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Everything posted by Hero1
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i agree with this :ditto: anything with Jazzy should be labelled as jazzy jeff and fresh prince.. solo stuff can be Big Will
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kanye's flow is awful..his beats are okay cause he samples sum good tracks..and his use of speeding up vocals is extremely annoying..he also has a very high opinion of himself..but atleast he is spittin sumthin that means sumthin on his tracks.. extremely overrated but if y'all enjoy em good..but please dont ever say hes better than LL Cool J :puke:
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das efx - they want efx, bell biv devoe - gangsta
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just had a quick visit over there..and that board is an ****in disgrace!! :scope:
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yeah but he never mentioned the guys name when he got sued for that magazine interview either!
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yeah and that guy "dana goodman" sued him for it!! im surprised he actually put it in a song the guy might sue him again :kekeke:
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http://www.993kissfm.com/main.html go vote switch is at 17% at the moment!
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Will gets another Top 10 hit in Australia :peace: switch moves from 11 to 10 this week..
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sure is :kekeke:
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somethin like dis is a good one to get people into JJFP as well..and i wanna rock had success with those :thumb:
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i don't know what it means either...but i was too scared to say :whistle: NOUN: 1. Food fit for human consumption. 2. victuals Food supplies; provisions. TRANSITIVE VERB: To provide with food. INTRANSITIVE VERB: 1. To lay in food supplies. 2. To eat.
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the album isnt abt will not being soft at all..wills just saying what he wants..they seem to want will to "dumb the rhyme a little"
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hiponline CORPORATE LINE: A legendary music sensation, Smith made his first record as a high school senior and subsequently embarked on a rap career with friend Jeff Townes. DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince recorded several platinum and multi-platinum albums, winning two Grammys and three American Music Awards. Smith's first solo album, Big Willie Style , has sold 8 million copies. His album Willennium and the featured single Will2K went double platinum, selling over 2 million copies each. THE GREAT: “Party Starter” – Will Smith is best at bringing the dance club anthems. When he isn’t trying to brag and act street he can still flow. “Lost & Found” – Smith isn’t the best rapper yet he has some points on what is wrong with hip-hop today. He is right even if he isn’t a great M.C. THE AVERAGE: “Here He Comes” – Firs Will Smith borrows the intro from the old-school Batman theme and then brags about having everything in the world… thanks for that. Good thing he isn’t arrogant. “Switch” – Smith tries to reinvigorate his old hit singles with “Switch”—it isn’t up to par with his hits of old. “Mr. Nice Guy” – Will takes his shots by attempting to prove that he isn’t soft. He tries to take on Eminem by telling us he’s richer. Good angle. THE BAD: “I Wish I Made That” – Smith is preoccupied with being called soft and its getting tired. “If You Can’t Dance (Slide)” – Smith’s singing is terrible and the rhymes aren’t much better. “Scary Story” – Smith wants to tell his story Eminem-style—it goes awry. FRANKLY: Will Smith is so preoccupied with proving that he isn’t soft that most of the record focuses on it. If Smith dropped more party anthems and less attempts at proving how great he is we might have something worth listening to. + CC Morris March.29.2005 scotsman WILL SMITH: LOST AND FOUND ** INTERSCOPE, £12.99 THE Will Smith brand trucks on with a ninth album of parent-friendly rap. It appears to be jocular business as usual on the throwaway opening track Here He Comes, which promotes the idea of Smith as a rapping superhero. To ten-year-olds maybe but, cliché though it is, Smith’s whole-some family man image wins him zero cred points from the hip-hop fraternity. "Sometimes y’all mistake nice for soft" he counters on Mr Nice Guy, a smart rap with shades of Eminem’s satirical wit. Elsewhere, he challenges Christian fundamentalism with no great originality on Ms Holy Roller and misfires in his attempts to address post-9/11 malaise on Tell Me Why. Militancy doesn’t suit him, but he’s grown out of grooving on the beach. FIONA SHEPHERD Telegraph Will Smith Lost and Found Interscope, £12.99 It may seem a strange thing to say of a Grammy Award-winning rapper and Oscar-nominated movie star, but Will Smith has an inferiority complex. On this, his ninth album, barely a couplet passes without Smith ruing his own versatility or griping about the public's refusal to take him seriously. Met by popular and critical acclaim as the rapping half of DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince, Smith's hip-hop career has been overshadowed by his enormously successful forays into television (The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air) and film (Ali, Bad Boys, Independence Day). For some reason, this really ticks him off. On the rock-riffed Mr Niceguy, Smith rails wittily against his critics, responding to an old Eminem diss along the way, and on I Wish I Made That, he whines, "I think y'all love me/But y'all place other rappers above me." To find out why, Smith should refer to the ghastly 9/11 think piece Tell Me Why or the watered-down crunk of Party Starter. He may prefer to blame his clean-cut ubiquity, but Smith just doesn't deserve the rap credibility he covets. Andrew Pettie
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U.S.A - #19 UK - #6 Australia - #11 Belgium - #6 Switzerland - #19 Ireland - #9 Italy - #8 know any others?
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Will Smith Lost and Found (Interscope **1/2) On his ninth CD, Will Smith takes on the intersection of Hollywood and West Philly as if jovially taking on another amiable movie role. Mostly, it's business as usual. The stutter-tronic "Switch" is the party track. In accordance with hip-hop law, Snoop Dogg appears. "Here He Comes" features a patented Smith sample gleaned from our childhood, the Spider-Man TV cartoon theme, with chunky beats by ex-partner Jazzy Jeff. Big Willie makes merry about getting dissed by Eminem, blabbing happily about getting reamed by rap radio. So what, right? With more than one reference to making "20 mil," you can't help but think that Smith is giggling all the way to his broker. But listen harder. Smith ain't feeling quite so jiggy. "Sometimes y'all mistake nice for soft, so before I go off..." spits Smith on "Mr. Niceguy," taking on haters through bucking rhythms with the sort of veiled threats his Shark Tale costar Bob De Niro usually proffers. When not busy taking the offensive on being defensive, Smith wails on religious hypocrisy, star-stalkers, and the rap game's relentless copycatting (from Smith, yet, goes the boast of the title track) with a sneer to match his cheer. Sure, he's ham-fisted. Smith may not show the brilliant flow of Ludacris or the foul functionality of 50 Cent. But at least he acts the part nicely. - A.D. Amorosi
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too damn hype!! "france, japan, sweden, london, italy"
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its kool man you dont have to be a potna.. you dont wanna get those old cds so you wouldnt be interested in old b-sides n stuff anyway.. :werd:
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:hilarious: :hilarious: :hilarious:
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yes jazzy jeff and fresh prince will be performing..hes also being interviewed at the start!
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haha you can tell you are wantin sum JJFP action :kekeke: i think will and jeff need to do an album..10 traxs every beat done by jeff released as jazzy jeff and fresh prince on an independant label
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my favs at the moment 1.party starter 2. i wish i made that 3. comin to the stage
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u mean he performed switch at the start?
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wow 3 way tie! :wiggle:
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if real fans show up on that board they need to know about this one :poke: