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Sunday General Discussion - April 19th, 2020 - HipHop

Sunday General Discussion - April 19th, 2020 - HipHop


Sunday General Discussion - April 19th, 2020

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 08:26 AM PDT

Fiona Apple going dolphin mode on the first track of her album was incredible shoutout to all my dolphins

I can't believe they're finally gonna explore Michael Jordan's life as a catgirl in this documentary, glad he's finally comfortable enough to live his truth

Good luck on the stalk market this week


don't forget we've got a crazy week of AMAs upcoming with

Westside Gunn AMA planned for 04/21 at 1pm ET

Shabazz Palaces AMA planned for 04/23

secret unannounced legend AMA planned for 04/23

Cam O'bi AMA planned for 04/28

Please get some good questions ready you god damn jabronis


Choose your fighter:

https://youtu.be/GkUiAg9yrIo

https://youtu.be/47n2YaqQUIc

https://youtu.be/Kp7Tqw3gi5Y

https://youtu.be/aa2WfP_nx6o

submitted by /u/HHHRobot
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[FRESH ALBUM] Mike Dean - 4:20

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 08:59 PM PDT

Apple Music | Spotify | Tidal

TRACKS 1-10: THE FIFTH DAY

TRACK 11: THE SIXTH OR SEVENTH DAY

TRACKS 12-15: THE EIGHTH DAY

TRACKS 16-17: THE EIGHTH NIGHT

TRACKS 18-23: THE NINTH DAY

TRACK 24: THE TENTH OR ELEVENTH DAY

TRACKS 25-28: THE TWELFTH DAY

submitted by /u/heroinfunerxl
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[FRESH ALBUM] Wiz Khalifa - The Saga of Wiz Khalifa

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 09:02 PM PDT

Dr. Dre's classic 1992 album has arrived on Spotify

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 10:00 PM PDT

[4/20] Kid Cudi - Just What I Am ft. King Chip

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 09:27 PM PDT

Blueface Hosts Coronavirus Unsafe Stripper Party That Turns Into a Brawl

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 08:24 AM PDT

[Fresh] Ab-Soul - Dangerookipawa Freestyle

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 09:53 PM PDT

Joe Budden calls Freddie Gibbs on IG Live and Drake hops in the chat

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 04:17 PM PDT

26 years on - Why Nas' debut album Illmatic is still the greatest hip-hop album of all time.

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 05:48 PM PDT

TLDR:

Illmatic is a greatest album in hip-hop because of the benchmark it set and the influence it caused in the genre. There is a unique sense of genuineness, originality and unbridled honesty that Nas captures on this project – "My approach was to talk about that kid on the corner… that kid wasn't on stage, I wanted the stage to come to him on the block"and that's exactly what he was able to achieve – it was just a young kid given the rare opportunity to share his experiences and tell his story. To think that this was the debut album for a mere 20-year-old from Queensbridge, New York who was an eighth-grade high school dropout is completely mind boggling. If you haven't listened to this album yet, do yourself a favor and give it a listen, it's only 40 minutes in length.

Nas's Career Before Illmatic:

In 1991, Nas made his debut at the tender age of 18 on Main Source's track "Live At The Barbeque" thanks to his close relationship with one of the group members, Large Professor. Nas is clearly the standout artist on this track and his verse, specifically the line: "When I was 12, I went to Hell for snuffin' Jesus" put him on the radar within New York.

MC Serch who would eventually become Nas's manager and executive producer on Illmatic recounts "It was one of the illest lines anyone had ever heard an MC say… It almost felt like within a week, everybody wanted to know who that guy was." Additionally, Faith Newman, an A&R at Columbia Records describes "Nas said the line 'When I was 12, I went to hell for snuffin' Jesus' and I said 'Who is this guy? This is crazy.' I went on a mission to try to find him." Both MC Serch and Faith Newman would play pivotal roles in securing Nas's first record deal with Columbia records towards the end of 1991. There is some conflicting information from both MC Serch and Faith with when Nas was signed, Faith claims that it was at the end of 1991 right as she started her new position at Columbia whereas Serch claims he was signed in 1992 after he introduced Nas to Faith.

Regardless of the fact, with the help from MC Serch, Nas featured on two more of projects that Serch was heavily involved in. The first being; "Back To The Grille Again" on Serch's first and only solo album "Return of the Product" and the latter was the original movie soundtrack Zebrahead with the song "Halftime". Halftime would later become a single for Illmatic. These two projects along with "Live At The Barbeque" had garnered hype around Nas and Faith describes "People were asking about him… You felt it on the streets. People talked about it, people asked about him, people wrote about him…" New York was not mistaken to be hyped about this young artist, but they had no idea he would drop one of the most revolutionary albums in hip-hop.

Lyricism on Illmatic

Nas as an artist has been influenced by several pioneers of the genre, such as Big Daddy Kane, Kool G Rap and Rakim. These are some of the artists who began evolving lyricism from a basic and simplistic style of rhyming to intricate and poetic format. Here are a few examples of Nas's use of multi-syllabic internal rhymes:

"Nas, I analyse, drop the kew-el, inhale from the L

School a fool well, you feel it like braille

It Ain't Hard To Tell"

  • It Ain't Hard To Tell, Verse Two

"Wisdom be leakin' out my grapefruit, troop

I dominate break loops, givin' mics men-e-strual cycles,

Street's disciples, I rock beats that's mega trifle"

  • It Aint Hard To Tell, Verse Three

"A two-day stay, you may say, I need the time alone

To relax my dome, no phone, left my nine at home"

  • One Love, Verse Three

"'Cause I'm an ace when I face the base,

40-Side is the place that is giving me grace"

  • Halftime, Verse Two

Illmatic – The first "Super Producer Album"

Illmatic was the first album in hip-hop to be a true example of a "super producer album", a project which several high-profile producers on it. Large Professor from Main Source, DJ Premier from Gang Starr, Q-Tip from A Tribe Called Quest and Pete Rock from Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth were the four producers on this album who already had successful and well-established careers within the industry. Nas's idea of having reputable producers on his debut album turned out to be a great one, mainly because each of the producers were getting competitive with one another. DJ Premier recalls being around Pete Rock and Large Professor when they were recording, scratching, or beat mixing and hearing their work motivated him to better his own. Premier even goes as far to say that when he heard "The World Is Yours" that made him change his final cut of Represent, which was the first song that Premier recorded with Nas. Additionally, even Q-Tip was victim to this, he remembers when he heard DJ Premier's original beat for "Memory Lane" and thinking "Oh, shit! And I heard Paul's (Large Professor's) shit, so then I was like 'I gotta give this dude some shit.'"

Victim Of Bootlegging

26 years on, many people may not actually know that Illmatic fell victim to excessive bootlegging, a phenomenon that at the time had only recently surfaced. Faith Newman recounts that "And everybody had it – all over the world, even. By February of '94, it was just done, and we had to pull the trigger. Just like, we gotta go. We got nine songs — nine and the intro." Demand within New York had grown so large, that MC Serch claimed he found a garage with 60,000 bootlegged copies. In Illmatic's opening week, it only sold 59,000 copies which is astonishing considering the hype in the leadup to the album and that it was also critically acclaimed, it was the first solo debut album to be awarded 5 mics by The Source. It would take Illmatic almost a further two years to be awarded Gold certification and over seven years for Platinum certification. As of this year, 2019, it has been certified as a Double-Platinum album.

In hindsight, perhaps the rushed release worked in Nas's favour because the resulting product was a 40-minute length album with nine phenomenal songs and absolutely NO filler. The short length and lack of filler has maintained Illmatic's replayability for 25 years and will continue for many years to come.

Illmatic's Influence On Other Artists And The Genre Itself

Throughout hip-hop, countless examples of inspiration, influence and sampling can be found from Illmatic. Perhaps one of the most recognizable was Jay-Z's renown track "Dead Presidents" which used a direct sample from "The World Is Yours (Q-Tip's Remix)" which was released on the B-side of the same single.

