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HHH Essential Album of the Week #116: Mos Def - Black on Both Sides - HipHop

HHH Essential Album of the Week #116: Mos Def - Black on Both Sides - HipHop


HHH Essential Album of the Week #116: Mos Def - Black on Both Sides

Posted: 06 May 2020 05:39 AM PDT

Every Wednesday we will discuss an album from our Essential Album List

Last week: Eminem - The Slim Shady LP

This week:: Mos Def - Black on Both Sides

All previous posts: Here

Stream/Purchase

Spotify

Tidal

Background/Description

Black on Both Sides, Mos Def's debut album, was released on October 12 1999 to universal critical acclaim. Not since the emergence of A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul (or any one of the heralded Native Tongues collective) had hip hop seen an MC as intelligent, lyrically proficient, consciously aware, and baby-butt smooth as Mos Def. Black On Both Sides can be seen as an extraordinary solo debut, an unlikely commercial success, an influential framework for unapologetically black albums that make noise in the mainstream, the best offering ever from Mos Def, or a loving time capsule for a Brooklyn lost. There is arguably no other hip-hop album released in 1999 with as much dimension and impact.

By late 1999 hip hop was at a critical juncture. The culture of hip-hop and the medium of rap were becoming more defined as separate entities while still occupying the same space as the century rapidly came to a close. At the 1999 Grammys, Lauryn Hill claimed the first ever Album Of The Year award for a hip-hop and R&B release, with the tour de force that is The Miseducation Of Lauryn Hill. But at the same time, Juvenile and Cash Money foreshadowed a commercial rap boom when they declared both 1999 and 2000 were theirs on one of the biggest hits of the year, "Back That Azz Up." Dr. Dre's 2001 would earn a gold certification in its first week en route to a platinum plaque with over 90 seconds of audio from a staged orgy on it.

There is more of a peaceful coexistence of rap on top and hip-hop in the underground now, but 1999 saw a second wave of tension between artists who were considered to be continuing the traditions of hip-hop and those who were perceived to be selling out for money and fame. It had happened once before in the late '80s and early '90s, when rap moved out West and many hip-hop traditionalists on the East Coast thought N.W.A were sensationalizing their lifestyle to pimp it across the country under the guise of "street knowledge." Hence Common's disappointment with the game in his 1994 track "I Used To Love H.E.R." It seemed the first battle was lost as sales sky-rocketed while any semblance of consciousness in the mainstream was going to die along with Tupac and the Notorious B.I.G. So this second wave of resistance against the commercialization and globalization of hip-hop had much more urgency. It felt like a last stand against what was most likely inevitable.

Rap had already existed and thrived in other regions, but traditionalists, especially those in the five boroughs of NYC, felt it was more derivative each time another region got its hands on it. New York still occupied the majority of the charts with five of the 10 rap albums with the highest first week sales in 1999, but the gap was closing quickly. In addition to other regions gaining ground, albums from politically savvy veterans like Public Enemy or the Sugarhill Gang and newcomers like Nas and the Roots failed to register blips on the popular radar and even fell short critically in some cases. It was becoming dismal for fans and artists of substance alike, and though they knew they were on the losing team in terms of sales and popularity, one MC would give them a last glimmer of hope.

In many ways Mos was perfectly groomed to lead the conscious fight at the turn of the millennium. He watched hip-hop make its way through the NYC boroughs, and saw Biggie Smalls win freestyle battles on Bed-Stuy corners. He saw one of the biggest superstars of rap as a "local cat," and would never forsake his Brooklyn roots no matter how high his star rose. He fully understood the exigence of the moment, fittingly making his recorded debut on De La Soul's 1996 warning cry Stakes Is High. The Black Dante fits in seamlessly rhyming alongside veterans Posdnuos, Maseo, and Trugoy on "Big Brother Beat," but he invigorates the track with his fresh, signature flow in just eight bars.

That Native Tongues tie would lead to him showing the world much more of what he could do alongside fellow crew member and Brooklynite Talib Kweli on Mos Def & Talib Kweli Are Black Star in 1998. From Brooklyn to Africa it was hard to find someone tapped into rap that wouldn't respond to "One, two, three… " with "Mos Def and Talib Kweli-i-i!" The perfect pairing established both as firmly local, but worldly MCs with head-spinning rhyming abilities. The album only hit #53 at its peak position on the charts, but it was critically beloved and caught the attention of the zeitgeist. Even so: Despite the buzz, there were still doubts about how the mighty Mos would perform commercially and fit into the changing landscape of the mainstream.

