Posted - 2010/11/14 : 23:24:22
Ive always like some rap and hip hop, I guess it comes from the fact i'm in the states...
So I love rap that is about real stuff, not any of this "**** whores, get money, get high" that stuff got old when I was 12. I really like rap about war, how bad the shit has got, and like struggles and stuff.
Right now I really like Lowkey, The Narcicyst, Tech N9ne. I like fast rap, high bpm, I really like Uk hip hop right now, but not any of that reggae stuff tho.
Would anyone have any recommendation?
Ps. dont make this a flame war if it happens, everyone likes different music...
quote:Originally posted by DJ Specimen:
Everlast (he has more songs than just what it's like), Hilltop Hoods, Sweatshop Union, Immortal Technique, Techn9ne
Enjoy
Didnt like Everlast that much, the other 3 I really like tho. Thanks!
quote:Originally posted by v-act:
I prefer Swedish Underground if rap, like Organism 12, De Sex Apornas Armé, Efterblivna and MBMA.
Liked Organism 12 and De sex Apornas, I always love Swedish music :D
Posted - 2010/11/27 : 14:14:59
dont really listen to rap anymore used to do when i was younger, i like gnagsta style tunes but my faveorites r talib kwali and mos def
Posted - 2010/11/27 : 15:54:54
Nuttin but Stringz ---They don't necessarily rap but they combine classical music with hip hop. They are insanely talented and their shtuff is good too. Haha
Posted - 2010/11/27 : 19:50:09
Since years I have had a conflict about accepting Hip-Hop as a music genre. I dislike most of Hip-Hop and the scenery around it, but this sholdn't mean I reject it just because of cheap disputes, prejudices and my own favoured interests.
Mainly in the focus of Hip-Hop is the rap. Due this, I think it is more correctly to define Hip-Hop as literature in the big house of art.
Please tell me, if any DJ has ever gotten more popular and well known than the rapper on the mic in the front.
The only Hip-Hop I listened to was some of the Eurorap that was produced after the Eurodance-hype. Even some of the artists were the same from back then (for example: Trey D). I still own a CD of Down Low. Today I would only listen to "intellectual" Hip-Hop. In Germany there is a Hip-Hop-artist named Curse, who is worth listening to.
And there are several Hip-Hop crossovers with other genres, which are quite OK. Even Eurdance was a crossover between Housemusic and Hip-Hop.
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