N.W.A biopic, it is difficult to tell his part of the story?

That's the only thing... It's not difficult because we have his words, his interviews and everything we can find in the archives. Add that with our knowledge of the situation and eyewitness accounts and bring in his wife, Tomica Wright, and you get the picture. Plus Ren, Yella, everybody. What's not cool to me is I wish he was there. I wish he was right there with us. Because you never know what he would say.

Do you think he'd enjoy the process of making the biopic?

Hell yeah. I think he'd be so turned on by this movie and excited about it. It's just what the doctor ordered when it comes to the legacy of N.W.A. We deserve this movie. It's like, why did NWA get together? And why did we do the music that we did? What did the neighborhood do to turn us into what we became in the studio, and what did N.W.A do to change the neighborhood? You gotta make sure all those questions are answered. That's the essence of N.W.A.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Blood$ on March 27, 2015, 04:50:46 PM
I will say that his verse on "Foe Tha Luv Of $" is one of the best of all time, period in music
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: ruthless95rip on March 28, 2015, 02:26:09 PM
Enjoy!

https://www.youtube.com/v/qFKTSJwYYYg
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: The Predator on March 28, 2015, 03:27:04 PM
^  8)

Never realized that there was an Eazy image on the cover of E1999...

(Eazy-E Tribute Featuring DJ Quik, DJ Speed, Krayzie Bone, David Faustino & Steve Lobel)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HixW0wfFfaU#t=88
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 28, 2015, 06:35:45 PM
legendary.  8)
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: BigMeazy on March 28, 2015, 09:48:10 PM
Great tribute post smh glad hope none of his family happens to see it
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: dameons on March 28, 2015, 10:28:17 PM
http://m.power1051fm.com/onair/emez-49301/suge-knight-admitted-eazye-was-killed-13451023
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: villain on March 28, 2015, 11:20:35 PM
whoever tuned into the julio g show on the 26th

yall know what im talking about here

that unreleased eazy e mc eiht joint was god damn muthafucking FIRE

someone gotta RELEASE THAT

cant find it anywhere heard it on the live broadcast my ears almost went deaf.... somebody anybody throw that shit up
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Free Suge Knight, Gucci Mane, & BShmurda Welcome Home Tray D on March 29, 2015, 06:11:09 AM
All these years and still no real unreleased music has been put out.  I think I know why and that's okay, but deep down I'm a little crushed
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 29, 2015, 06:21:31 AM
All these years and still no real unreleased music has been put out.  I think I know why and that's okay, but deep down I'm a little crushed
if it's not gonna be released in og form then I don't wanna hear it.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 29, 2015, 06:22:25 AM
whoever tuned into the julio g show on the 26th

yall know what im talking about here

that unreleased eazy e mc eiht joint was god damn muthafucking FIRE

someone gotta RELEASE THAT

cant find it anywhere heard it on the live broadcast my ears almost went deaf.... somebody anybody throw that shit up
some gangsta shit huh... 8)
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Free Suge Knight, Gucci Mane, & BShmurda Welcome Home Tray D on March 29, 2015, 06:31:30 AM
All these years and still no real unreleased music has been put out.  I think I know why and that's okay, but deep down I'm a little crushed
if it's not gonna be released in og form then I don't wanna hear it.


#Stamp
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 29, 2015, 06:35:24 AM
http://m.power1051fm.com/onair/emez-49301/suge-knight-admitted-eazye-was-killed-13451023
every time I hear that it pisses me off....makes you wonder....
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Free Suge Knight, Gucci Mane, & BShmurda Welcome Home Tray D on March 29, 2015, 06:41:19 AM
http://m.power1051fm.com/onair/emez-49301/suge-knight-admitted-eazye-was-killed-13451023
every time I hear that it pisses me off....makes you wonder....



Still don't believe Hip Hop is the tool for Mind Control and suppression of the Black Conscious?



Wake up
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: The Predator on March 29, 2015, 06:44:23 AM
One of the last songs Eazy recorded was in the vein of 'Real Muthafuckin G'z',  a mid 90s G-Funk reply to 'No Vaseline'.

Yella should get a pass from Cube to release it at some point.
Every N.W.A fan wants to hear it.

(http://images5.fanpop.com/image/photos/28900000/Eazy-e-eazy-muthaphukkin-e-eazy-muthaphukkin-e-28961346-405-602.jpg)



Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Free Suge Knight, Gucci Mane, & BShmurda Welcome Home Tray D on March 29, 2015, 07:04:24 AM
Yes.  I've heard about that song.  Way back in my tinder years.  Never got the scope on how it sounded but I do remember it being a diss record to Ice Cube. 



They should throw it on the Soundtrack.  They could even have a new NWA record come on right after that about reminiscing over the game with a chuckle or two from Cube and Dre laughing it off fading into the new track.



The possibilities are endless for how they could freak that whole situation
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: The Predator on March 29, 2015, 07:39:41 AM
Quote
13 Rappers Remember Eazy-E on the 20th Anniversary of His Death

On March 26, 1995, the world lost an icon. Eazy-E, co-founder of the infamous rap group N.W.A, succumbed to AIDS nearly one month after his diagnosis. Eazy, born Eric Wright, joined forces with Dr. Dre, Ice Cube, Arabian Prince, DJ Yella and MC Ren in the late 1980s and set the tone for what the media would later dub gangsta rap. More often than not, he and the members are credited for laying the blueprint for what they referred to as reality rap, in which they detailed the raw, uncut occurrences of life in Compton, Calif.

Two decades after his unexpected passing, Eazy's legacy lives on. When reflecting on the present state of hip-hop, one can certainly pick out elements lifted from the style pioneered by Eazy-E and N.W.A. As a unit, they laid the foundation for a new breed of hip-hop that still thrives today.

N.W.A began blazing the trail in the late 1980s and released their debut album, Straight Outta Compton, in 1988. The record included tracks like "Fuck Tha Police" and "Gangsta Gangsta," both monumental efforts for the realm of rap at the time. Eazy would then go on to release his solo debut, Eazy-Duz-It, just weeks later, and the stage was set for the West Coast takeover that spilled over into the early 1990s.

Presently, the surviving members of N.W.A are readying the release of N.W.A’s biopic Straight Outta Compton. The upcoming picture, directed by F. Gary Gray, will focus on the rise and fall of the Compton rap crew and is set for release on Aug. 14 of this year. But today, March 26, 2015, XXL is celebrating the 20th anniversary of the day that Eazy-E passed on by honoring the late MC's legacy. We spoke to everyone from Ice Cube to The Game and even Bone Thugs-N-Harmony about Eazy's continuing influence and what parts of him still live on. —Miranda J.

Ice Cube
Ice Cube: Man, time just goes extra fast it seems like. It’s crazy for it to even be 20 years. It doesn’t seem like it.

[I miss], I guess, his sense of humor. He had a kind of dark sense of humor. He was funny. His mentality, he was really smart and knew how to promote and sell, that was his thing. He knew what would work. He knew what good music was, compared to stuff that wasn’t going to sell. That dude was pretty smart.

I think we opened up entertainment and artists to all spectrums. It was a part of entertainment that was kind of taboo and only comedians would tap into it, like Redd Foxx, more or less Richard Pryor, [they] would kind of tap into these zones, but it was still considered blue entertainment back in the day. With Eazy-E and N.W.A, we made it easy for artists to be themselves and still be just as famous as the squeaky clean artists who were kind of hiding behind a reality curtain. We actually sprang true freedom in entertainment. For artists, if they were raw, they could be raw. If they were a bad boy, they didn’t have to try to be a good boy. They could be themselves. And to me, it sparked a whole revolution of shows like The Osbournes, South Park and people like Eminem, Marilyn Manson and even The Sopranos. It just opened up a flood gate.

[I think we were] architects of [gangsta rap]. I think we did it the best and we were fearless. We go right up there with...but, you have to add people in the mix like Ice-T, people like KRS-One who did “Criminal Minded,” which to me was a gangsta record, groups like Public Enemy, even though they weren’t doing gangster rap, they were definitely standing up for themselves in a way that music hadn’t done in a while. So I think it’s just, we helped coin—not the phrase, the phrase was coined by the media—we called it reality rap when it first came out; the media took it and started calling it gangsta rap, that was a little more sensationalized than reality rap. It was something that if it would have stayed reality rap, the music would probably have a little bit more substance than it has now.

It’s a trip because our style was new when we did it. Not too many people were even attempting to do music that hard. So we thought everybody else would keep their own styles, but we saw hip-hop kind of change into gangsta hop, pretty much. Everybody was doing hardcore records and now, that’s pretty much the norm. It’s kind of like being Dr. Frankenstein in a lot of ways, building a monster that you can’t control. We thought that this would be our style and nobody would bite because biting used to be taboo in hip-hop. But now, it’s damn near mandatory.

Warren G
Warren G: Eazy was one of the coolest cats I've encountered in this music business and he was one of the first guys to believe in me and know I had talent. When I was real young, I used to ask him and Dre to go and hang with them when they were the HIGH POWERED CRU. He always showed me love, no matter what. Eazy is truly missed and [there] would not be a lane for me and others if it wasn't for him. Happy anniversary from the professor Warren G.

The Game
The Game: Eazy is and always will be the God of gangsta rap. Any time someone mentions a car, flossing, money, drugs, guns, bitches, hoes, hood rats, groupies, rebelling, Compton, California, being a thug, the streets, alcohol or anything that goes against the grain in a rap song in this genre of hip-hop... That's Eazy-E. Know that, respect that and we are good.

YG
YG: Eazy-E helped pave the way for gangsta rap, as y'all call it. Straight out Kelly Park. It's nothing but love and respect from my side.

MC Ren
MC Ren: His vision still lives on and his legacy grows stronger year after year and with the movie coming it will grow bigger than we can imagine. He lives on by his groundbreaking business dealings, [his] music and children. Without him the hip-hop game would be dull and who knows what else. He is forever missed and thought of. The world misses you, E.

Krayzie Bone
Krayzie Bone: What stands out to me is the vision that he had. E may not have been the best MC, but he was a great visionary. And without his vision, you don't get the world's most dangerous group, N.W.A. His vision is what branded the West Coast as a major force in hip-hop. The world can learn a lot from his existence in many ways. If you know the history of his legacy, then you know the many ups and downs, the many mistakes that were made.

Hearing those kind of true life stories can teach us all very valuable lessons in life. They should know that he was a very down to earth dude, loved to joke around, very smart in the way that he turned his negatives into positives and was responsible for the birth of West Coast hip-hop.

Nipsey Hu$$le
Nipsey Hu$$le: Eazy-E was the most authentic voice and attitude to speak for gang and street culture in L.A., Compton, Watts and Long Beach in the '80s and '90s.

Wish Bone
Wish Bone: Man, this marks a day when I thought [Bones Thugs-N-Harmony's] whole new world just crumbled and [it was] back to the block. [We had] a very short, but good time with him. A great friend left us, not to mention a music icon. I still don't believe it sometimes, but I remember God only gives us what we can handle. And as you can see, he's still looking out for us.

Kid Ink
Kid Ink: Eazy-E is a West Coast icon and a true hip-hop Renaissance Man... He showed us that you could be a gangster, a businessman and be fly all at the same time. That's a triple threat; that hasn't been executed very many times.

Chevy Woods
Chevy Woods: "Real Compton City G's" was the first song that I heard from Eazy and from that day on, it's been the only song that I connect him with. Even though I listened to that whole CD [It's On (Dr. Dre) 187um Killa], that one song was the first song with cursing in it that my mom didn't know I knew the lyrics to, so I used to sneak and play it real low and just act like I was Eazy-E.

I feel like his style, the hat, shades and the interviews, he really gave hip-hop one of its first real voices in the game. Being from the East Coast, I'm kind of on the outside looking in, so it's easy to see how much of an influence Eazy had on the West Coast sound.

Bizzy Bone
Bizzy Bone: To my mentor who made sure my life would be grand, after life blessings from afar from us all. Eazy-E...

Flesh-N-Bone
Flesh-N-Bone: Eric Wright is a true martyr in hip-hop, especially for Bone Thugs-N-Harmony. He is more than a mentor. He believed in us and he invested in us. We carry on and keep his legacy alive with honor.

Problem
Problem: Eazy-E is the God of West Coast rap. He is the beginning of hip-hop entrepreneurship. N.W.A Independently changed the way THE WHOLE FUCKIN WORLD rapped! ...and [he was] a REAL COMPTON CITY G! RIP to Mr. Wright.







Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 29, 2015, 07:58:40 AM
http://m.power1051fm.com/onair/emez-49301/suge-knight-admitted-eazye-was-killed-13451023
every time I hear that it pisses me off....makes you wonder....



Still don't believe Hip Hop is the tool for Mind Control and suppression of the Black Conscious?



Wake up
man that was some behind the scenes shit that got eazy killed (possibly jerry heller) I don't think it was any deeper than that.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Free Suge Knight, Gucci Mane, & BShmurda Welcome Home Tray D on March 29, 2015, 08:00:28 AM
http://m.power1051fm.com/onair/emez-49301/suge-knight-admitted-eazye-was-killed-13451023
every time I hear that it pisses me off....makes you wonder....



Still don't believe Hip Hop is the tool for Mind Control and suppression of the Black Conscious?



Wake up
man that was some behind the scenes shit that got eazy killed (possibly jerry heller) I don't think it was any deeper than that.