Enter Black On Both Sides — a marvelous solo debut from Mos Def that would briefly, yet brilliantly, blackhole some of the spotlight from the commercial takeover and give it back to hip-hop's early tenets, back to New York and cognizance. Four months after its release, the album would hit number one on Billboard's Top Rap Albums Chart and be certified Gold, signifying 500,000 units shipped. Back then, a lot of big rap albums would go Gold or close to it in their first week. Yet the album reaching those heights after moving just 78,000 units in its first week meant people were hooked long after the initial rush of the album's newness. Ingenuity often takes time to sink in.

It's not hard to see why the album grew on listeners. Black On Both Sides possesses a wonderful depth and breadth in the midst of a rhyme clinic with a steady current of blackness and Brooklyn as its lifeblood. The man either says, spells, or alludes to Brooklyn over 35 times on the album collectively, and does so 19 times on the track "Brooklyn" alone. The constant shoutouts don't feel like overkill because he roams so far away home in the number of topics he touches on.

The Mighty Mos addresses the state of hip-hop on the intro "Fear Not Of Man," the importance of community on "Love," lust on "Ms. Fat Booty," the dangers of flexing too hard and living life too fast on "Got" and "Speed Law," the global water crisis on "New World Water," the legacy of black music he is attempting to keep alive on "Rock 'N' Roll," escaping poverty on "Climb," black social mobility on "Mr. Nigga," and much more. He does it all with dazzling wordplay, captivating storytelling, sophisticated similes and metaphors, and complex rhyme schemes.

Immediately he lets everyone know he's in tune with what's happening to the rap game on the intro "Fear Not of Man," and positions himself as someone who should be heard in the matter. Yet it's not some self-aggrandizing spiel. It's simply an answer to a question: "Yo Mos, what's getting ready to happen with hip-hop?" He replies: "Whatever's happening with us." He goes on to explain that "Me, you, everybody, we are hip-hop" and "Hip-hop is about the people."

Though he offers tidbits about people not being valuable because they "got a whole lot of money" — setting himself in opposition to the birth of the bling era — he doesn't come off as preachy or corny. There is a measured nonchalance that lets you know he's spent a lot of time contemplating the fate of the culture he loves, and he's not worried. It's the perfect first offering to set the tone for the album because he comes off as knowledgeable, but he isn't "trying to kick knowledge," as Nas would say. That is a delicate balance to strike and Mos does it well, making what follows on the 17-track behemoth easy to digest and accept.

The intro frames the subsequent "Hip Hop" perfectly. It's understood why Mos has to keep the OG Spoonie Gee alive with the opening line "One for the treble, two for the time." Lines like "The industry just a better built cell block" still have plenty of bite, but they don't come off as condescending. The sharp barbs feel more like a man who cares deeply for his people, his culture, and his music than some prophet sent to deliver the rap game from evil and temptation. The transition into the wonderful storytelling on "Love" further establishes his conviction and what he's fighting for. His depiction of the love and warmth he felt despite a poor upbringing in the Roosevelt housing projects leads listeners to realize there is so much lost when a rapper's downtrodden community is exploited for the sake of image and profit.

Mos continues with the engaging storytelling on "Ms. Fat Booty," subverting the rise of the "video hoe" moment where women were basically only cast as eye candy ornaments. His story of how Sharice opened his nose up is masterful; it's a testament to Mos' skill that he was able to work an Idaho Potato into a rhyme and not come across irredeemably cheesy. Perhaps the best part of this song is that you can picture all of this going down in a Brooklyn club and continuing in the neighborhood, like a Spike Lee screenplay. Up to the halfway point of the album, it's fair to say he hasn't even left Brooklyn yet, but it's already captivating.

When he does exit the borough, things get even more interesting. Dude comes with some smooth singing chops on "UMI Says," and that change in form signifies a relocation from the local to the global geographically, but also a shift from a specific blackness in Brooklyn to blackness internationally and historically. This is the first sense we get of Mos Def the traveler, theologian, and philosopher. The stretch from "UMI Says" to "Climb" and from "Mr. Nigga" to "May-December" showcase how far Mos could wander despite being firmly rooted in Brooklyn. From the Arabic words — Umi (mother), Abi (father), Jiddo (grandfather) — on "UMI Says" to the nations without clean drinking water that come to mind on "New World Water" to the thorough statistical analysis of inequity that is "Mathematics," Mos goes places where probably 95% of rappers don't have the knowledge or skill to follow.

What partly ties everything he expands on together is the steady current of blackness underneath. "Rock 'N' Roll" in particular highlights a black legacy in rock music that you still can't find in history textbooks to this day, featuring everyone from Chuck Berry to Bad Brains. Lines like "Fools done upset the Old Man River/ Made him carry slave ships and fed him dead niggas" on "New World Water" reminds you that his skin color informs his perspective first and foremost. "Mr. Nigga" reminds you that other people's perspectives are informed first and foremost by his skin color as well, no matter where he gets to in life. "Habitat" shows you that there are Brooklyns all over the country, and all over the world with resonant lines like "Son I been plenty places in my life and time/ And regardless where home is, son home is mine."

