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I didn't own one either, unless you wanna count the lil Fisher Price joint that I could swipe from my younger sisters room:
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I did have a dual cassette boom box of my own that I got for Christmas when I was 14 or 15 and by the time I was back in school at 16 I had a walkman. Back then I was taping shit off the radio, but when I got that Eric B and Rakim joint I made a copy on cassette using my folks' stereo on my day off while they were at work. I bought significantly more tapes than vinyl back then (something I stated maybe a week or so ago in the Physical Media thread), and I kept them in my room. If I played any rap shit out loud in my room, it was usually the positive shit like BDP, Rakim, Public Enemy, KC Flightt, and others so if moms came in my room and heard it she wouldn't trip over it.
So, lemme get this straight: y'all had a Walkman but never bought tapes??? Y'all ain't sneak to buy shit and hide it in your rooms??? 'Cause I know my moms found my Too $hort and 2 Live Crew tapes that I had bought when I was 16, listened to them, and confiscated them telling me I didn't need to be listening to such "filth". A week later I swiped them back from their room; she hid them in a dresser drawer.
As for what single did Raekwon drop that y'all listened to? Dunno, I was still in Metro Detroit in them days, and, yeah... Glaciers of Ice and, particularly, Ice Cream was in rotation on the radio out this way; Ice Cream being the more popular of the two.
I can't speak on y'alls listening and purchasing habits in the souf back then, but I do find it odd that y'all wasn't buying your own tapes in those days as teenagers.
Your dad had to buy it, Most parents in the early 90s, mid 90s didn't even fuck with rap music like that, what kid in the south is taking their allowance money or birthday money, going to Circuit City to buy a Raekon album? to bring home to listen to in their walkman?
Most kids (black) didn't have CD players like that lol. (Remember Martin and that EP when they stole his CD player) Martin paid 500 hunnid dollars for a CD player in 1995, "Another hunnid you could have gotten this is what he told Pam, and she had gotten a raise lol" what 9 year old kid is getting a CD player? lol, that shit was rare, but I'm not saying that kids didn't get them for Christmas, but it was rare. We had walkmans And as a 9 year old black kid, where are you even listening to a Raekow album at? And who are you telling this shit too? cuz most kids back in the 90s, when we actually heard a new song or a tight song, we would brag about it to our friends or the niggas and chicks at school?
What chick is buying a Raekon album that's under 15 years old?
Come on man... That nigga shit aint get no burn down here in real time. Aint no kid asking their parents to bring them to the store, spend their allowance or birthday money on a fucking Raekon album in the South in 1995.
Most kids were buying 'singles' in 1995
Nah, 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?
i was typing from my phone, got a call and didnt realize i had pressed post lol
can you point these people out? lolOnce again no diss......
But what im taking away from the last few post is people are casting judgement on an album they've never even heard.
Brotha like I stated, Raekon, most niggas in the south got on Raekon for his music music was when he got on Ross track. Hood niggas weren't on Raekon. lol
And again it's no diss to the brotha.
I got on Wu-tung through @AP,
He was the 1st dude that I met that acutally brought the Wu-tang album, the bees and I remember clowning the shit outta him for listening to it.
You wasn't the cool kid if you listened to anything outside of the South, West or Midwest, you were odd.
Wayne got clowned by Baby and other N.O. dudes for bumping Jay back in 97 lol. and that nigga somehow (I don't know) was prolly the only nigga at his age listened to his shit, his own ppl clowned him.
can you point these people out? lol
I didn't own one either, unless you wanna count the lil Fisher Price joint that I could swipe from my younger sisters room:
![]()
I did have a dual cassette boom box of my own that I got for Christmas when I was 14 or 15 and by the time I was back in school at 16 I had a walkman. Back then I was taping shit off the radio, but when I got that Eric B and Rakim joint I made a copy on cassette using my folks' stereo on my day off while they were at work. I bought significantly more tapes than vinyl back then (something I stated maybe a week or so ago in the Physical Media thread), and I kept them in my room. If I played any rap shit out loud in my room, it was usually the positive shit like BDP, Rakim, Public Enemy, KC Flightt, and others so if moms came in my room and heard it she wouldn't trip over it.
So, lemme get this straight: y'all had a Walkman but never bought tapes??? Y'all ain't sneak to buy shit and hide it in your rooms??? 'Cause I know my moms found my Too $hort and 2 Live Crew tapes that I had bought when I was 16, listened to them, and confiscated them telling me I didn't need to be listening to such "filth". A week later I swiped them back from their room; she hid them in a dresser drawer.
As for what single did Raekwon drop that y'all listened to? Dunno, I was still in Metro Detroit in them days, and, yeah... Glaciers of Ice and, particularly, Ice Cream was in rotation on the radio out this way; Ice Cream being the more popular of the two.
