on black stations. it is for a reason. they call it a mind resolution mind revolution. rebel without a cause was heavily influenced by rakim at what was going just going on. it was really a desperate call to have us being heard. you talk about black all the time to a multiracial audience. shouldn t you maybe be thinking about who are the people i ve got out here? haven t you got a responsibility to them rather than what you personally i have a responsibility to my people and my culture, because my people and my culture have been brutalized and ignored for years. my mother standing in the welfare line the way you survive is crime my life is over so i might as well speak my mind ice t is the first west coast gangster rap. reality rap. 6:00 in the morning police at my door. ice t did it way before nwa did it. straight outta compton
it s called reality rap. it s called jay-z, you know what i m saying? there s rappers and there s a lot of great ones. and there s tell them what hove means. well, that s the god, one of the gods. you know what i m saying? he s one of the gods in the game. so when hove speaks and rhymes, you have to listen. he s only speaking facts. and not just that, we trust him. we basically broke down everything you are talking about in our language. you know what i m saying? brothers like you got on this incredible platform that you have, and you broke it down. just in case they didn t understand our language. remember, he s the oracle. he s the g.o.a.t. he s the god. he s a hip-hop god. you know what i m saying? you might say these are hymns because it s him.
enemy of the 80s, and much more into reality rap and street rap. the police coming straight from the underground a young n- got it bad because i m brown the group nwa is the harshest most in your face of the gangsta-style rappers. one song blasts the police in the most obscene terms. renn and ice cube, they write the rap, right? me and my boy yella get together and hook up a good beat we feel will go good with the rap and boom, there it is. platinum records. nwa at that point is the biggest hip-hop band there is. first time i heard nwa i was like, oh, that ice guy is all right, but the rest of this is garbage. that was pretty much the attitude initially of most people who were part of the new york hip-hop scene. nwa ain t sick to me dre step up to the door and get up the east coast kind of felt like, well, we invented hip-hop, you re not going to come in as the new kid and suddenly decide this is the thing. like the east coast is the home of hip-hop, an
politics met no radio airplay, even on black stations. it is rap for a reason. they call it a mind revolution. rubble without a cause was heavily influenced by rock kim, and heavily influenced by just going on. it was really a desperate call to have us being heard. you talk about black all the time to a multiracial audience. shouldn t you maybe be thinking about who are the people i ve got out here? haven t you got a responsibility to them rather than what you personally i have a responsibility to my people and my culture, because my people and my culture have been brutalized and ignored for years. my mother standing in the welfare line the way you survive is crime my life is over so i might as well speak my mind ice t is the first west coast gangster rap. reality rap. 6:00 in the morning police at my door. ice t did it way before nwa did it. straight outta compton ice cube from a gang called
enemy of the 80s, and much more into reality rap and street rap. the police coming straight from the underground a young n- got it bad because i m brown the group nwa is the harshest most in your face of the gangsta-style rappers. one song blasts the police in the most obscene terms. renn and ice cube, they write the rap, right? me and my boy yella get together and hook up a good beat we feel will go good with the rap and boom, there it is. platinum records. nwa at that point is the biggest hip-hop band there is. first time i heard nwa i was like, oh, that ice guy is all right, but the rest of this is garbage. that was pretty much the attitude initially of most people who were part of the new york hip-hop scene. nwa ain t sick to me dre step up to the door and get up the east coast kind of felt like, well, we invented hip-hop, you re not going to come in as the new kid and suddenly decide this is the thing. like the east coast is the home