Another aspect that keeps Black On Both Sides cohesive is its production. Though this album isn't quite Questlove and company locked in a studio together being geniuses, it is one of the more loosely affiliated Soulquarian projects. The sonics are not as groundbreaking and quintessential as they are on D'Angelo's Voodoo or Erykah Badu's Mama's Gun, but they're smart and sophisticated in matching Mos' every move. (Mos was also heavily involved on the production side of the album, as he tends to be.)

On "Got," Ali Shaheed Muhammad of A Tribe Called Quest and production crew the Ummah (with J Dilla and Q-Tip) keep things just engaging and varied enough to not be boring and let Mos' lyrics shine. We of course can't forget the legendary DJ Premier lending some classic New York boom bap and triumphant horns on "Mathematics." A young 88-Keys also contributes some subtle brilliance on the keyboards on "Love," "Speed Law," and "May-December." No sound ever detracts from Mos' voice; they only serve to uplift and keep things moving.

More important than the relationship between Mos' vocals and the sounds surrounding them, the production subtly enhances the motif of blackness. Peep this list of samples and tell me it's not one of the most melanated things you've ever heard: "Fear Not For Man" by Fela Kuti (on "Fear Not Of Man"), "One Step" by Aretha Franklin (on "Ms. Fat Booty"), "Anyone Who Had A Heart" by Dionne Warwick (on "Know That"), "A Legend In His Own Mind" by Gil-Scott Heron (on "Mr. Nigga"), "We Live In Brooklyn" by Roy Ayers (on none other than "Brooklyn"), Angela Davis' interview with Art Seigner (on "Mathematics"), James Brown's classic "Funky Drummer" break (also on "Mathematics"), and "On And On" by Erykah Badu (again on "Mathematics").

Though he strays far from Brooklyn in the breadth of topics he addresses, the borough's steady presence is the first sign of how the album is aging. Mos Def refers to Brooklyn as Bucktown, and the album feels like a time capsule for a Brooklyn that no longer exists. The "luxury tenements" that Mos Def foreshadowed on "Hip Hop" indeed "choke the skyline" as deep as Bushwick and Flatbush. The areas he names where people get "got" have been gentrified.

No longer is the intersection of Broadway and Myrtle "black as midnight" as he describes it on "Mathematics." Silly awning ordinances make businesses that have been thriving for decades look like they'll be shut down soon. Murals depicting a white woman adorned in chains with pendants tell people to "Protect ya neck." Google swoops in with ads that tell people who have lived in Brooklyn for decades that "You don't know Bed-Stuy (yet)." Rents sky-rocket and displace multigenerational families, forcing them deeper into Brooklyn until rent in that area becomes unaffordable and they have to move again. The Brooklyn the Black Dante refers to is sadly gone and mostly colonized.

The album has aged beautifully in other ways, though. There are clear sight lines to contemporary, politically conscious albums like J Cole's KOD. Black On Both Sides is still a blueprint for any conscious album that makes mainstream appeal bend to its sensibilities, such as recent classics like Kendrick Lamar's To Pimp A Butterfly, Solange's A Seat At The Table, and D'Angelo's Black Messiah. It's less than 100,000 copies away from a Platinum certification, and could reach the milestone soon with its 20th anniversary possibly providing a resurgence in sales.

Mos Def has turned into quite the traveler since Black On Both Sides, giving even more credibility to his hints of far-flung wisdom on the album. He had trouble leaving South Africa after spending three years living in Cape Town. He started performing under his Muslim name, Yasiin Bey, and has since dropped four more albums to varying critical receptions. He has contemplated retirement several times, but also promised three more albums during the rollout for his latest offering, Dec 99th with producer Ferrari Sheppard. Though Mos more often than not comes correct on the mic, only 2009's The Ecstatic approaches the end-to-end, how-dare-you-skip-a-track greatness of Black On Both Sides.

