Pitchfork is owned by white people, no offense.HerbertdaPervIt's not the skin color that matters, more that the people that created this list don't have the half a brain necessary to know that R Kelly's Ignition Remix is not the 19th best song of the decade. This list is an abomination for the most part. Pitchfork has no business reviewing rap albums.
-Methtical-'s forum posts
Am I the only one who doesn't like this song, besides kanye's killa verse.HerbertdaPervI hate most everything about this song, Rihanna, the majority of Jay, Kanye and the beat. It just doesn't do it for me, and I don't feel like giving it enough time to grow on me.
[QUOTE="-Methtical-"]Well that video sucked, album isn't bad though, but I'm definitely not as far on board as most of you guys.IsThisIt_basic
I know it's difficult to imagine anyone besides Wu-Tang putting out good music, but I'm glad to see you're waking up to it. Mob Figaz put out great music.
I'd hardly call this great, good but not great. And it's not surprising that music other than Wu-Tang is good, it's more that some music you recommended was good.You can use the Parametric EQ in the mixer in Fruity Loops to mix/master the song and emphasize what sounds you want with it. You can also mess around with Reverb and other effects in the mixer to give your beat a more human feel.Heya. Whenever I make a beat on Fruity Loops, are there any other ways to make it sounds a little bit more proffesional like adding any parametric effects and other fancy materials? I've seen other people using Pro Tools and other softwares to enhance the sounds. Any Fruity Loops or beatmakers here? Can you give me some details of what you do whenever you make some beats?
Thanks a lot and best regards. Peace
Welis
you don't have any appreciation for proper lyricists, go back to listening to 808s and heartbreak, thats more up your ally[QUOTE="HaSheeSh_basic"][QUOTE="elpooz"][QUOTE="HaSheeSh_basic"][QUOTE="elpooz"]
and i'm really not that hyped for Armor of God... Hash seems to think it will be legendary and i really don't see why... i've enjoyed dudes music and i will admit that he is in the top percentile when it comes to lyrics... but the album honestly won't be anything more than good.
KamMoye
i hope there isn't anything up my ally :lol:... i'd feel bad for the homie...
and yes i do, Nas is my all time favorite artist for a reason..... i'd certainly rather have a rapper with great flow and production and decent lyrics than one with decent flow and production and great lyrics, but i still appreciate dope lyrics. how are you gonna say stuff like this when i always hype up joe budden and padded room...? the best part of joey as an artist is his lyrics, and the best part of that album was its lyrical capacity...
sure thing bud, that SH joint is prolly the first lyrical album you got in your collection. lol at comparing Padded Room to anything Vakill has done, have you even listened to Vakill? Please don't make me own you like I did Mk with that Chino thread long ago.don't make ME own you. i like vakill a lot and all and went through a ZOMG VAKILL IS DA BEST TRU HIP-HIP LYRICISM!!!!11 but LOL, i also grew up as a listener and realized rap isn't all about lyrical ability. you know you lost when you have to diss something you can't understand (808s and heartbreaks) to prove a point.
padded room ishes on anything vakill has done a million times over, you really don't want to get me started lololol
and if you really wanna get on the lyrical tip, vakill ain't even the most lyrical dude out there...
If lyricism isn't everything how could Padded Room be better than a Vakill album, what with how terribly boring the beats were on PR? Vakill has always got some good production, the production on Padded Room could sedate an elephant. And it's not like Joe Budden blows away Vakill as a lyricist either, especially on that album.EDIT: Absolutely. I actually thought the thread was for the CH album so, I initially gave it an instant no without even looking at the actual post. But yes, Capital Punishment is a definitely a classic piece of rugged, yet lyrical, NY hip hop.
2nd EDIT: To bring up more points of argument, the guest spots on this album are really good IMO, especially Prodigy and the Rebel INS on Tres Leches and Black Thought on Super Lyrical. Album is diverse enough due to all the different producers involved and still manages to flow really well. Big Pun on this album is as good as anyone was in '98 and fortunately his skills translated into a classic with this release.
3rd EDIT: Big Pun's punchlines on this hit just as hard as Big L's did on Lifestylez but I think Pun is a more well-rounded emcee, not dedicated completely to punchlines and he flow can flow for days. The beats have different feels to them, and he can ride them all exceptionally I didn't mention the production is well above average on this album, too.
[QUOTE="elpooz"][QUOTE="mischa_barton"]The Blueprint is just as good, if not better.HaSheeSh_basic
yeah ^..
And vol 1 is up there too.
lol at you guys. Those albums aren't even CLOSE.I don't know about the Blueprint not being close, but I agree that Reasonable Doubt is next level.Other than the first one there in no order, and probably not my top ten, but just ten Premo beats I love.
Crooklyn Dodgers - Return of the Crooklyn Dodgers
Nas - N.Y. State of Mind
Fat Joe - **** is Real (DJ Premier Remix)
Jeru the Damaja - My Mind Spray
Showbiz & A.G. - Next Level (Nyte Time Mix)
Jay-Z - D'Evils
Mos Def - Mathematics
Gang Starr - Mass Appeal
Termanology - So Amazing
The L.O.X. - Recognize
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