Quote:
Originally Posted by Phrozen1ne
I don't think its splitting anything up due to the fact that we have categories for a reason. "Artists" such as Soulja Boy would never fall into the category of being a hip hop artist, IMO. The media tends to throw the word hiphop around nowadays and pretty much label everything they see as such, therefore the meaning becomes distorted and watered down.
"All MCs and lyricists are rappers...all rappers aren't MCs and/or lyricists."<-----Thats the difference.
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LOL. Exactly. Go away Animate.
Since Animate used Soulja Boy: The opinion of children (Soulja Boy's fans are children--adults may dance to him but they usually aren't the ones buying the music) doesn't matter. No one who knows about hip hop and even rap will ever call Soulja Boy anything more than a rapping artist who is an opportunist who makes catchy tunes. No one would call Soulja Boy an emcee or a lyricist. He probably wouldn't consider himself an emcee or a lyricist.
I remember the LL Cool J and Kid N Play songs that I used to listen to as I got ready to catch the bus as a kid. If you actually listen to their lyrics and flows, LL and Kid N Play had tight lyrics (especially on the tracks that weren't released as singles) and they were also able to move the crowd. There are levels of lyricism with the lowest level being someone who is just a rapper. Biz Markie, as awesome of a DJ as he is, is just a rapper. Snoop Dogg is just a rapper. LOL. In fact, all of NWA were just rappers with exception for Ice Cube when he went solo. I don't think NWA would deny that they were just rappers with a message...of Ns With Attitutudes. LOL.
Notice that I tend to only talk about older emcees because I don't keep up with the nonsense the kids listen to today. Drake who? LOL. I sound like my parents when they hated what we used to listen to.