@ Non East Coast Posters, Do You Have TM101 Ranked Over..

Let's come from this angle

In 1995, Freak Nic was big, Do you really think folks (chicks included) came down to ATL and was bumping Raekown music in 1995?? Like the folks that were in the South, do you believe that they were pulling up to Freak Nic bumping Raekon? Folks out of FL, LA, MS, TX, GA, NC, SC, in droves?

I've never heard anybody or seen anybody from the South pop into their car cassette tape deck that Raekon album lol

Even the drive down to ATL to go to freak nic, nobody in the South is doing that in the summer of 1996

Were you at Freaknic in '95? Were you of age to be there???
 
You didn't always have to "buy" tapes back then. Making copies with a dual cassette deck was a thing and had been for over a decade in '95. We made copies for each other back in middle school and high school. The only money we needed to spend was on blank tapes.

I gotta know tho... How old were you in '95?

Big facts, Very true.

But brotha, nobody in my region or the other region was asking to make a copy of Rae's album in 1995. Again, I'm speaking from July 28, 1995 to December 31st of 1995

Nobody's making a copy of an old album in 1995, so if it wasn't made 2 weeks or a month, maybe 2 after, that album is after thought especially in a region like the South and West Coast.

95, I had 3 uncles 17, 21, 24
 
Were you at Freaknic? Were you of age to be there???

Over 18? Hell nah, but I was there...

Brotha I lived life.

That's why I can speak on many of things, I was in it in real time or was around it. No better than anybody, but i was one of the lucky ones to have been outside outside.
 
Brotha,

I couldn't gather up 20 chicks in both regions combined that went out and copped a Raekown album in 1995. That's Chicks.

Street cats weren't listening to this dude's album...and again, you mentioned walkman, let's start here, what 15 year old is walking around in 1995 on the West Coast or in the South listening to Raekown's album??

Let's do this, when would you even listen to your walkman?? Cuz in 1995, you couldn't listen to it at school, the teachers would take it away, you had to buy the 'tape' by the way, so what 15 year old mama or daddy is buying or bringing to the store to cop a Raekown album in 1995, when I gave you a list of albums that came out in 1995?

On that list that listed in my previous post, there are several West Coast artist and before a West Coast teenager especially a kid buy an album, they would buy an album by someone that they are familiar with. Not a Raekwon album who they are NOT familiar with


And in 1995, kids were buying the albums that were popular in their area, with their money and they would buy 'singles' of the songs buy their favorite artist.


How folks cop albums every weekend, that wasn't the case with your average kid or teenager, or person unless you're over 30. Kids didn't have a bunch of cassette albums, they had a bunch cassette tapes with singles in 1995 brotha

You realize a walkman wasn't the only way to listen to music right? As Koncept already told you plenty also had radios with tape decks in them. And an album about the ups and downs of hustling and being in the streets was definitely listened to by street niggas. Why you think it's regarded as highly as it is? This is why your personal lack of knowledge on the album is hurting you. Because you're saying the demographic the album was speaking from the pov of and highly praised it was somehow ignoring it. You're also either intentionally overexaggerating or intentionally being obtuse because not 1 person has said it was coming out of every speaker or headphone. Just that you can't speak for what millions of people across multiple regions were doing and it was a more popular album than you're giving it credit for. You can only speak to what you were exposed to and you keep trying to speak for everyone. Shit in 1995 Gangsta Paradise was the biggest selling rap single. Based on what you saying because Coolio was from LA that's solely based on LA people buying it lol. You keep thinking somehow nobody in the south knew Raekwon til the 2010s because of a Rick Ross feature though when by 2010 Wu Tang had multiple #1 albums and projects already regarded as classics. Somehow Rick Ross feature is what put southerners into Raekwon
 