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Daily Discussion Thread 05/06/2020

Posted: 06 May 2020 04:04 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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Watsky trying to break the longest freestyle record for covid relief fundraiser

Posted: 06 May 2020 06:57 PM PDT

Lil Baby x Gunna - Drip Too Hard

Posted: 06 May 2020 07:02 AM PDT

Ka's new album Descendants of Cain now on streaming

Posted: 06 May 2020 09:03 PM PDT

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/0yhyMBfxKhjy1f7TsXXssl?si=-3LvJThkS2-xB5ww_bGvGw

Tidal: https://tidal.com/browse/album/140156121

Doesn't seem to be on Apple Music yet

Also it's still up on http://brownsvilleka.com if you want to support the artist and (for whatever reason) haven't bought it already

submitted by /u/prettiestmf
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J. Cole - Forbidden Fruit (Feat. Kendrick Lamar)

Posted: 06 May 2020 06:19 PM PDT

GoldLink - Crew ft. Brent Faiyaz, Shy Glizzy

Posted: 06 May 2020 10:30 AM PDT

Dr. Dre - Deep Water (Ft. Kendrick Lamar, Justus, Anderson .Paak)

Posted: 06 May 2020 11:05 PM PDT

[FRESH] Lil Durk - 3 Headed Goat (feat. Lil Baby & Polo G)

Posted: 06 May 2020 08:17 PM PDT

Nathan Smith reviews Clams Casino's "Instrumental Relics" for Pitchfork ("This collection gathers the cloud-rap pioneer’s earliest and most seminal recordings, in danger of being lost to the digital ether.")

Posted: 06 May 2020 07:26 AM PDT

Dave - Wanna Know (ft. Drake)

Posted: 06 May 2020 10:02 AM PDT

Bladee & Ecco2K (live)

Posted: 06 May 2020 03:53 PM PDT

Kurupt - C-Walk (1998)

Posted: 06 May 2020 06:26 PM PDT

Westside Gunn - Claiborne Kick (ft. Boldy James) Prod. The Alchemist

Posted: 06 May 2020 04:53 PM PDT

[FRESH] A.CHAL - Hollywood Love (Audio) ft. Gunna

Posted: 06 May 2020 10:59 AM PDT

RZA with live commentary during screening of digitally restored Shaolin Vs Wu Tang live streaming this Friday @9:15 EST

Posted: 06 May 2020 12:50 PM PDT

[FRESH VIDEO] Lil Baby, 42 Dugg - We Paid

Posted: 06 May 2020 12:10 PM PDT

Method Man ft. Lauryn Hill - Say

Posted: 06 May 2020 05:43 AM PDT

[FRESH VIDEO] D Smoke & SiR - Lights On (starring Danny Trejo and Issa Rae)

Posted: 06 May 2020 07:08 AM PDT

THROWBACK: Waka Flocka Flame goes on 106 & Park; proclaims "Votin' good" and reveals plans to go back to school for Geometry

Posted: 06 May 2020 01:37 PM PDT

Rich Homie Quan - Get TF Out My Face ft. Young Thug (Official Video)

Posted: 06 May 2020 09:36 PM PDT

Saba - MOST

Posted: 06 May 2020 10:12 PM PDT

[FIRST IMPRESSIONS] Chris Brown & Young Thug - Slime & B

Posted: 06 May 2020 08:23 AM PDT

It's been over 24 hours. How do you guys feel about the project?

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Yungster Jack & David Shawty - GREEN ( Prod. 16yrold )

Posted: 06 May 2020 10:24 PM PDT

$uicideboy$ X Shakewell - Venom

Posted: 06 May 2020 10:22 AM PDT

Benny The Butcher & 38 Spesh - 2 Weapons

Posted: 06 May 2020 01:37 PM PDT

J. Cole - Deja Vu

Posted: 06 May 2020 07:25 AM PDT

Throwback Write-up #7: Jean Grae - Bootleg of the Bootleg - HipHop

Throwback Write-up #7: Jean Grae - Bootleg of the Bootleg - HipHop


Throwback Write-up #7: Jean Grae - Bootleg of the Bootleg

Posted: 05 May 2020 09:08 AM PDT

Artist: Jean Grae

Album: Bootleg of the Bootleg


Listen

Spotify

Youtube

Apple Music


Background

Jean Grae is a lyrical MC born in Cape Town South Africa before moving to New York City at a young age. As the daughter of two jazz musicians (including a mother that managed her own label), throughout Jean Grae's life art and music was part of her lifestyle. Whether it be starting off in dance, starting a career as a producer or her eventual rise to being an MC.

One thing that has always defined Jean Grae's life is her competitive spirit which she cultivated to push herself as far as she could no matter what work she was perusing. When she made beats she'd focus everything on making them the best, and this only continued when she started her rap career in the mid 90's.

After Originally using the name 'What? What?' for the first few years of her career she decided to change her name to something more self-reflective of who she is. The name Jean Grae hatched from her love of comics and specifically the X-Men character Jean Grey.

A few years of demos and small releases eventually set the stage for her 2002 debut album Attack of the Attacking Things. With a heavy focus on lyricism and a cold delivery Attack of the Attacking Things left both critics and fans alike excited for what could possibly come next, and after only a little over a year we would get that release with her EP Bootleg of the Bootleg.


