Where is the love?

smackyo

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all i did was say that sucked and called them sellouts which no one here as disproved in anyway. you were the ones that fanned the flames in questioning what makes me an expert on the issue so i showed you and now that i am right you wanna come with peace.

easy question.

what do you call a group that adds a an attractive member of the oppisite sex to the group and proceeds to make music that sounds nothing like thier original sound. this new member dominates their sound and 70 to 80% of the new content is her? therefore they are nothing like their original selves?

one might call them sellouts which is what they are.

i'd be willing to bet 95% of people that are fans of theirs never even knew they had an album before fergie.

i'd also bet that 98% of people that liked them before fergie no longer like them now, unless they were band wagon jumping posers in the first place.
 

Cock Throppled

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Oct 1, 2003
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Don't know how a thread titled "where is the love" turned into a hostile discourse on rap/hip hop, but that's the way some people have to play it. Smackyo, you are a perfect example of a music snob. Becasue you are heavily immersed in a certain type of music you believe only you have a right to determine what fits that genre and how much of a sell-out anyone is. For the record I am not a fan of rap or hip hop, but the world is full of bands that don't "sell out" and for the most part nobody has ever heard of them and they can't make a living. Who the hell cares (other than you, apparently) that some obscure nobody is credited with inventing hip hop? I ask you to go into any music store and look around. Notice anything? There are racks and racks of many types of music. For every fan of BEP's there is a Donny Osmond buyer or Frank Sinatra or Ashley Simpson. Hell, there might even be a Kevin Federline fan somewhere. Doesn't mean one is better or worse or more of a sell-out - just different market for different tastes. Don't take yourself so seriously.
 

schizo_man

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Oct 18, 2003
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Cock Throppled said:
Don't know how a thread titled "where is the love" turned into a hostile discourse on rap/hip hop, but that's the way some people have to play it. Smackyo, you are a perfect example of a music snob. Becasue you are heavily immersed in a certain type of music you believe only you have a right to determine what fits that genre and how much of a sell-out anyone is. For the record I am not a fan of rap or hip hop, but the world is full of bands that don't "sell out" and for the most part nobody has ever heard of them and they can't make a living. Who the hell cares (other than you, apparently) that some obscure nobody is credited with inventing hip hop? I ask you to go into any music store and look around. Notice anything? There are racks and racks of many types of music. For every fan of BEP's there is a Donny Osmond buyer or Frank Sinatra or Ashley Simpson. Hell, there might even be a Kevin Federline fan somewhere. Doesn't mean one is better or worse or more of a sell-out - just different market for different tastes. Don't take yourself so seriously.
Word to your mother! totally agree
 

Disenchanted

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Jan 19, 2006
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Dakota Wood said:
Good luck with that rainman. It seems the board may be undermoderated for awhile, that means lots of piles on, name calling and flaming. I think it's going to be ugly here for the next little bit :(

But if you're looking for the love, I found it in my own thread...twice! :)
Poor Dakota, it's not all fuzzy/wuzzy like she'd prefer. Poor, poor Dakota
 

Disenchanted

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schizo_man said:
dude grind your axe elsewears. it's nobody's fault you have a small dick
Why's that? Because since we turned 2006 Dakota figures everything should be played by her rules? Man there was a time I considered you a Bro!
 

smackyo

pimp supreme
May 18, 2005
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Cock Throppled said:
Don't know how a thread titled "where is the love" turned into a hostile discourse on rap/hip hop, but that's the way some people have to play it. Smackyo, you are a perfect example of a music snob. Becasue you are heavily immersed in a certain type of music you believe only you have a right to determine what fits that genre and how much of a sell-out anyone is. For the record I am not a fan of rap or hip hop, but the world is full of bands that don't "sell out" and for the most part nobody has ever heard of them and they can't make a living. Who the hell cares (other than you, apparently) that some obscure nobody is credited with inventing hip hop? I ask you to go into any music store and look around. Notice anything? There are racks and racks of many types of music. For every fan of BEP's there is a Donny Osmond buyer or Frank Sinatra or Ashley Simpson. Hell, there might even be a Kevin Federline fan somewhere. Doesn't mean one is better or worse or more of a sell-out - just different market for different tastes. Don't take yourself so seriously.
excuse me sir but i don't just listen to hip hop, i listen to everything from marvin gaye to iron maiden to johnny cash to run dmc to bach. don't believe me then quiz me. as for why i don't like sellouts to hip hop music and why i take the music seriously are as follows, oh and just for the record kool dj hurk and afrikka bambatta are not obscure nobody's for those who know.