Perhaps a more subtle sample from the album was one of Nas's spoken phrases in the introduction of "Life's A Bitch" – "Clothes, bankrolls, and hoes" which would later be referenced by many other artists notably by Notorious B.I.G. to say "money clothes and hoes, all a nigga knows". Biggie was later called out by Raekwon The Chef and Ghostface Killah from The Wu-Tan Clan on Raekwon's track "Shark Niggas" this would devolve into a beef with songs containing subliminal lines between the mentioned artists.

Illmatic also influenced album art covers in hip-hop, with Nas's childhood photo on the cover of the album many other artists have released inspired album covers such as Notorious B.I.G. – Ready To Die, Lil Wayne – Tha Carter III and The Game – The Documentary (special edition cover).

Many artists have praised Nas and Illmatic for setting a standard of what hip-hop should be:

Common: "That whole Illmatic album, that's like my favourite album in hip-hop."

Ludacris: "I heard Illmatic for the first time, I remember being in high school and I just remember it being, if not, the most complete album, hip-hop wise I felt like I ever heard. You know, its one of those albums you can listen to from beginning all the way to the end without stopping it or passing through any song."

Ghostface Killah: "When I used to listen to Nas back in the days, it was like "Oh, Shit! He murdered that!" That forced me to get my pen game up and like "How can I try to catch it how this nigga catchin' it?" The whole Illmatic album forced you to go ahead and do shit."

Pharrel: "Illmatic is one of those transformative moments in hip-hop."

Busta Rhymes: "What he was able to do lyrically completely shifted the climate of how the MC was supposed to rhyme."

J-Cole: "In 1994, I was 9 years old. I came up in Fayetteville, North Carolina so a lot of things didn't make it to me, he hit us with life lessons and insight on how to maneuver through this world as just a young black man in America."

Kendrick Lamar: "Illmatic's the album from the 90's era where I was growing up, the stories he was telling was something I could relate to. Illmatic will always be number one." Also "You can hear the influence of my music. You can hear the influence of my story telling." Lastly, Kendrick also gave Nas – Illmatic among other hip-hop icons a shoutout at his acceptance speech for winning best rap album for To Pimp A Butterfly.

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Fort Minor - Remember The Name

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 04:50 AM PDT

Jailed rapper YNW Melly given Gatorade to treat coronavirus

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 07:21 PM PDT

[FRESH VIDEO] Desiigner — Survivor

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 06:19 PM PDT

[FRESH] Flight - Disingenuous

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 09:03 PM PDT

Lupe Fiasco - Never Forget You (feat. John Legend)

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 12:53 PM PDT

[FRESH] Wiz Khalifa - High Today (feat. Logic)

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 09:43 PM PDT

[FRESH] Shoreline Mafia - Gangstas & Sippas (feat. Q Da Fool)

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 09:08 PM PDT

It appears that Netflix may have copied some artwork from IDK

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 11:41 AM PDT

The artwork for Netflix's new show 'The Innocence Files' is eerily similar to the artwork for IDK's 'IWASVERYBAD' album.

IDK's Twitter post about it

IDK's Instagram post about it

IDK's album cover | Netflix artwork

Here's a more indepth twitter thread if you want to read more

Am curious to hear other's thoughts on this. I am having some trouble finding the artwork for the netflix show outside of twitter (the one in question), which seems kind of weird to me. I will come back and update this thread if there are any major updates.

submitted by /u/warrfiend
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E-40 - Choices (Yup)

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 06:18 PM PDT

Metropolis of Foreign Beggars has died

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 08:06 AM PDT

They had just released their last album Matriarchy last year. Damn sad news I loved this record. Been listening to FB for years. Loved his voice. You will be missed!

https://youtu.be/ZDQl8YxeJG0

submitted by /u/messystoner
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Lupe Fiasco - Switch (Fahrenheit 1/15 Part II mixtape, 2006)

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 12:49 PM PDT

Nav - Nav (prod. Nav)

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 10:46 PM PDT

Ab-Soul - The End is Near (feat. Mac Miller)

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 02:42 PM PDT

6lack - Never Know

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 10:18 AM PDT

(FRESH) Shoreline Mafia - Gangstas and Sippas (feat. Q Da Fool)

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 09:21 PM PDT

Rob $tone - Chill Bill (feat. J. Davis & Spooks)