Album Review

Preface: I will be discussing tracks based on how they appear on the deluxe version of the album. Both the original and the deluxe share the same length the deluxe edition just splits the 45 minute long Chapter One: Destiny into 11 separate tracks.

As we discussed earlier one of the biggest motivating factors for Jean Grae is her competitive nature and tenacity to be the best. She makes no better case for this than on the opening track 'Haters Anthem'. We are instantly introduced to Jean Grae's exceptional ear for production bringing some killer boom bap percussion along with an excellent baseline before quickly hitting us with her punchy and cold style of rap she's known for. It's a song where Jean Grae is un-apologetically putting herself on top. At this point in her career she knows her talents are above that of her pupils and in true hip-hop fashion she's going to let everyone know.

While Jean Grae is certainly exceptional from a technical standpoint and loves to boast about her talents; she doesn't take long to get into the meat of some lyrical substance on the following track 'Take Me'. A track focused on Jean Grae's troubled relationship with God.

Lock and aim and I'm dropping my frame quick when I pop in the brain

And if God's omnipotent,

will he slip in and change

And move the pistol so it shoots out of range and the lead whistles?

(Baby) Maybe he's just playing; it'll ricochet

And cripple me strictly for questioning, give me life to the pain

'Take Me' offers the other side to the coin of 'Haters Anthem'. Instead of being a song of immense confidence it's instead a song of vulnerability where we find her in a deep depressive state where she feels self-destructive attitudes taking over her life afraid of how it could potentially lead to a shortened life. Frustration over the negativity surrounding her makes her question the meaning of life.

The sadness expressed on 'Take Me' gets complemented well a few tracks later on 'My Crew' which focuses on the love she has for those around me and her dream to see them succeed. Jean Grae is certainly at least somewhat disappointed in some of the decisions made by those around her, but above all else her goal is to give them the support they need to get over their inner demons.

All of this comes to a head on the track 'Chapter One: Destiny' where Jean Grae is playing the character of a contracted assassin and a piece of their story including the start of one of their jobs and the eventual betrayal by their contractors. This character is expanded upon a few more times in Jean Grae's discography on future tracks like 'Football Season is Over'.

After this point this album shifts into being heavily focused on her rapping beats that other rappers had previously made famous. Giving it more of the feeling of being a mixtape. Despite the change in styling it fits right in, and she performs as well on the production as you'd imagine from someone of Jean Grae's caliber.

One of the highlights on this part of the project includes 'High' which samples the beat off of Nas's track 'Purple'. Jean Grae takes a lot of the themes Nas built on around drug culture and builds upon it with her own thoughts with as much tact as we've come to expect throughout the tracklist.

Along with this we get her take on another classic artists materiel with the track You Don't Know (uses the same beat as Jay-Z's U Don't Know) where we get more insight of her view on media and how focused they are on putting artists like herself into categories rather than respecting them based strictly on ability. Which is something she has discussed a lot in interviews in speeches including her distaste for the terms 'female rapper' and 'FEMC'. Which is something that really isn't discussed much on the project outside of this. Whether or not the fact that she is a woman potentially puts her at a disadvantage in the industry her goal is to force people to respect her regardless because she wants her rap to speak for itself more than anything else.


Conclusion

Bootleg of the Bootleg is a fantastic project that really highlights Jean Grae's excecptional talents as an artist. Her lyrical ability and sharp one-liners can go up against anyone, and I believe this project is a great example of that. It's large variation of topics and sounds with incredibly rich and punchy production leaves it as one of my favorite hip-hop projects of the early 2000's.


Favorite Lines

No, Jean's not hard now, Jean hasn't changed

I was 18 on the first record, I've just experienced the game

Not a thug, not a drug seller, not a gun shooter

Not a stripper, sex symbol, or anything you're used to

Marketing nightmare, I don't fit into categories

I just rap, make beats and shit and sleep all these stories

You Don't Know

I represent for a nation. Thought we was in it together

But I guess it gets strange when money rains in sunny weather

Tougher than leather? We're weaker than glass

And shattered on the side of the road. Try to get a ride,

but pass each other fast

My Crew

Suppose you only used to chicks who use they tits to boost sales

And boot males who switch the crew they with but really fails

Cause rap fans are finicky, your approach is gimmicky

So your turn's over fast, like a young man's virginity

A Little Story


Discussion Questions

  • Is Jean Grae an artist you were aware of prior to ths write-up? If so what were your thoughts on her music? If you weren't aware of her music do you have plans to give it a shot?

  • Jean Grae's output in terms of music has slowed down in favor of other artistic endeavors including books, podcasts, directing, and more. If she were to ever return with a new full length solo-rap project what direction would you hope for?

  • Where do you see Jean Grae fitting in with other MCs in the early 2000's?

