Author Topic: looking for some good rap songs to listen to  (Read 3698 times)


holy stuff i almost forgot about j dilla and pysche origami shame on me

J Dilla - So Far To Go
J Dilla - E=MC²

Psyche Origami - Dead Right
Psyche Origami - Check Out Line (this album is like, 400 dollars)

J Dilla is definitely one of my favorite producers ever in the rap game. SFTG is like audible love, and E=MC² is just badass. Common and D'Angelo's voices complement these tracks like butter to your ears <3

 Psyche Origami is really bouncy and fun. i found Psyche from old adult swim bumps and i can always trust adult swim when it comes to finding dope stuff. say what you will about their tv shows, but adult swim knows how to run a dope as forget program

but obviously Nujabes and Shing02 take the cake with their luv (sic.) series. pt2 and pt3 are my personal faves. the beats are sweet and make you feel. nujabes was really good at doing that

Nujabes - luv (sic.) pt 3
« Last Edit: August 03, 2017, 01:06:51 PM by mod-man »


The Story of O.J. by Jay-Z

I haven't been able to stop listening to it since my friend showed it to me when it dropped. it's pretty symbolic and has an interesting way of telling it's story, both lyrically and visually

i'm having a hard time understanding the message.

how is it not music dummy
have you ever listened to any music

have you ever listened to any music

sure the lyrics can be fast but don't discourage it. that gang rap and stuff is whack, but others like eminem and 2pac are very lyrical.

itt: people don't listen to rap so they misjudge it

rap is usually just one constant two-measure beat and tune with a bunch of fast unintelligible lyrics that match up to it. im not saying that rap doesn't take any effort to make but it's about a small much music as an essay is a book

rap is usually just one constant two-measure beat and tune with a bunch of fast unintelligible lyrics that match up to it. im not saying that rap doesn't take any effort to make but it's about a small much music as an essay is a book

just look at a lyrics page for a rap song. most of it is really poetic actually, but all that brother and forget hoes stuff sucks.

im currently addicted to bones so ill just dump some of his stuff here [1] [2] [3] [4]

ivan b makes a lot of emotional/storytelling stuff [1] [2]

lupe fiasco [1] [2]

ab soul [1] [2]

i'm having a hard time understanding the message.
i did too, i needed to listen to get and get a couple interpretations from other people to actually make sense of it, but this is what i got from the song:

its essentially a message for the black community. the "light brother, dark brother, faux brother, real brother" bit is Jay saying that no matter what kind of black person you are: rich, poor, light, dark, whatever, you will always be a brother. you will always be a part of the black culture no matter how badly you may not want to be. this is complemented by the american-40s art style, and the "my skin is black" voice samples from Nina Simone

theres been examples of this with Kanye and OJ (why its called Story of OJ). Kanye and OJ are both black people who almost seem to run away from their culture. theres been a number of times OJ has apparently been quoted saying the words "Im not black, im OJ" implying hes something above his culture. like hes different kind of black person because hes successful and not the perpetrated stereotype that most people associate with black people. jay says that black people shouldn't victimize their past. its understandable, but its whats holding them back from being something greater than what they are now.

"please dont die over the neighborhood that ya mommas rentin" is obviously him talking about hood violence. if you're a rich drug dealer, dont send goons to go shoot up other people in the neighborhood to take their money or for pay back, ultimately risking your life, your income, and the reputation of your black community. "take yo drug money and buy the neighborhood". thats how you actually rinse your drug money and turn it into an even bigger profit for yourself. buy real estate and invest your money

he reinforces this point by bringing up dumbo. "i coulda bought a place in dumbo before it was dumbo, for like 2 million". DUMBO, or Down Under Manhattan Bridge Overpass, used to be called Gairville, so once it became dumbo he says "that same building today is worth 25 million.". had he bought that place for 2 million, the value and his own intake from the property would have sky rocketed, which is why he says he feels "Dumbo".

its just a song of helpful advice. Jay-Z is honestly probably one of the richest rappers in the world with a net worth of almost a billion dollars, but the reason he is so rich is because hes an actual business man, hes not just a "hard rapper", this song is essentially his wake up call to everyone else.

lines like,
"you wanna know whats more important than throwing away money at the strip club? CREDIT."

and the artwork bit, is his way of making real money without being thug or gangster, or anything stereotypical that you'd find in rap songs or in any rappers story.


TL;DR: the victimization the black community clings so closely to is whats holding them back from doing better than they are. accept that you are a "brother" and instead of doing what most brothers do like shooting up neighborhoods and holding stacks to your ears like you're some big shot, actually become a big shot. use your money wisely. invest it, buy things that will increase in value, ultimately increasing your value. think and act smart, and you gain even more success out of the success you already have in a way thats respectable. people will look up to you, ultimately causing people to look up to your culture because then, you wont feel like you need to disconnect yourself from it

« Last Edit: August 03, 2017, 03:48:17 PM by mod-man »


just look at a lyrics page for a rap song. most of it is really poetic actually, but all that brother and forget hoes stuff sucks.
rap is modern poetry

its essentially a message for the black community. the "light brother, dark brother, faux brother, real brother" bit is Jay saying that no matter what kind of black person you are: rich, poor, light, dark, whatever, you will always be a brother. you will always be a part of the black culture no matter how badly you may not want to be. this is complemented by the american-40s art style, and the "my skin is black" voice samples from Nina Simone

this is essentially the only interpretation i could think of myself.

TL;DR: the victimization the black community clings so closely to is whats holding them back from doing better than they are. accept that you are a "brother" and instead of doing what most brothers do like shooting up neighborhoods and holding stacks to your ears like you're some big shot, actually become a big shot. use your money wisely. invest it, buy things that will increase in value, ultimately increasing your value. think and act smart, and you gain even more success out of the success you already have in a way thats respectable. people will look up to you, ultimately causing people to look up to your culture because then, you wont feel like you need to disconnect yourself from it

i don't listen to rap sometimes but if this is what rap songs are now then this is loving awesome man