I can't speak on y'alls listening and purchasing habits in the souf back then, but I do find it odd that y'all wasn't buying your own tapes in those days as teenagers.
If you're talking about Molasses that dropped in 2011. Outkast had Raekwon on Skew It On The Bar-B in 1998 and that was a pretty successful single. People in the south knew of Raekwon. How frequent they bumped his music likely changes based on where, but he wasn't some unknown random person to rap fans in the south. WuTang as a whole was already massive by the late 90s.
Once again no diss......
But what im taking away from the last few post is people are casting judgement on an album they've never even heard.
My brother and I got a Sega cd for Christmas in 94 and shared a walkman in 95. We weren’t listenin to Wutang like that but listened to a lot of west coast rap at the time.
We had nobody really to talk to about the albums but each other cuz like you said, most kids weren’t allowed to listen to that shit
Once again no diss......
But what im taking away from the last few post is people are casting judgement on an album they've never even heard.
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
I think folks are taking the albums that folks deem as genius albums and comparing them to the simple albums that made an impact in a major region and casting an overview of how other folks from other areas of the country didn't go crazy over said genius album.
TM101 was a movement compared to what Raekon album did when it dropped. TM101 stopped time here in the south.
For Example, Nas album, his 1st one, I made a post or thread on how I couldn't find 10 people in the South that bumped that album, but if you ask the average podcaster or radio head in one of these tri-states or anybody for that matter in 2026, they may very well talk about how good that album was or rank it as Nas best album, when in real time, that album go no burn in places in the South and on the West coast, in real time
It more so (to me) have to do with 'impact' in the South or other areas vs the quality of the albums that may be compared.
Hot Boyz dropped Gurella Warefare in the Summer of 1999, in the south, that album stopped time, now compare it to that Nas album or Jay-Z Reasonable Doubt, folks in the South would pick GW over Nas 1st album, now is it a better album that Nas? I don't know, I, personally haven't heard Nas 1st album, but I ran GW until the tape popped that 99 summer.
It just to me when these topics are brought up, (I love them) it makes me go back into real time to really get the essence of how the music scene really was when the albums or singles dropped.
You still have folks in 2026 thinking Jay-Z Reasonable Doubt was a big album when it dropped in real time, when it wasn't
All of Master P albums especially Ghetto D was more Impactful than any of Jayz albums before Hard Knock Life, Nas or any rapper from the tri-state area not named Biggie, Mase or DMX
Same with me, we had 2 walkmans to share, my sisters had their own, and I had to 'steal' or sneak to listen to my cousins and brothers shit. And that's how I would listen to the hardcore music, I couldn't go out and ask my mama to buy me the new Dayton Family album etc. lol
Most black families were on that Delories Tucker type vibe, they didn't say it all loud like her but they felt that rap music contributed to the violence around the area. That was around the time, politicians wanted to censor rap and wanted the 3 strike rule and shit etc etc.
Some parents weren't as strict like DT, mines just couldn't stand it but they never not allowed us to listen to the shit...
They just didn't understand it really, mines...but you had some parents who thought it brought on violence etc...no diss.
But the walkman shit, I had to share the shit, we got walkmans either for Christmas or as a birthday present and that shit was a real deal.... I wasn't listening to Wu-Tang as I stated, AP was the first fuck nigga to put me on that shit and I clowned him for listening to it...
I was in awe that the nigga knew all the wu-tang members, and shit, but he was the ONLY dude that I knew who copped their CDs, I think it was a double disc, and that fuck nigga tried to play me ever song on that shit...
I got the Super Nintendo in 95. My 1st album I bought or rather stole was Kris Kross Da Bomb....
Idk if that poster lives in NY but that isn’t a sentiment I’ve heard up here in quite sometime. The last rapper from NY to blow up was Pop Smoke & even tho I wasn’t a fan, a lot of ppl were totally okay with thatAbout 3 posts up lol
Well let me just say it like this, in 1998, your average 16 year or 17 and under in the south couldn't name you 2 Raekwon songs if you asked them to, and I say it this because he didn't have anything that niggas in the south at that age could chew on to say "oh that's ole dude that has this song out that we still play"
Outkast was prolly a big fan of his, had to been, I'm sure nobody from ATL was asking for them to feature Raekwon on any of their 90s albums, the most known Wu-Tang members at that time were ODB and Method Man from niggas in the south at that time.
Niggas in the South knew ODB from Mariah Carey remix and other stuff, they knew Method from his MJB single and other stuff, again, it was nothing that Raekwon had out that made niggas be on some, yea we need that Raekwon feature, I think Outkast meshes with his style or they can be put into the same unorthodox box as a Raekwon, when it comes rapping.
A lot of deep southerners don’t consider us the south. I know it does not make any logical sense but rarely at least when it comes to rap do they view us as part of the southern vibe