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Daily Discussion Thread 05/05/2020

Posted: 05 May 2020 01:31 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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[FRESH VIDEO] JPEGMAFIA x DENZEL CURRY - BALD! REMIX

Posted: 05 May 2020 09:29 AM PDT

DaBaby Allegedly Attacked a Driver After Rapper Was Told to Not Smoke Inside Vehicle

Posted: 05 May 2020 01:26 PM PDT

Snoop Dogg Clout Chasers Theory

Posted: 05 May 2020 05:46 PM PDT

I'll get right into it. I have a theory, a Snoop Dogg theory. To my knowledge, I am the first person to bring this up. In July of 2018, it was reported in many places that Snoop Dogg cheated on his wife of 21 years, Shante Broadus, with Instagram star Celena Powell. Powell made public many screenshots of messages between the two, complete with photos from Snoop himself and a recording of her face-timing him. During the exchange, both shared photos of themselves half-dressed and they both sent messages which would lead people to believe they had sex, Powell also said publically on Twitter and Instagram too that they did engage sexually as well. (All her evidence for it taking place is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ETCA3UbLQv8)

A few days later, Snoop put out this trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tWQlsO75uUk The trailer is for an upcoming show he called 'Clout Chasers' in which the premise was to find people and bait them into exposing their intentions of being with famous people, Snoop in particular, only for personal social gain. Now, you probably didn't see this show, not even a single episode. That's because, despite the 'Premiering 2018' card at the end of the trailer, the show was never made. Not a single episode - even though Snoop promised episode one just a week after making an Instagram video on July 17th. (Evidence for that here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZgSwMCUvFN0)

I propose to you that Snoop did, in fact, cheat on his wife, Shante Broadus, with Celena Powell and made this trailer in an attempt to make sure everything blows over and is forgotten about before new evidence is uncovered. What evidence do I have for this claim? If you look closely at the trailer, every single part of it is either stock footage, footage Powell made public, or footage that Snoop could have easily recorded anywhere at any time, including after the allegations transpired. AND, despite the show promising a whole series, the trailer only shows one 'clout chaser' - Celena Powell - who would likely only be the subject of one episode, showing the trailer was quickly cobbled together and Snoop only had enough footage just to disprove the cheating claims, not to make an entire show. Due to this lack of footage, the show never came out, as Snoop never recorded anything before these events transpired as he didn't believe it would go public so he only had stock footage, what Powell had put out, personal screenshots of text messages. And footage of himself which was likely recorded after.

People might also think the opposite, that the show perhaps didn't come out for other reasons (perhaps not finding a network which would run it, editing/budget issues. etc) and that it was, in fact, Powell who lied. This is because she had engaged with other notable rappers previously, claiming she was pregnant with Offset's baby, and that she had had sex with Cheef Keef and Fetty Wap. Although, this time with Snoop Dogg was the only one she had evidence for, and I personally believe that this is why Snoop Dogg cheated with her - the perfect crime. In essence - 'Nobody's going to believe someone who has lied about so many similar things all these times before.'.

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Nav announces tracklist for “Good Intentions”, dropping May 8th

Posted: 05 May 2020 08:18 PM PDT

https://imgur.com/a/sBIPt4q

Features: Lil Uzi Vert, Travis Scott, Young Thug, Gunna, Future, Pop Smoke, Don Toliver, Lil Durk

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Childish Gambino - This Is America (it was released today two years ago)

Posted: 05 May 2020 02:56 AM PDT

Denzel Curry Will Drop Three More Albums Before He Stops Rapping - (XXL Magazine Exclusive)

Posted: 05 May 2020 12:40 PM PDT

[FRESH] Little Simz - Drop 6 EP

Posted: 05 May 2020 04:04 PM PDT

[FRESH VIDEO] A$AP FERG x ONEFOUR - Say It Again

Posted: 05 May 2020 10:32 PM PDT

Kanye West goes shopping at the mall in Chicago after signing with Roc-A-Fella Records

Posted: 05 May 2020 08:57 AM PDT

Polo G is dropping his sophomore album 'The Goat' on 5/15

Posted: 05 May 2020 01:29 PM PDT

Rapper Kiing Shooter Dies, Allegedly Due To Covid-19

Posted: 05 May 2020 03:28 PM PDT

Joey Badass Talks New Album, Being Underrated, Pop Smoke, and More

Posted: 05 May 2020 08:09 AM PDT

[FRESH] A$AP FERG, ONEFOUR - Say It Again

Posted: 05 May 2020 04:08 PM PDT

Rapper Watsky to attempt to break the Guiness World Record for longest freestyle tomorrow by rapping for 33 hours

Posted: 05 May 2020 12:49 PM PDT

Gorillaz - Clint Eastwood (Official Video)