Somethin tells me that you're one of them dudes who ain't never left his City before lol
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 29, 2015, 08:01:09 AM
http://m.power1051fm.com/onair/emez-49301/suge-knight-admitted-eazye-was-killed-13451023
every time I hear that it pisses me off....makes you wonder....



Still don't believe Hip Hop is the tool for Mind Control and suppression of the Black Conscious?



Wake up
man that was some behind the scenes shit that got eazy killed (possibly jerry heller) I don't think it was any deeper than that.




Somethin tells me that you're one of them dudes who ain't never left his City before lol
nigga stop playin' wit me !
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 29, 2015, 08:02:29 AM
https://www.flickr.com/photos/21630929@N04/2243877499/  8)
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Blood$ on March 29, 2015, 08:49:20 PM
All these years and still no real unreleased music has been put out.  I think I know why and that's okay, but deep down I'm a little crushed
if it's not gonna be released in og form then I don't wanna hear it.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: awol22222 on March 29, 2015, 09:50:49 PM
whoever tuned into the julio g show on the 26th

yall know what im talking about here

that unreleased eazy e mc eiht joint was god damn muthafucking FIRE

someone gotta RELEASE THAT

cant find it anywhere heard it on the live broadcast my ears almost went deaf.... somebody anybody throw that shit up

Anyone have it?
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: villain on March 29, 2015, 11:16:52 PM
someone get ahold of JULIO G and tell him drop that shit full raw uncensored the eazy e mc eiht unreleased joint
im telling you
it was off the hook, a gem hidden for over 20 years.... we want eazy
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: doggfather on March 30, 2015, 01:25:17 AM
wow, i want that eiht eazy track!
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Blood$ on March 30, 2015, 07:48:45 AM
and too bad y'all will never hear it  :'(
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: JohnnyL on March 30, 2015, 09:08:17 AM
wow, i want that eiht eazy track!

This isn't possibly that "Get Yo Ride On" track from Mack 10's Recipe album, that keeps getting brought up, is it?  It would be great if there is actually a real unreleased track from Eazy and MC Eiht. 
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Sccit on March 30, 2015, 11:05:52 AM
Yes.  I've heard about that song.  Way back in my tinder years.  Never got the scope on how it sounded but I do remember it being a diss record to Ice Cube. 



They should throw it on the Soundtrack.  They could even have a new NWA record come on right after that about reminiscing over the game with a chuckle or two from Cube and Dre laughing it off fading into the new track.



The possibilities are endless for how they could freak that whole situation


theyd do it if they needed the money
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Free Suge Knight, Gucci Mane, & BShmurda Welcome Home Tray D on March 30, 2015, 02:42:23 PM
Fuck tha money, do it for the craft
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 30, 2015, 02:55:00 PM
what I really would like as a fan is somebody to ask niggas like yella, dresta, dirty red, etc. about the making of eazy-e's albums like it's on and str.8 off tha streetz.
jmix where u at !!!!!!!!!
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Free Suge Knight, Gucci Mane, & BShmurda Welcome Home Tray D on March 30, 2015, 02:55:55 PM
Jmix needs a camera man first lol
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 30, 2015, 02:56:57 PM
Jmix needs a camera man first lol
LOL his audio joints be on point though...
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Free Suge Knight, Gucci Mane, & BShmurda Welcome Home Tray D on March 30, 2015, 03:00:14 PM
I'm not gonna lie.  I've wanted to check out a few of his interviews but couldn't make it past tha first couple of minutes because that shit was puttin me to sleep.  Audio Interviews are always the worst, even when The News does it.



Props to him for atleast tracking some of these good folks down tho.  Can't hate on that
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Sccit on March 30, 2015, 03:03:10 PM
Fuck tha money, do it for the craft


if only it was like that
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Free Suge Knight, Gucci Mane, & BShmurda Welcome Home Tray D on March 30, 2015, 03:07:23 PM
You'd figure after all of this time and after all of those Commas it wouldn't mean a thing to throw a little clip of it into a movie or a documentary or somethin.


