Dead prez dj drama mixtape download




















Nigga you not even old enuff to have a license wtf you talkin about slab lol!! I bet your mommie drives you to the movies errday huh? He might be talkin about his bicycle?

Thats what my lil bad ass nephews call their bikes. I remember one time one of their lil friends came by the crib to play nintendo and my nephew said.. Vinnie Paz would murder ya boy Gucci in any freestyle. And we know Gucci cant freestyle, he can bring his notepad of repetive lines to say. And how you gonna hate on something u aint even listen to yet u fuckin fag, that shit just came out.

You'll never escape it alive anyway. And if you gotta a problem With my Opinion come to 5th ward and get jumped by my goons white boi. Spam thiz Grape Fruit Sized Nuts in ya moms mouth nikka. I ain't no muthafuckin Goofy Granger St Off in Lockwood 5th ward.. Its What ever Ima roll 43 deep You better get ya army bitch.

Clipse have since disbanded at least temporarily , and Pusha T has found great success in Kanye West's camp since, but this tape proves he was a fierce puncher even then. Outside the street-rap universe, there's New Jersey's Chase N. Cashe, a member of the Surf Club with fellow super producer Hit-Boy , best known perhaps for his production on Drake's sophomore album, Take Care ; 's The Heir Up There is a lousy pun but a fine introduction to his innovative softness, especially "Where Do We Go," with a stringy, nimble guitar riff lifted from a Coldplay album, of all places.

Gucci Mane's The Movie Part 2 from that same year doubles down on the trap cinematography of its predecessor with the creeping piano of "Awesome" costarring Snoop Dogg and the soaring Trey Songz hook on "Beat It Up"; Guccimerica , also from and one-third of his Cold War series, even landed two Drake features. But surprisingly, that tape is one-upped by relatively low-profile Nashville luminary Young Buck: Also from '06, Welcome to the Traphouse is a reminder of just how promising his career seemed back when he was a soldier in 50 Cent's G-Unit army, filled with rugged street rap like the menacing, name-dropping "Rap Money.

Chicago has slowly emerged as a major hub for young, hard-nosed rap talent: Shout-friendly rap anthems don't get much better than Lil Reese's "Us," but his Don't Like has trouble maintaining that energy level all the way through. Durk's Signed to the Streets , out this year and highlighted by "Dis Aint What You Want," is a more balanced brand of street rap, enlisting help from Reese when his sort of manic energy is required. Slaughterhouse and Quez he of the aforementioned Georgia trio Travis Porter are at opposite ends of the spectrum, but both did great work with Drama—'s On the House is a dark display of super-knotty rapping with the Freeway-featuring "Sucka MCs" as its centerpiece, while 's Black Boe Knows is far less restricted by the technical restraints of old-guard rappity-rap principles and stuffed with fantastic production, most notably from London on the Track "Dirty Money," "Shawty What's Your Name" , who has since hit the national stage as a producer for Birdman's Rich Gang.

From this point on, you're only dealing with winners. The tradition has been carried on by a host of Southern rappers, including Paul Wall, whose No Sleep Til Houston is highlighted by the syrupy, screwed "Knowmtalmbout.

The dead prez and Gnarls Barkley Two mixtapes are often entirely overlooked: The former remixed then-popular hits like "Exhibit C," "Over," and "Beamer, Benz, or Bentley" into sociopolitical Black Power anthems, while the latter mined the Cee Lo connection, mixing classic Goodie Mob songs with new Gnarls songs and guest spots from Outkast.

Fabolous has built a reputation as a great mixtape artist, due in large part to his There Is No Competition series: The second installment from is by far the best, and it finds the NYC jokester, whose punchlines can sometimes get vapid and dull, in rare form.

Many of the hits that made Meek a star came from his first two volumes, from the braggadocios "Tupac Back" with Rick Ross to the reckless "House Party," the worshipful "Amen" featuring Drake , and the ominous "Burn. Three of the very best Gangsta Grillz mixtapes also happen to be among the most unexpected. The series is called Gangsta Grillz for a reason, though, and so it's only right that three of the Top 10 mixtapes come courtesy of three different gangster rappers at their apex.

Streetz Iz Mine from is Lil Boosie in his prime: The socially conscious albeit politically incorrect "They Dykin'," the self-aware "Jealousy," and bangers like "Too Much," and "Set It Off" all help explain why he's something of a folk hero. Gucci Mane has an entire catalog of great mixtapes—he made his name in this format, after all—and 's Mr. Zone 6 is among his greatest, with the Atlanta kingpin at his slurry best see "Rooftops" and "Normal" over signature trap production see "You Know What It Is".

But the tape that resonates most deeply with the Gangsta Grillz brand is Young Jeezy's Trap or Die : a certified classic, and an early catalyst for the Atlanta shouter's extended success. But it's not quite the best. What's really left to say about Lil Wayne's monolith Dedication , and its even better sequel? But Dedication 2 was Wayne just as he was coming to the peak of his powers, rapped every line as if he'd never be able to rap again, particularly on the "Cannon AMG Remix " and "SportsCenter," where he offers the following:.

I'm serving this track like Steffi Graf Roger Federer, there's no competitors Niggas know my rhetoric Bitches know my preference Young god, baby, all them other niggas reverends Sitting in my big house surrounded by my weaponry I keep them away like I got leprosy.

It's the greatest Gangsta Grillz mixtape because it memorializes the brief period in time when Lil Wayne was the best rapper on the planet, and Drama was, however improbably, in the argument for best DJ. Ha Ha I didnt know white ppl fuckin with Dead Prez. If white ppl like Dead Prez even tho they be on some fuck you white mutha fuckaz then you know that Hip Hop come a longway. If you think their talking bout white people like me then you're the dumb fuck, its white people as in "the system" let me tell you something that you might not believe, if you're not rich then it doesnt matter what color you are, if you still think shit is about your color and not your dollars then you've been brain washed real fuckin good.

Ha Ha Geting all booty hurt n shit. Yeah i do think their talking about white ppl in the system and moutha fuckaz like you.. Niggas would be rich if them ppl didnt make niggas work for free.

You think people like Obama want you to be rich?? Hell no the rich want the poor to stay poor. And "my people" are from Italy we didnt have anything to do with that ship, but if Africa wasnt selling its own people into slavery then there wouldnt of been a ship, its not like they stole anybody, they paid for everybody on those ships.

And Im not hurt, I cant change the past and neither can you, slavery isnt just American history its World history, but you're just one of those people that want to be mad about something thats never affected you one bit. But like I said it didnt have anything to do with me, I wasnt a slave and my family wasnt even in America till That fuckin fag sound like Godbody boyfriend.

Hes just another motherfucka thats never read a book but thinks he knows shit, he prob thinks the Civil War was over slavery. I will end ya life for you if you too scared to do it. I have a question, what does it really matter what happened so many years ago, theres nothing ANYBODY can say or do to change yesterday, all we can do is prepare for tomorrow. Yall see how these other countrys that have been at war with eachother for ever are today?

If we keep fighting eachother instead of coming together America will be a 3rd world country before we even relize what happened. Pretty much the whole government of Memphis has been mostly black my since I could remember, but do all the black people here have jobs? Why do they give just enough to get by and then flood the tvs with rappers and ball players living the life, just to make you want something you have to rob to get?

Why do they take anything that could be takin racest and make it bigger than it should of been and put it in your face everyday. How come nobody cares when a black is racest against a white, you never see on tv where some black sportscaster went over the line by saying white guys cant jump. Its just questions, we can spent our life trying to answer them or we can spend our life changing things so our children never have to ask these questions.



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