Posted: 05 May 2020 04:17 PM PDT

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Billboard Hot 100 Discussion - May 3-9 2020 | THE SCOTTS debuts at #1

Posted: 05 May 2020 08:33 AM PDT

Billboard Hot 100 chart

Position Title Artist ▲/▼ Last week Weeks Charting Peak
1 THE SCOTTS THE SCOTTS, Travis Scott & Kid Cudi ▲+100 [FRESH] 1 1
2 Blinding Lights The Weeknd ▼-1 1 22 1
3 Toosie Slide Drake ▼-1 2 4 1
4 Savage Megan Thee Stallion ▲+10 14 7 4
5 The Box Roddy Ricch ▼-2 3 21 1
6 Say So Doja Cat ▼-1 5 17 5
7 Don't Start Now Dua Lipa ▼-3 4 26 2
8 Circles Post Malone ▼-2 6 35 1
9 Intentions Justin Bieber Featuring Quavo ▼-1 8 12 8
10 Adore You Harry Styles ▼-3 7 21 6
11 Righteous Juice WRLD ▲+90 [FRESH] 1 11
12 Life Is Good Future Featuring Drake ▼-2 10 16 2
13 My Oh My Camila Cabello Featuring DaBaby ▼-1 12 21 12
14 ROCKSTAR DaBaby Featuring Roddy Ricch ▼-5 9 2 9
15 The Bones Maren Morris ▼-2 13 32 12
16 everything i wanted Billie Eilish ▼-5 11 25 8
17 Someone You Loved Lewis Capaldi ▼-2 15 51 1
18 Nobody But You Blake Shelton Duet With Gwen Stefani ▲+2 20 16 18
19 I Hope Gabby Barrett ▼-3 16 18 16
20 Blueberry Faygo Lil Mosey ▼-1 19 12 16
21 Memories Maroon 5 ▼-3 18 32 2
22 Chasin' You Morgan Wallen ▼-1 21 14 21
23 Roses (Imanbek Remix) SAINt JHN ▼-1 22 6 22
24 Falling Trevor Daniel ▼-1 23 24 22
25 High Fashion Roddy Ricch Featuring Mustard - 25 18 20
26 death bed Powfu Featuring beabadoobee ▲+1 27 7 26
27 Hot Girl Bummer blackbear ▼-3 24 33 11
28 Sunday Best Surfaces ▲+10 38 9 28
29 RITMO (Bad Boys For Life) The Black Eyed Peas X J Balvin ▲+5 34 23 26
30 Does To Me Luke Combs Featuring Eric Church ▲+10 40 7 30
31 Heart On Ice Rod Wave ▼-2 29 25 25
32 Ballin' Mustard & Roddy Ricch - 32 41 11
33 Roxanne Arizona Zervas ▼-7 26 26 4
34 Dance Monkey Tones And I ▼-3 31 30 4
35 WHATS POPPIN Jack Harlow ▲+2 37 12 35
36 Break My Heart Dua Lipa ▲+3 39 5 21
37 Heartless The Weeknd ▼-9 28 23 1
38 HIGHEST IN THE ROOM Travis Scott ▲+63 [FRESH] 22 1
39 I Hope You're Happy Now Carly Pearce & Lee Brice ▲+8 47 17 39
40 Beer Can't Fix Thomas Rhett Featuring Jon Pardi ▲+11 51 7 40
41 Level Of Concern twenty one pilots ▲+4 45 3 23
42 I Love Me Demi Lovato - 42 8 18
43 More Hearts Than Mine Ingrid Andress ▼-13 30 18 30
44 After A Few Travis Denning ▲+12 56 5 44
45 All In Lil Baby ▲+56 [FRESH] 1 45
46 10,000 Hours Dan + Shay & Justin Bieber ▼-5 41 30 4
47 Hard To Forget Sam Hunt ▲+2 49 5 40
48 Supalonely BENEE Featuring Gus Dapperton ▲+11 59 7 48
49 Goosebumps Travis Scott ▲+52 [FRESH] 35 32
50 Before You Go Lewis Capaldi ▲+7 57 13 50
51 In Your Eyes The Weeknd ▲+4 55 6 16
52 Dior Pop Smoke ▲+2 54 11 30
53 Sum 2 Prove Lil Baby ▲+7 60 16 16
54 Slide H.E.R. Featuring YG ▲+4 58 19 43
55 Catch Brett Young ▼-3 52 14 29
56 Walk Em Down NLE Choppa Featuring Roddy Ricch ▲+9 65 6 56
57 Heartless Diplo Presents Thomas Wesley Featuring Morgan Wallen ▲+10 67 14 57
58 JUMP DaBaby Featuring YoungBoy Never Broke Again ▼-41 17 2 17
59 If The World Was Ending JP Saxe Featuring Julia Michaels ▲+18 77 5 59
