Daily Dose of Carpetbaggeury
faux_rillz
14,343 Posts
From a DJ Shadow interview on www.xxlmag.com:
So damn weak.There was a lot of garbage gangsta rap too. That???s the only differentiation I ever made: quality versus fly-by-night bullshit. But even some of the fly-by-night bullshit became good: I remember 8Ball and MJG in the early '90s, I was like, "I don???t know I???m not really feeling this." But then they kind of came into their own, around '97, '98, and it made sense to me. Sometimes people just need more time to gel.
Comments
the best is yet to come
Gel takes a while to solidify
I might prefer Space Age 4 Eva, too.
Who needs that "gelling time" exactly? Josh or 8&MJG?
It's their most polished and is clearly the album that would appeal most to self-styled real headz, but I personally listen to Comin' Out Hard the most.
It's just weak to try to impose the elevation in your personal consciousness--i.e. the fact that in 1998 you were finally ready to take Eightball & MJG seriously--upon the artist by suggesting that what really happened is that they stopped making "garbage gangsta" music that year.
Their worst album... although it does include "Buck Bounce," one of their greatest songs.
That's probabally the thing he's been good at this year. Self-embarassment
coldblooded
I thought Li'l Wayne paying tribute to that on Dedication was an officially great look...
Co-sign.
They should have gave Quik a couple more track on that album.
Brace yourself for a screed from deej about how we are merely sheep and he is "rethinking the canon"...
8.5
Buck Bounce is great obv
You don't like the Swizz tracks on that shit?
I like how modern it sounds. My 'least listened to' album would be "on the outside looking in."
But seriously underrated = MJG's solo record.
(secret underrated 8ball and mjg song ever is on harlem world, shhhhh. 9.5)
I agree.
It depends how you feel about Shawnna's album.
Although I'm not sure if much of anything on a triple platinum album is a secret--that may actually have been one of their biggest looks.
Instead hes gotta be like "oh fo sho, you know i was always into hyphy and basicly i was up on all this ish right here because you know im such a master musicologist".
No, actually, he's saying in this very interview that big Ball and G sucked until he reached a point in his understanding of rap where he was ready to accept them.
Exceedingly weak.
I think you're taking the quote a bit out of context.
That's the best defense you can come up with?
Whining about how the quote is "taken out of context"?
Explain how it means something else when taken in the context of the full interview or keep it to yourself, because it seems quite clear to me.
So damn weak.