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 12:33 AM PDT

Ludacris - I Do It For Hip Hop (feat. Nas & Jay-Z)

Posted: 19 Apr 2020 02:38 PM PDT

Throwback Write-Up #4: Devin the Dude - Waitin' to Inhale - HipHop

Throwback Write-Up #4: Devin the Dude - Waitin' to Inhale - HipHop


Throwback Write-Up #4: Devin the Dude - Waitin' to Inhale

Posted: 16 Apr 2020 03:58 PM PDT

Encomium of Devin the Dude and His Album Waitin' to Inhale

It was the twentieth day of April, 2011. Devin was on stage with the whole Coughee Brothaz crew. There was a dude who sang like CeeLo Green, jumping onto the mic to sing hooks. When he wasn't singing, he was rolling up blunts. They'd pass the blunt around to everyone on stage once, then pass the blunt to the crowd. The whole venue was hotboxed. My buddy turns to me and says, "Yo, I feel like we're actually just hanging out with Devin the Dude. Like, he's up there, but I feel like we're just hanging out here, and I'm hanging with Devin the Dude."

That's the feeling I get when I listen to Waitin' to Inhale. It's so richly textured and lived-in that I feel like Devin is chilling in the room, sharing a few stories over a blunt or two.

Devin the Dude teaches a message equal parts clever and kind. Late stage capitalism has plenty of opportunities for the clever, but little patience for kindness. So, I suppose it's not surprising that Devin hasn't been given the credit he deserves for this album, or his contributions to hip hop over the course of his career. Still, he manages to haunt the culture, hovering like the smoke from a fat-ass blunt on features for spiritual descendants like Curren$y and cultural icons like Solange.

Waitin' to Inhale marks the moment that Devin the Dude fell off the mainstream radar, but it's also his highest charting album. He did the best he'd ever done, and it just wasn't enough. The singles didn't gain traction, like "Doobie Ash Tray" and "Lacville '79" had managed to do a few years earlier. While UGK dropped a number one album the same year, Devin's career fizzled. Waitin' to Inhale is his final album with Rap-A-Lot Records. After, he continued his career as an independent artist. However, poor sales don't change the fact that the product he delivered on March 20, 2007 was perfect.

A Closer Look at the Album

For starters, Waitin' to Inhale is one of the finest example of comedic hip hop. Devin the Dude successfully executes, on this album, a type of wry, observational humor that is both deeply relatable and impossible to replicate.

Here, you can find Devin the Dude worrying about how a dollar doesn't buy as much gas as it used to, but there's also a song with Bun B and Lil Wayne. He's trading verses with Andre 3000 and Snoop Dog, but they're talking about pulling all-nighters in the studio, fretting whether or not music piracy will ruin them financially.

Devin doesn't rap about all the women he has begging him for sex. On "Broccoli and Cheese", he instead raps about how he wines, dines, and romances a woman. He also builds the entire chorus of of that song around reassuring a woman that he doesn't have any STIs: "Girl this dick is so clean, it'll probably go good with your broccoli and cheese!" Devin the dude is a rascal, a picaresque hero.

He manages to take hilarious, but insensitive, set-ups and unwind them into something broadly appealing, like in "She Useta Be", a song about seeing an old high-school classmate who had gone from "elegant to elephant". The song begins as an expression of surprise, turns into a light-hearted roast, and ends with him going to her house to eat some pork chops, chicken, Stove Top Stuffin', macaroni and ham, purple hull peas, and yams. Of course, he had to hit it while he was there, the scoundrel. "She still cute," he says, in conclusion. "She just got big ankles."

He pulls off a similar magic trick on "Cutcha' Up", a love song to an underage girl with a hook that's about being patient and waiting for her to be legal. This isn't to say that his attitude or actions in the song are virtuous, just that the way he expresses himself makes it hard to be mad at the guy.

This same effect can be seen in the way he juxtaposes laid back production and a lethargic flow with violent fantasies following heartbreak on Just Because, a track that segues into the pleading "Don't Wanna Be Alone", where croons about not wanting to end up alone masturbating all the time. The track is built on a gorgeous sample from "Alone" by Ohio Players. "Doncha say goodbye unless you wanna see a grown man cry, girl!" he pleads in a sweet, surprisingly well-executed falsetto.

As the album nears it's close, he gets adventurous stylistically. "Somebody Else's Wife" features a delicate smattering of vocoder. "Nothin' to Roll With", on the other hand, is a straight-forward country ballad with 808 bones that would be perfectly at home with the current explosion of country-rap hybrids.

The album ends with "Till It's All Gone", a posse cut that feels like a freestyle session with friends in a smoked-out basement.

Devin isn't a rapid-fire rapper He sinks deep, deep into the pocket, delivering his bars with the rhythm of Dave Chappelle delivering a joke. He can also sing when it suits him. Sometimes, he sounds like he's singing in the shower, other times he's right on pitch. What ties it all together is his wit, charm, and the unmistakably Huston flavor of the production. Right before the internet irreversibly threw the flavors of every genre and region into a cultural blender, Devin delivered a record that is drenched in the rhythms and sounds of his hometown.

All of this adds up to an album that feels out of step with hip hop's direction in 2007. Even the hilarious skits that tie together the album feel anachronistic, arriving the same year as Graduation, Kanye West's first album without a single skit.

In Conclusion

Waitin' to Inhale's poor album sales, compared to other records with similarly high-profile features, is representative of a turning point in mainstream hip hop away from relatable street-level observations as it entered its imperial era. The self-deprecating charms of Devin the Dude failed to get traction in a hip-hop landscape defined by braggadocio.

Listening to this record, I vividly recall spending 45-minutes with a friend picking the seeds out of a bag of weed to roll two fat blunts. That's nothing to brag about, but in hindsight, it was a helluva way to spend an afternoon. Devin the Dude soundtracked countless experiences like that in my life, hovering in the air like a mischievous, perverted, but ultimately benevolent, uncle. If modern rap stars are superheroes, Devin the Dude is modern rap's alter ego. He didn't fake it until he made it. He kept it real until his label dropped him, and then he just kept it real some more.

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Daily Discussion Thread 04/18/2020

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 03:42 PM PDT

Welcome to the /r/hiphopheads daily discussion thread!

This thread is for:

  • objective questions with right/wrong answers (e.g. "Does anyone know what is happening with MIXTAPE?", "What is the sample in SONG?")
  • general hip-hop discussion
  • meta posts...e.g. ideas for the sub

Thread Guidelines

  • Do not create a separate self post for these types of discussions outside of this thread - if you do, your post will be removed, as stated in the guidelines.

  • Please be helpful and friendly.

  • If a question has been asked many times before, provide a link to a thread that contains the answer.

Weekly/Monthly Threads

Other ways to interact

There are a number of other ways to interact with other members of HHH:

New to /r/hiphopheads or hip-hop in general?

Check out these:

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Judge Seizes Game's Record Label And "Born 2 Rap" Royalties: The woman trying to collect a $7 million judgment from Game just won the rights to the rap star's final album "Born 2 Rap" and his future royalties.

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 01:05 PM PDT

AllHipHop:

A woman trying to collect a massive $7 million judgment against Game just took control of the rap star's independent label, LA Prolific.

Priscilla Rainey was just granted "any and all rights, title, and interest" in any money, property or future payments due to the record label, which was set up to release Game's last album Born 2 Rap.

Rainey is now the owner of now Born 2 Rap, the royalties from the record, and even any salary Game may have been paying himself through LA Prolific.

"All third parties who receive notice of this Order are directed to pay any and all money or property due, or to become due, under this Order, directly to Plaintiff either: (1) by check payable to "Priscilla Rainey," and delivered to Plaintiff's counsel" until the judgment is satisfied in full," Judge Virginia A. Phillips stated.

And now, the situation could turn into a criminal case for Game.

According to Judge Phillips, if the rap star attempts to thwart the ruling and collect the money, he could be hit with a charge of contempt of court.

Priscilla Rainey originally sued Game in 2015 after he allegedly rubbed his hand on her bare vagina during a taping of his hit reality show "She Got Game."

Game vehemently denied Rainey's accusations. But he mocked the court when he missed a series of key court dates and decided to skip the trial entirely in 2016.