60 OUT WEST JACKBOYS Featuring Young Thug ▲+12 72 16 38
61 Stupid Love Lady Gaga ▼-15 46 9 5
62 Yo Perreo Sola Bad Bunny ▲+6 68 7 53
63 I'm Ready Sam Smith & Demi Lovato ▼-27 36 2 36
64 P*$$y Fairy (OTW) Jhene Aiko ▲+12 76 15 40
65 Sasuke Lil Uzi Vert ▲+36 [FRESH] 1 65
66 Godzilla Eminem Featuring Juice WRLD - 66 15 3
67 Find My Way DaBaby ▼-34 33 4 22
68 Cool Again Kane Brown ▲+33 [FRESH] 1 68
69 BELIEVE IT PARTYNEXTDOOR & Rihanna ▲+6 75 5 23
70 Bluebird Miranda Lambert ▲+12 82 4 70
71 Emotionally Scarred Lil Baby ▲+13 84 9 31
72 You should be sad Halsey ▲+8 80 16 26
73 Here And Now Kenny Chesney ▲+14 87 4 73
74 Turks NAV, Gunna & Travis Scott ▲+4 78 5 17
75 Be A Light Thomas Rhett Featuring Reba McEntire, Hillary Scott, Chris Tomlin & Keith Urban ▲+8 83 4 71
76 Slow Dance In A Parking Lot Jordan Davis ▼-3 73 17 37
77 Come Thru Summer Walker & Usher ▲+2 79 18 42
78 After Party Don Toliver ▲+14 92 2 78
79 Homemade Jake Owen ▲+2 81 14 39
80 Ride It. DJ Regard ▲+15 95 3 80
81 God Whispered Your Name Keith Urban ▲+16 97 2 81
82 In Between Scotty McCreery ▲+7 89 3 82
83 Ain't Easy YoungBoy Never Broke Again ▲+18 [FRESH] 1 83
84 Party Girl StaySolidRocky ▲+17 [FRESH] 1 84
85 Die From A Broken Heart Maddie & Tae ▲+9 94 3 80
86 Diamonds YoungBoy Never Broke Again ▲+15 [FRESH] 1 86
87 Myron Lil Uzi Vert ▲+1 88 7 13
88 July Noah Cyrus & Leon Bridges ▲+5 93 9 85
89 Captain Hook Megan Thee Stallion ▲+7 96 4 74
90 Bout My Business YoungBoy Never Broke Again Featuring Sherhonda Gaulden ▲+11 [FRESH] 1 90
91 That Way Lil Uzi Vert - 91 9 20
92 Rough Ryder YoungBoy Never Broke Again ▲+9 [FRESH] 1 92
93 B.S. Jhene Aiko Featuring H.E.R. ▲+8 [FRESH] 6 24
94 Underdog Alicia Keys ▲+7 [FRESH] 5 69
95 I Love My Country Florida Georgia Line ▲+6 [FRESH] 2 81
96 NASTY DaBaby Featuring Ashanti & Megan Thee Stallion ▼-46 50 2 50
97 Drinking Alone Carrie Underwood ▲+4 [FRESH] 1 97
98 PTSD G Herbo Featuring Chance The Rapper, Juice WRLD & Lil Uzi Vert - 98 5 38
99 Thug Of Spades YoungBoy Never Broke Again Featuring DaBaby ▲+2 [FRESH] 1 99
100 Safaera Bad Bunny, Jowell & Randy & Nengo Flow ▼-1 99 7 81

Notes

THE SCOTTS is Kid Cudi's first #1 song

Savage jumps up 10 positions to #4. It is now Megan Thee Stallion's highest charting song

Billboard 200 chart

Position Title Artist Sales Change Last week Weeks Charting
1 38 Baby 2 YoungBoy Never Broke Again 73,325 (3,994 pure) -- [FRESH] 1
2 BLAME IT ON BABY DaBaby 52,328 (954 pure) -59% 1 2
3 Eternal Atake Lil Uzi Vert 48,594 (560 pure) -11% 3 8
4 After Hours The Weeknd 48,884 (4,583 pure) -13% 2 6
5 My Turn Lil Baby 42,184 (863 pure) +6% 5 9
6 Hollywood's Bleeding Post Malone 36,011 (1,328 pure) +0% 6 34
7 YHLQMDLG Bad Bunny 34,991 (595 pure) -1% 7 9
8 Please Excuse Me For Being Antisocial Roddy Ricch 32,055 (327 pure) -2% 8 21
9 ASTROWORLD Travis Scott 28,258 (993 pure) +85% 30 91
10 Suga Megan Thee Stallion 19,398 (404 pure) +2% 21 8
submitted by /u/RobYaLunch
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