You realize a walkman wasn't the only way to listen to music right? As Koncept already told you plenty also had radios with tape decks in them. And an album about the ups and downs of hustling and being in the streets was definitely listened to by street niggas. Why you think it's regarded as highly as it is? This is why your personal lack of knowledge on the album is hurting you. Because you're saying the demographic the album was speaking from the pov of and highly praised it was somehow ignoring it. You're also either intentionally overexaggerating or intentionally being obtuse because not 1 person has said it was coming out of every speaker or headphone. Just that you can't speak for what millions of people across multiple regions were doing and it was a more popular album than you're giving it credit for. You can only speak to what you were exposed to and you keep trying to speak for everyone. Shit in 1995 Gangsta Paradise was the biggest selling rap single. Based on what you saying because Coolio was from LA that's solely based on LA people buying it lol. You keep thinking somehow nobody in the south knew Raekwon til the 2010s because of a Rick Ross feature though when by 2010 Wu Tang had multiple #1 albums and projects already regarded as classics. Somehow Rick Ross feature is what put southerners into Raekwon

Brotha,
A radio with a cassette deck in 1995 in a black house, what 8-17 year old is listening to a Raekon album on the West Coast or Down South? Why would a 8-17 year old listen to that album from either coast? Girl or Boy?
You listen to music that you already are familiar with. This is how it was back in 1995 brotha. How would someone from the south listen to Method Man??? From a banging ass radio single that reached his radio station or a jamming as video that they've seen. Method Man had one. Raekown did not have one that won over the ears of folks in the south and west coast.

Now you're telling me that street niggas in the SOUTH and WEST coast was bumping this album when you were in neither region?
 
You realize a walkman wasn't the only way to listen to music right? As Koncept already told you plenty also had radios with tape decks in them. And an album about the ups and downs of hustling and being in the streets was definitely listened to by street niggas. Why you think it's regarded as highly as it is? This is why your personal lack of knowledge on the album is hurting you. Because you're saying the demographic the album was speaking from the pov of and highly praised it was somehow ignoring it. You're also either intentionally overexaggerating or intentionally being obtuse because not 1 person has said it was coming out of every speaker or headphone. Just that you can't speak for what millions of people across multiple regions were doing and it was a more popular album than you're giving it credit for. You can only speak to what you were exposed to and you keep trying to speak for everyone. Shit in 1995 Gangsta Paradise was the biggest selling rap single. Based on what you saying because Coolio was from LA that's solely based on LA people buying it lol. You keep thinking somehow nobody in the south knew Raekwon til the 2010s because of a Rick Ross feature though when by 2010 Wu Tang had multiple #1 albums and projects already regarded as classics. Somehow Rick Ross feature is what put southerners into Raekwon


Brotha in 1995, Radios in the South did a Rap Top 10 countdown, Most radios in the south and west coast did not play Rap music 24/7 like they do NOW.

So in the little time that rap music played, what single off that album before July 28, 1995 or on July 28, 1995, when the album came out, What single that the record company have out at the time was spinning in the South or West? or showing up on these Rap Countdowns in these regions every night?

What single of that Raekon album that 10 year old- 18 year old was calling the radio station requesting to be played?
 
You realize a walkman wasn't the only way to listen to music right? As Koncept already told you plenty also had radios with tape decks in them. And an album about the ups and downs of hustling and being in the streets was definitely listened to by street niggas. Why you think it's regarded as highly as it is? This is why your personal lack of knowledge on the album is hurting you. Because you're saying the demographic the album was speaking from the pov of and highly praised it was somehow ignoring it. You're also either intentionally overexaggerating or intentionally being obtuse because not 1 person has said it was coming out of every speaker or headphone. Just that you can't speak for what millions of people across multiple regions were doing and it was a more popular album than you're giving it credit for. You can only speak to what you were exposed to and you keep trying to speak for everyone. Shit in 1995 Gangsta Paradise was the biggest selling rap single. Based on what you saying because Coolio was from LA that's solely based on LA people buying it lol. You keep thinking somehow nobody in the south knew Raekwon til the 2010s because of a Rick Ross feature though when by 2010 Wu Tang had multiple #1 albums and projects already regarded as classics. Somehow Rick Ross feature is what put southerners into Raekwon


July 28, 1995, before that, what singles or songs did Raekon himself have out on the radio that made street niggas that live in the South and West coast hear that made them wanna cop his album on July 28th 1995??

Brotha, you're adding extra on stuff that has nothing to do with what I am saying, but I'ma just ask you some simple 3rd grader questions so that I can pick apart your stance and tighten my own


Put down something that he did before July 28th 1995, that made the street niggas in the South and West coast say, let me skip over these albums like Bone and BG knock and all of the other artist that I'm familiar with and let me cop this Raekown album, a cat that I somewhat never heard of....


Put down something that he did before July 28th, 1995 that made an 8 year or a 16 year old kid from the West Coast or South say that I wanna cop this album when it comes out for my walkman or cassette deck on July 28th, 1995
 
Over 18? Hell nah, but I was there...

Brotha I lived life.

That's why I can speak on many of things, I was in it in real time or was around it. No better than anybody, but i was one of the lucky ones to have been outside outside.

Were you even 15 in '95???
 
You realize a walkman wasn't the only way to listen to music right? As Koncept already told you plenty also had radios with tape decks in them. And an album about the ups and downs of hustling and being in the streets was definitely listened to by street niggas. Why you think it's regarded as highly as it is? This is why your personal lack of knowledge on the album is hurting you. Because you're saying the demographic the album was speaking from the pov of and highly praised it was somehow ignoring it. You're also either intentionally overexaggerating or intentionally being obtuse because not 1 person has said it was coming out of every speaker or headphone. Just that you can't speak for what millions of people across multiple regions were doing and it was a more popular album than you're giving it credit for. You can only speak to what you were exposed to and you keep trying to speak for everyone. Shit in 1995 Gangsta Paradise was the biggest selling rap single. Based on what you saying because Coolio was from LA that's solely based on LA people buying it lol. You keep thinking somehow nobody in the south knew Raekwon til the 2010s because of a Rick Ross feature though when by 2010 Wu Tang had multiple #1 albums and projects already regarded as classics. Somehow Rick Ross feature is what put southerners into Raekwon

Juvenile did an interview and many more artist have stated that Jay-Z wasn't played in the south

Many other folks stated that was on the West Coast, when Jay-z came out in 1996, he wasn't played in the West region, but you want to sit up here and say that Raekon who didn't have nothing out was played in the South and on the West Coast by street niggas?

So tell us, why didn't street niggas play Jay-Z when he came out since you said the street niggas in the South and West gravitated to Rae's album cuz he talked about it in his album??

Jay-z has street shit all over Reasonable Doubt which came out in 1996, but yet street niggas in the South and West wasn't fuckin wit it.

So the street niggas in the South and West Coast fucked with Rae's album but skipped over Jay-Z Reasonable Doubt Album?
 
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.

I was 15 in 95, nigga shut the fuck up.
 
You realize a walkman wasn't the only way to listen to music right? As Koncept already told you plenty also had radios with tape decks in them. And an album about the ups and downs of hustling and being in the streets was definitely listened to by street niggas. Why you think it's regarded as highly as it is? This is why your personal lack of knowledge on the album is hurting you. Because you're saying the demographic the album was speaking from the pov of and highly praised it was somehow ignoring it. You're also either intentionally overexaggerating or intentionally being obtuse because not 1 person has said it was coming out of every speaker or headphone. Just that you can't speak for what millions of people across multiple regions were doing and it was a more popular album than you're giving it credit for. You can only speak to what you were exposed to and you keep trying to speak for everyone. Shit in 1995 Gangsta Paradise was the biggest selling rap single. Based on what you saying because Coolio was from LA that's solely based on LA people buying it lol. You keep thinking somehow nobody in the south knew Raekwon til the 2010s because of a Rick Ross feature though when by 2010 Wu Tang had multiple #1 albums and projects already regarded as classics. Somehow Rick Ross feature is what put southerners into Raekwon

Millions of people??

Brotha, that Rea album just went platinum in 2020 and that album came out in 1995. Brotha millions of people didn't even buy this dude cassette in 1995 lol.

Brotha that east coast rap wasn't what folks down here and on the west coast gravitated to in 1995, that hip hop word play wasn't what folks in the West and South gravitated to.

That's why Jay-Z didn't get no play down here or on the West Coast, and his whole rap is on some street shit.

Street niggas down south and on the west coast in 1995, wasn't on that miracle whip rap.

That's why Jay couldn't get no run down here, or Nas until If I ruled the world came out, if your name wasn't Biggie or Mase, in the 90s, LL and he wasn't a miracle whip rapper you wasn't being played heavy.

It's not hate, it just how it was.
 
Juvenile did an interview and many more artist have stated that Jay-Z wasn't played in the south

Many other folks stated that was on the West Coast, when Jay-z came out in 1996, he wasn't played in the West region, but you want to sit up here and say that Raekon who didn't have nothing out was played in the South and on the West Coast by street niggas?

So tell us, why didn't street niggas play Jay-Z when he came out since you said the street niggas in the South and West gravitated to Rae's album cuz he talked about it in his album??

Jay-z has street shit all over Reasonable Doubt which came out in 1996, but yet street niggas in the South and West wasn't fuckin wit it.

So the street niggas in the South and West Coast fucked with Rae's album but skipped over Jay-Z Reasonable Doubt Album?

The bold is literally not true. You not dealing with facts. Just your own pov which you can't seem to get isn't the only one
 
Millions of people??

Brotha, that Rea album just went platinum in 2020 and that album came out in 1995. Brotha millions of people didn't even buy this dude cassette in 1995 lol.

Brotha that east coast rap wasn't what folks down here and on the west coast gravitated to in 1995, that hip hop word play wasn't what folks in the West and South gravitated to.

That's why Jay-Z didn't get no play down here or on the West Coast, and his whole rap is on some street shit.

Street niggas down south and on the west coast in 1995, wasn't on that miracle whip rap.

That's why Jay couldn't get no run down here, or Nas until If I ruled the world came out, if your name wasn't Biggie or Mase, in the 90s, LL and he wasn't a miracle whip rapper you wasn't being played heavy.

It's not hate, it just how it was.

Yes there are millions of people across the south and west coast. Was that a shock to you? I never said millions of people brought the album. I said you can't speak to what millions were listening to based on your limited knowledge
 
The bold is literally not true. You not dealing with facts. Just your own pov which you can't seem to get isn't the only one

I asked, 2nd time, what did Rae have out music wise that made kids 8-12 and teenagers 13-19 living in the South and on the West Coast in 1995 want to go and cop his debut album on July 28th 1995

or Street niggas in the South and on the West Coast to want to go to the store on July 28th 1995 or a maybe a week afterwards and cop HIS album?

It just a question brotha that you can answer.
 
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Yes there are millions of people across the south and west coast. Was that a shock to you? I never said millions of people brought the album. I said you can't speak to what millions were listening to based on your limited knowledge
I counter that millions of people living in the south to break that down and let you know that he didn't even sell a million albums in 1995.

That millions of people you put out that is moot.

We are talking about who copped the cassette tape on July 28th 1995, that are from the South and West Coast....


If you're suggesting that millions of people listened that are living in the South and West Coast listened to Rae's album 1995, then that's a lie.

That's the part I want you to focus on, millions of people do live in the south and west coast......now...millions of people that's living in the south and west coast in 1995 aint listening to no dayum Raekons album.

You aint say it but I'm telling you this...
 
I asked, 2nd time, what did Rae have out music wise that made kids 8-12 and teenagers 13-19 living in the South and on the West Coast in 1995 want to go and cop his debut album on July 28th 1995?

It just a question brotha that you can answer.

Your statement was that he didn't have anything out. That's flat out false. Your statement i bolded isn't actually based in reality. But to answer the switch up...the Wu Tang singles you keep pretending didn't exist. Ice Cream was also the biggest single off the album and was popular as hell. Top 40 on Billboard, top 5 on the rap charts. That doesn't happen unless the song is popular nationwide
 
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