I'm from the south and I've never listened to one Jeezy album.
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I'm from the south and I've never listened to one Jeezy album.
it’s because what these folks are doing is they’re taking a very extensively, genius album and comparing it to a barebones, black and white, basic album that Young Jeezy made. Young Jeezy and Raekwon are in two completely different schools bare rap. The problem with a lot of conversations is that people don’t wanna come out and just say that a lot of the rap discussions are what they are because you’re asking a specific coast to go up against another one where lyrics and being not just technically good, and lyrically good, you had to be almost genius level intellect to structure your bars. Then you get folks from the south, who let because they like the album and it’s simplistic and basic rhyme scheme, make them think that a basic rapper making the album you enjoy is better than a lyrical rapper making the album that you enjoy.
In 1995 in the South, (What was going on)
This album got no play in the South (in real time) not sure why we are asking folks this question in 2026, when most of the folks weren't listening to rap music in 1995
I never heard that other album 5 times anywhere in the South. I've never heard any soul in the south requesting this album or recommending anybody to go cop this album from your Circuit City, or Walmart, or any record shop
I know a very few people (at that time) in the South didn't even knew who Raekon was, put it like this, Raekon was more known by most niggas in the south when he jumped on Rick Ross song.
No Diss, I just like to live in the moment and I think that's why the tweet/question was asked to see how the temp was when that album dropped, unless he's talking about present time. idk
In 1995, that shit got no play in the South by nobody other than a nigga who was visiting a HBCU from NY or the tri-state area. And even then, that nigga was called weird for listening to that.
That shit in the tri-state just didn't get any run down here.
He's not wrong, at all. And while SC is the South I'm sure he's talking about Louisiana. I'm in Arkansas and share the sentiment.Bruh what? I don't know what you part of the south you're from, but I grew up in SC and had ties to FL, GA, and NC around that same time and everyone knew about the Purple Tape. Then calling out that Rick Ross collab as if Rae and Outkast weren't the first ones to make popular East/South collab is crazy. You must have been in a coma or something.
boot brotherHe's not wrong, at all. And while SC is the South I'm sure he's talking about Louisiana. I'm in Arkansas and share the sentiment.
Bruh what? I don't know what you part of the south you're from, but I grew up in SC and had ties to FL, GA, and NC around that same time and everyone knew about the Purple Tape. Then calling out that Rick Ross collab as if Rae and Outkast weren't the first ones to make popular East/South collab is crazy. You must have been in a coma or something.
Let's do it this way. I
In 1995. (Real Time) I take it we are hitting mid 40s, late 30s, Brotha, you was 10 years old, or under 12. You wasn't asking your mother to go take you to the store and buy no dayum Raekon, Nobody under 15 was doing that. Nor were your friends of that age doing that. And let's cut the crap out that you were in your bedroom listening to this Album at 13? or listening to it in your parents house, most black parents didn't play that shit, you listened to that shit with the door closed in your room, and mainly it was the older sibling listening to the rap music, in 1995.
Most black parents in the south didn't like rap music.
You couldn't buy albums at 12 without an adult, present and nobody in the South under 15 is spending their allowance on a dayum Raekon album.
Kids under 14 years old in 1995, didn't know about a dayum Raekon.. In the South
You wasn't doing that shit in no 1995
In real time 1995, you had to listen to the music either at a House Party (in which most House Parties were given by your parents, who played the Blues or old songs, or that older sibling and in the south, they wasn't playing no Raekon at a house party) , Radio, or Family Function or on a college campus, Brotha, you weren't outside,, and if you were 'outside' the kids in your neighborhood listened to the shit that was on your radio the local shit that everybody played in that area.
Let's go deeper:
What major single off that album did Raekon have on the radio in 1994 or 1995 (summer of 1995) that was getting played on the Southern radio stations like that? Name it. Most kids/teens heard music on the Radio especially if you didn't have older siblings or that Uncle or cousins that were in their 19-27 age range who listened to rap music.
He released his 3rd single in September 1995 off that album and again, what black spaces or places in the South that YOU was at that was bumping this shit? or his album? Name it?
Name the college HBCU band that played any Raekon song? What frat party played any Raekon song?
What Top 10 single did he have out in 1994, or the summer of 1995 (because in 1995, most radio stations in the South and on the West coast, only played Rap music during a certain time slot and most radio stations had your Top 10 countdown which took up a 1 hour time slot was played off that album in the South?
I can name 10 - 20 rap songs in 1995 that got major play in the South.
