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  • Jun 24, 2022
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    2 replies

    ardee’s verse on this is so hilarious cause it’s unexpected but fire as hell

    he really had the best verse on a drill track with all these dudes

  • Jun 24, 2022
    math fifty

    so biracial people are non black?

    Depends on the roll of the dice and how your face looks

    Logic clearly feels he doesn’t look black enough bc he doesn’t say the n word but jcole is his exact mix and you would never know he’s half white dude based his whole identity around being black asf

  • Jun 24, 2022
    6geW

    ardee’s verse on this is so hilarious cause it’s unexpected but fire as hell

    !https://youtu.be/BS3HgiHPYcs

    he really had the best verse on a drill track with all these dudes

    this track was f***ing huge bro

    100 mil views gah dam

  • Jun 24, 2022
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    1 reply

    Mexican rappers on the come up soon

  • Jun 24, 2022
    6geW

    ardee’s verse on this is so hilarious cause it’s unexpected but fire as hell

    !https://youtu.be/BS3HgiHPYcs

    he really had the best verse on a drill track with all these dudes

    why do they keep dropping cigarette lines

    also its crazy how ass fivio verse is lol never listened all the way thru n dam bro fivio little league compared 2 the rest of em

  • U did Cordova wrong w that pic smh

  • Jun 24, 2022
    Nozuka

    Mexican rappers on the come up soon

    they’ve been around forever too

    brownside, SPM, kid frost, etc etc

    6ix9ine is mexican, unfortunately

  • Jun 24, 2022

    hip-hop as a culture is still expanding, because its relatively young the definition of its sound have become more ambiguous as artists have pushed boundaries of what it encompasses. we've seen it take time for certain movements or sub-genres to take off as the overall genre was gaining its legs, and to help with that growth some artists have fused sounds to make it more palatable for the general public

    hip-hop being the most popular genre in terms of consumption is naturally going to draw acts because of how lucrative it can be. labels will push what they believe is most profitable, and to be honest it is easier for one person to relate to someone in which they have something in common with. First thing we notice about someone is their physical appearance so...

    I think with what constitutes as rap continues to be blurred we'll see less artists identifying with genres bc of how limiting it can be. Bad Bunny is classified as a rapper and he's currently up there as one of the most popular acts in the world, and there have been many artists after his insane blowup that labels been trynna push in the latin/global market as rappers. So as more people see others who look like them succeeding, more will be inspired and motivated to pursue the same thing. Same thing with what happened with the white rappers after Em. The niches will continue to grow and expand now that hip-hop is the main force in the industry

  • Jun 24, 2022
    snoozer

    love the pfp

    Likewise

  • Jun 24, 2022
    6geW

    those were just the first guys that came to my mind from 2012-2013

    i didn’t know who g eazy was till like 2015
    action bronson i might’ve recognized from acid rap but i didn’t listen to that until like 2014

    still the infant stages of me getting deep into music

    Just remembered Iggy & Yelawolf too lmao n i know im still missing a handful

    Actually wtf op talm bout this "white boy era" was highkey 2010s 🤨🤨✋

  • Jun 24, 2022
    cold mountain

    also big cordova is on the comeup, keep your eyes peeled

    hottest rapper coming out of whats essentially Southeastern Iowa

  • Jun 24, 2022

    The last pic 💀

  • Jun 24, 2022

    I don’t get why everyone keeps saying hip hop is a relatively young genre. Let’s say it started in 1980 (obviously it could go back further, but for the sake of argument, you’re not gonna put it later than that), it’s 2022 now. That’s 42 years. Rock started in what, 1950? By 1992 no one was calling it a young genre, if anything, it was the last decade it felt present.
    I’m just saying, let’s look at what hip hop is now and be grateful it’s thriving, cuz s*** can get derailed pretty quickly.

  • Jun 24, 2022
  • Jun 24, 2022
    lacriminal

    F***in Cordova

    Cordova the only great rapper in op post

    Jack got potential but he's still well far off

    Yeat

  • Jun 24, 2022
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    edited
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    1 reply
    OMEGA

    Touchy subject but something I have been thinking recently.

    If we look at the 2020s objectively.

    The biggest mainstream new act and the biggest underground new act thus far have been these guys.

    Kinda of telling. We are half way into the third year of the new decade and we cannot name a new black act that has matched what these two guys are doing.

    Is it setting precedence. We are already seeing the second wave hit as well

    Been thinking this for a min

    White rappers have always been around but they’ve never been THIS prevalent

    Em was an anomaly and had super controversial subject matter that got him A LOT of press

    Mac had a strong fan base but he wasn’t making chart topping hits

    Yeat and Jack are actually making hits and are dominating in the commercial rap space, dropping projects that casuals tap in for, getting play on urban radio etc

  • Jun 24, 2022
    NorthShoreWhiteGuy

    If white people were the Lakers, Jack Harlow is our Westbrook.

    @Unity @Junior

  • Jun 24, 2022

    rise up

  • Jun 24, 2022
    math fifty

    He's literally not white

    If he's white then so are Drake and Cole

    does babytron say nigga tho

  • Jun 24, 2022
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    1 reply

    Harlow showed me that Em and Mac were the last interesting whites in Hip Hop.

    So I hope not. Or else Hip Hop is f***ed

  • Jun 24, 2022

    White people don’t have experiences worth listening about through rap music.

  • Jun 24, 2022
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    1 reply
    ryuH

    Been thinking this for a min

    White rappers have always been around but they’ve never been THIS prevalent

    Em was an anomaly and had super controversial subject matter that got him A LOT of press

    Mac had a strong fan base but he wasn’t making chart topping hits

    Yeat and Jack are actually making hits and are dominating in the commercial rap space, dropping projects that casuals tap in for, getting play on urban radio etc

    that's not really true
    you don't remember Paul Wall? Maclemore? Yelawolf? MGK? Beastie Boys? You may not have personally f***ed with them but white rappers have always existed. the only difference today is that they make club music

  • Jun 24, 2022
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    1 reply
    whippet volverse

    that's not really true
    you don't remember Paul Wall? Maclemore? Yelawolf? MGK? Beastie Boys? You may not have personally f***ed with them but white rappers have always existed. the only difference today is that they make club music

    None of the rappers you named were being considered for the equivalent of their generations big 3

    Most of them didn’t even stay relevant past an album or two (aside from beastie boys)

    I think it’s pretty clear Jack ain’t going no where and Yeat will probably have staying power as well

    Not saying white rap never existed before now obviously ijs that there has been a shift and the culture takes them A LOT more seriously than they used to

  • Jun 24, 2022
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    1 reply
    Mmm Hmm

    Harlow showed me that Em and Mac were the last interesting whites in Hip Hop.

    So I hope not. Or else Hip Hop is f***ed

    I think Yeat is interesting

  • Jun 24, 2022

    nigga said aitch wallahi uk rap isn’t serious