The entire Dedication 2 mixtape is essential, and the closer is one of its best moments. Smarter, funnier, more coherent, and a million times more emotionally resonant than any Immortal Technique song, Wayne even makes reference to conspiracies about the levees during Katrina so he's really beating Tech at his own game. The hidden track at the end is Wayne remixing Ambitionz Az A Ridah, too.
especially Dedication 2, Tha Carter 2, and Like Father Like Son. and his freestyles from whatever channels that are around youtube. he was incredible in that era with wordplay flow all of the stuff
Lil Wayne's love for Dipset is never talked about because it has become cool to flatten New York's superiority in hip-hop and act like no one is influenced by New York. Wayne might be from New Orleans but for a while there, he desired to be a malt-liquor drinking Harlem nigga. "Beat Without Bass" is amazing. Just incredible.
It's always dope when a group only has two members. It's more common and a bit less remarkable in typically electronically produced genres, but when it's a more conventional rock band it's fucking dope. Hella, Death From Above 1979, it's fucking sick.
My @ on here is a line from a Meat Puppets song. My pfp is the cover of a NoMeansNo album. When I was a teenager I thought it was really cool there was a Snowing song that mentioned listening to At The Drive-In. I would show kids in class Lil Ugly Mane and secretly feel smug knowing they were enjoying a song made by a black metal noise guy. If you're lacking in insight and perspective, completely uncharismatic, or just don't know what to say, bringing up shit people like is a good way to trick them into thinking you're worth talking to.