Also, the landscape of 1995, most black families listened to R&B songs, your parents listened to oldies, blues or again the new R&B coming out of ATL, babyface, the kids, teens listened to Aaliyah, TLC, Kelly, "his radio shit" unless you had siblings.
Teenagers, under 17 wasn't buying rap albums like that. from other regions other than West Coast, Midwest and Southern artists Especially not in no 1995
I aint in no coma, brotha, I traveled all around the Southern states, every other weekend and on the West Coast all throughout my childhood. I had older siblings and uncles and cousins that listened to rap music.
I had friends in 1995 my age that couldn't listen to rap music, other than the shit being played on the radio.
Where were you at listening to Raekon at the age of 9-14? Name it.
He's not wrong, at all. And while SC is the South I'm sure he's talking about Louisiana. I'm in Arkansas and share the sentiment.
Hey brother, by the age of 7 (in 93) was listening to real uncensored rap albums that my dad let me and my brother listen to without supervision or any bullshit like that. And I’m from Virginia
Just sayin
Hey brother, by the age of 7 (in 93) was listening to real uncensored rap albums that my dad let me and my brother listen to without supervision or any bullshit like that. And I’m from Virginia
Just sayin
And for my 9th birthday, the first CD I ever bought using my money (my dad actually bought it in the store) was Eazy E-Straight off tha Streetz of Muthaphukkin Compton
Also, the landscape of 1995, most black families listened to R&B songs, your parents listened to oldies, blues or again the new R&B coming out of ATL, babyface, the kids, teens listened to Aaliyah, TLC, Kelly, "his radio shit" unless you had siblings.
Teenagers, under 17 wasn't buying rap albums like that. Especially not in no 1995
What teenagers were you around that wasn't buying rap albums??? Wheredeydodatat???
View attachment 1598506
^^^ See that??? I bought Eric B and Rakim's "Follow The Leader" with my lil Hardee's check when it dropped; I was 16 when I copped that. Most of my friends was already buying records and tapes for few years while I was recording shit off the radio. I copped a grip of shit by the end of that summer. I went past two record shops on the way home from school back in those days and I'd grab something almost every week before I was 17.
Were y'all sheltered or something??? I find it REALLY hard to believe that Black 17 year olds anywhere in this country weren't buying hip hop albums in '95 unless they came from ultra strict religious families.
What teenagers were you around that wasn't buying rap albums??? Wheredeydodatat???
View attachment 1598506
^^^ See that??? I bought Eric B and Rakim's "Follow The Leader" with my lil Hardee's check when it dropped; I was 16 when I copped that. Most of my friends was already buying records and tapes for few years while I was recording shit off the radio. I copped a grip of shit by the end of that summer. I went past two record shops on the way home from school back in those days and I'd grab something almost every week before I was 17.
Were y'all sheltered or something??? I find it REALLY hard to believe that Black 17 year olds anywhere in this country weren't buying hip hop albums in '95 unless they came from ultra strict religious families.
Album/record.
17 year old kids in the South didn't own record players. The parents did, and as I stated, most parents in the South in 1995 wasn't fucking with that hardcore rap.
So as a 17 year old kid or under, buy a record and trying to play it in the house "when" wasn't happening in majority of the homes in the southern states or west coast in the 90s.
CD players, most 17 year kids in 1995 didn't have CD players, we had walkmans, and most 17 year old kids in the South in 1995 wasn't buy no Raekon album.
Ok. Let's do it this way
Name me the lead single off that album in 1994 that a 17 year old kid or kid under 17 that they heard on the radio (Girl and Boy) that's in the South would make them wanna buy a Raekon album with their own or parent's money?
In 1995, the artist single would come out before the album, so name me his 1st single that caught the ears of 17 & under black girls and black kids in the south that made them wanna spend their allowance on a Raekon's album
Y'all have gotten away from the point of the thread![]()
Y'all are cause y'all speaking in absolutes based on personal experiences, at least that's how it's coming acrossNah, I'm trying to understand how it seems that almost nobody in the souf was fuckin' with that album. Like, I get it if there were no singles dropped, but y'all wasn't hearing them joints on the radio? It's really fascinating to me in a way that goes beyond the stated nature of this thread. As a DJ and someone that was actively trying to get some shit dropped back in those days I thought I had a pretty good grasp of how certain shit was "regional", but something like OB4CL was getting spins at a nationwide level, or so I thought.
So y'all below The Mason-Dixon Line really didn't hear Raekwon on the radio?