In February of that year, a court awarded Rainey a judgment totaling $7,130,100.

An appeals court upheld the decision against Game in October of 2019 and directed the rap star to pay Rainey the full $7 million.

submitted by /u/HHHRobot
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DaBaby - Blame It on Baby ALBUM REVIEW

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 07:41 PM PDT

Migos - Stir Fry

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 11:28 AM PDT

Kanye West & Kendrick Lamar - All Day [Remix]

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 11:58 AM PDT

Sean Kingston - Beautiful Girls

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 06:18 AM PDT

"Allah Sent Me" beat off of Westside Gunn's Pray For Paris originally done by uncredited producer Vanderslice

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 07:39 AM PDT

Phoenixville-based producer Vanderslice recently posted on Facebook (mirror), featuring an older Instagram post by himself from March 2017 (mirror of the post and the video itself), previewing a beat to his followers. Later on the beat was used for a song called "Kevlar Coating" for The God Fahim.

Although the sample was not played by session musicians (presumably it's from an older record) it's not a loop either, therefore it had to be chopped and edited the way it eventually ended up sounding like on the final song. The drum sequencing and the tempo is nearly identical to Vanderslice's original beat, and Fahim's song features the chopped up sample without drums in its entirety, further providing proof that Daringer could have used Vanderslice's song to make the beat for Allah Sent Me.

submitted by /u/TheNoiseCreator
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I'm Me - Lil Wayne

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 02:04 PM PDT

Joey Bada$$ - Front & Center

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 04:12 PM PDT

$uicideBoy$ - 122 Days

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 08:22 PM PDT

Busta Rhymes - Thank You (ft. Q-Tip, Lil Wayne, Kanye West)

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 05:49 PM PDT

[FRESH VIDEO] Moldhands - Quarantine Dreams

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 08:18 PM PDT

How Gil Scott-Heron Became The Godfather of HipHop

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 08:46 AM PDT

9th Wonder On Sampling For Kendrick Lamar | The Formula | NPR Music

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 02:01 AM PDT

The official HHH plug.DJ needs more people - bored during quarantine? Come through and discover & share new music!

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 02:18 PM PDT

-> -> -> https://plug.dj/rhhh <- <- <-

This sub has it's own plug.dj room, if you don't know what it is/how it works, it's basically like sharing an aux online, with everyone taking turns at playing songs (you can make playlists with anything from youtube/soundcloud). Hiphop and related music is welcome, great place to find new music and its fun when the rooms popping, been a little while since now

Most recently played songs at the time of making this post - it's often varied, anything from obscure to mainstream, old to new, east/south/west etc and occasionally foreign stuff, trap/boom bap/r&b etc.

plug.dj FAQ

YOUTUBE SEARCH ISSUE AND FIX: Since a while ago searching on youtube for songs has been broken as a feature (soundcloud still works) but there's an easy fix provided you're on PC. F12>Console and paste: gapi.client.setApiKey("AIzaSyDW6S22z44Q1ryJdDqEP2W53koniO9bk04");

Youtube songs already added to a playlist work, it's a really annoying problem for sure but not hard to bypass

submitted by /u/dakkadakka3
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New interview with R.A. the. Rugged Man. Talks about Biggie, Atmosphere and what album is better, The Low End Theory or Midnight Marauders?

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 11:09 AM PDT

8 girls fight at blueface house during video shoot on ig

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 11:10 PM PDT

Rejjie Snow - PURPLE TUESDAY (feat. Joey Bada$$ & Jesse Boykins III) (Official Audio)

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 07:54 AM PDT

IDK - "GOOD NEWS" ft. (Domo Genesis)

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 06:55 PM PDT

JPEGMAFIA - Black Steve Austin

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 07:58 PM PDT

Joyner Lucas - I'm Sorry

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 08:29 PM PDT

Eminem - The Apple

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 06:36 PM PDT

Notorious BIG - The Realest Niggaz (feat. 50 Cent & Eminem)

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 08:34 PM PDT

Skepta - Crime Riddim

Posted: 18 Apr 2020 04:13 PM PDT