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Engine 05-06-2013 05:20 PM

Favorite Dead Rappers (excluding 2Pac & Biggie)
 
Please don't simply list a bunch of rappers who have shuffled off this mortal coil.
Tell us which ones you actually like and why.

I like Tim Dog (died February 2013) because he built his career by dissing Compton and NWA in the late 80s, which was pretty funny.



Later he made some interesting music with Kool Keith (the duo was called Ultra).



Tim Dog's career lasted many years and he generally held onto his old-school delivery. And he stayed vulgar to the end.

Janszoon 05-06-2013 05:28 PM

I'm going to get in on the ground floor with some Big L love. He just had a great style that sounds like an intersection between everything that had happened in hip hop in late 80s and first half of the 90s. His first album has come to be one of my favorites of the 90s.

billyblaze 05-06-2013 05:37 PM

Ol' Dirty Bastard...

He was bizarre...and he completed the Wu tang circle with his crazy ass raps. Baby, I got yo' money.

14232949 05-06-2013 05:40 PM

^ Yeah Big L and Big Pun would be the obvious ones. Pun was probably one of the all time most gifted rhymers in the way he was able to deliver complex verses at a high speed. As for L his use of local slang and unorthodox rhyming schemes were what made him such a unique entity. Would have been interesting to see what they two would have done next, I know Pun was trying to lose weight at the time of his death; he did a lot of stuff with Fat Joe and the like so he may have had a crack at the mainstream. Alternately he may have opted to remain somewhat underground as he was a prominent figure in the battle scene of South New York. Big L was also a notorious rap battler but the fact L had just signed with Rockafella leads me to beleive he probably would have went on to garner considerable media attention and be held in the same regard as Jigga and Nas in the eyes of the casual follower as well as increasing his popularity tenfold.

Other than them two, I never really hear much about Mac Dre. Although he's released a ton of music and was credited with being the innovator of some Bay Area movement, he's rarely discussed. I've never seen him as one of the greats, but I guess I can dig his style, it's by in large more party orientated (or at least what I've heard is)


Engine 05-06-2013 05:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Janszoon (Post 1316402)
I'm going to get in on the ground floor with some Big L love. He just had a great style that sounds like an intersection between everything that had happened in hip hop in late 80s and first half of the 90s. His first album has come to be one of my favorites of the 90s.

Word up. I haven't listened to that album in forever, but I'm about to. Also, did that documentary on him ever get released?


Goofle 05-06-2013 05:41 PM

Eyedea has become a favourite of mine. I don't have much of his material downloaded but regularly scour YouTube for anything he's on. Great lyrics, and usually interesting production.

ODB has some of my favourite verses ever too.

Not to forget MC Guru of Gang Starr.

djchameleon 05-06-2013 05:49 PM

Capital Punishment from Big Punisher. If you could get over his pauses where he would stop to take breathes because of his weight. I feel like Fat Joe just stepped in and took over where Pun would have finished but Pun would have did it better lyrically.




Engine 05-06-2013 05:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mankycaaant (Post 1316409)
Other than them two, I never really hear much about Mac Dre. Although he's released a ton of music and was credited with being the innovator of some Bay Area movement, he's rarely discussed. I've never seen him as one of the greats, but I guess I can dig his style, it's by in large more party orientated (or at least what I've heard is)

I've never really listened to Mac Dre but I like the song you posted. It definitely has that Heiroglyphics sound, which I guess is the Bay Area style.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Goofle11 (Post 1316411)
Eyedea has become a favourite of mine. I don't have much of his material downloaded but regularly scour YouTube for anything he's on. Great lyrics, and usually interesting production.

ODB has some of my favourite verses ever too.

Not to forget MC Guru of Gang Starr.

All excellent. I'm particularly partial to Eyedea just because he was a skinny white boy who was better than almost everybody at an early age. I still occasionally think about how easily he could have lived if only he went to sleep face-up when he overdosed.

ODB was, in my opinion, one of the most interesting rappers to ever live.

Guru.. I don't even know what to say. He helped make hip-hop something that everybody has heard.

Goofle 05-06-2013 06:10 PM

Yeah, I need to retract my comment on the other thread.

djchameleon 05-06-2013 06:12 PM

Another one of my faves that I feel gets overlooked when it comes to talking about dead rappers is Proof. He has two solo albums and the work he did with D12.

Em does tend to mention him pretty often though throughout various songs because of how much of a mentor he was to him.



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