There might be something else Said in that track that they don't want out there
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: villain on March 30, 2015, 05:35:45 PM
100% legit unreleased verse
Dope g funk beat
Possibly a unreleased drop for 92.3 the beat, julio g has it and played it. you had to listen to the live broadcast on his dash radio station 1580. It was dope and damn i wished i had recorded that
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: JohnnyL on March 31, 2015, 08:00:56 AM
100% legit unreleased verse
Dope g funk beat
Possibly a unreleased drop for 92.3 the beat, julio g has it and played it. you had to listen to the live broadcast on his dash radio station 1580. It was dope and damn i wished i had recorded that

Man, in that case I'm really sorry I missed it.  Maybe the people at eazy-ecpt.com can track it down.  I think the webmaster over there talks to Julio G, from time to time.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Free Suge Knight, Gucci Mane, & BShmurda Welcome Home Tray D on March 31, 2015, 08:26:08 AM
100% legit unreleased verse
Dope g funk beat
Possibly a unreleased drop for 92.3 the beat, julio g has it and played it. you had to listen to the live broadcast on his dash radio station 1580. It was dope and damn i wished i had recorded that

Man, in that case I'm really sorry I missed it.  Maybe the people at eazy-ecpt.com can track it down.  I think the webmaster over there talks to Julio G, from time to time.


20 years is a call for a celebration.  New music is the best way to do that
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: J. B A N A N A S on March 31, 2015, 03:59:22 PM
give it up for the real king of the west coast eazy-e...without him there'd be no west coast.

The west coast is a product tectonic plate shifts and continental drift.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Hack Wilson - real on March 31, 2015, 04:03:55 PM
give it up for the real king of the west coast eazy-e...without him there'd be no west coast.

The west coast is a product tectonic plate shifts and continental drift.

that dummy doesn't know what a tectonic plate is  ;D
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on March 31, 2015, 04:07:48 PM
give it up for the real king of the west coast eazy-e...without him there'd be no west coast.

The west coast is a product tectonic plate shifts and continental drift.

that dummy doesn't know what a tectonic plate is  ;D
since you put yourself on my dick I put my nuts on ya chin.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Hack Wilson - real on March 31, 2015, 04:14:28 PM
 ::)
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Triple OG Rapsodie on April 03, 2015, 12:11:37 AM
RIP

but dude was overrated
lol @ without him there'd be no west coast
please explain
without eazy there would have been no dre, cube, snoop, etc. if u blind to those facts u trippin'.

Cube and Dre were around before Eazy got involved. You stupid.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Dre-Day on April 04, 2015, 02:42:15 PM
rest in peace  8)
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on April 04, 2015, 03:17:21 PM
RIP

but dude was overrated
lol @ without him there'd be no west coast
please explain
without eazy there would have been no dre, cube, snoop, etc. if u blind to those facts u trippin'.

Cube and Dre were around before Eazy got involved. You stupid.
dre was in a group dressin' like a tranny and ice cube was in a group and thought he was a beastie boy....slap yourself clown.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Hack Wilson - real on April 04, 2015, 03:46:41 PM
NWA put the entire west coast on the map rap wise

there was once a point in time where record labels would sign any rap group just because of the city they came from, not based on music
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Triple OG Rapsodie on April 05, 2015, 10:59:02 AM
RIP

but dude was overrated
lol @ without him there'd be no west coast
please explain
without eazy there would have been no dre, cube, snoop, etc. if u blind to those facts u trippin'.

Cube and Dre were around before Eazy got involved. You stupid.
dre was in a group dressin' like a tranny and ice cube was in a group and thought he was a beastie boy....slap yourself clown.

It was the style back then. Styles change over time. Just like showing your ass and sagging was cool in the 90s but is considered gay now.
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Blood$ on April 05, 2015, 11:21:30 AM
RIP

but dude was overrated
lol @ without him there'd be no west coast
please explain
without eazy there would have been no dre, cube, snoop, etc. if u blind to those facts u trippin'.

Cube and Dre were around before Eazy got involved. You stupid.
dre was in a group dressin' like a tranny and ice cube was in a group and thought he was a beastie boy....slap yourself clown.

It was the style back then. Styles change over time. Just like showing your ass and sagging was cool in the 90s but is considered gay now.

and sadly enough it's the style again today with some of these rappers wearing tight pants and glitter lol
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: Black Excellence on April 05, 2015, 11:23:03 AM
RIP

but dude was overrated
lol @ without him there'd be no west coast
please explain
without eazy there would have been no dre, cube, snoop, etc. if u blind to those facts u trippin'.

Cube and Dre were around before Eazy got involved. You stupid.
dre was in a group dressin' like a tranny and ice cube was in a group and thought he was a beastie boy....slap yourself clown.

It was the style back then. Styles change over time. Just like showing your ass and sagging was cool in the 90s but is considered gay now.

and sadly enough it's the style again today with some of these rappers wearing tight pants and glitter lol
Title: Re: R.I.P. To The Godfather Of Gangsta Rap....20 Years Later
Post by: jmix on April 21, 2015, 06:50:56 PM
i love eazy - e. I am reaching out to heller but that is a process. Thanks for repping me BLACK Excellence