if you spent your time growing up in two places, place A. a small town in northern ontario, and place B. big city ontario(toronto southern ontario region)

i developed my taste for REAL hip hop in the city where i was a white kid living on the outskirts of the blackest of the black neighborhoods that canada has to offer. i had to go through a lot of shit to prove myself worthy of peoples respect. music and sports were those ways.

as for the small town situation. we moved there from the city, eventually i made my way south again but not till i was a bit older. there is no one there except white rednecks and maybe one chinese family per town. i got called nigger every day for playing basketball and listening to hip hop music. i had to fight a lot and deal with the verbal abuse every day. keep in mind i didn't dress overly hip hop style nor did i talk the street ebonics. but the nigger, wigger white boy insults still came.

what was funny was that once i began making friends, more and more people in the area started listening to it and asking me to make them dj mix tapes. so i did and eventually i had myself a little cult following.:) that seemed to keep growing.

to those that know hip hop is more then just music, it is a type of subculture if you will, rap is the oral expression of hip hop. it is a music born out of poverty and rebellion. it gave a voice to people that otherwise didn't have one. therefore to see what the pop version of hip hop is now sickens me to the core. i am a person that has lived that lifestyle most of my life and delt with the consequences of loving that style of music in that time and place.

therefore to see a group like the black eyed peas that used to be a part of that culture and turn their back on it disgusts me. therefore mr. cock throppled if you don't know anything about it then i would refreign from telling me what it is. now i'm not saying this to start a flame war or anything cause i do enjoy most of your posts and find you quite entertaining. however i do know about this subject and music in general so don't class me like you did as being some overzelous wigger hip hop music snob.

most people that listen to this garbage today that is considered hip hop don't know thing one about the music, its history or the culture. they are a bunch of kids that come from the burbs and claim it as their own without knowing shit about it. that is what pisses me off.

if you listen to past bep albums in their lyrics you will hear them say that they would never do what they are doing now just to please the masses of sheep.

THE PEAS ARE SELLOUTS AND THEY SUCK!
 

Cock Throppled

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Once upon a time there was gospel music - born and nurtured in poor, black America. Then there was soul, banip,ba: then there was rap, banip,ba. You have every right smackyo to enjoy the music and the lifestyle and even be protective of your adopted culture like it is yours. All I'm saying is, basically nobody cares. We all have our specialties, our pursuits our interests; things we have discovered, been attracted to and immersed ourselves in and feel like they are part of our souls. Kind of like finding that special SP. By being protective of the hip hop lifestyle and all that that entails - you have become a snob. Same as a wine snob, art snob or status snob. Doesn't make you a bad guy, just really involved. There is a big, bad world out there and most of it doesn't give a rat's ass about most of the stuff we think is cool. Think the starving kids in Somalia care which ring tone anyone has? Or if people rebuilding from the Pakistan earthquake care if Ice T is studying acting? We get it - you think the BEP's are sell-outs. It's not worth the angst you are putting yourself though. I remember the first time I heard a Stones song in a commercial how I felt betrayed. My bill for your anaylsis is in the mail. You're welcome.
 

stryker

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Jan 23, 2004
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Brandi said:
Stryker since you dont know what it is I will tell you.
Is it possible to do this hip hop thing to Ten years after or GrandFunk Railroad? I't a dance right??or a new form of music??Just kidding,my daughters drive me Fucking nuts when they come home,they're even getting smartass and asking if they can play this on MY Stereo:eek: Not gonna happen!
 

wolverine

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Nov 11, 2002
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smackyo said:
it is a music born out of poverty and rebellion. it gave a voice to people that otherwise didn't have one.
I don't really follow hip-hop/rap much, but I've observed that it's really not that rebellious anymore, is it? Not when there's corporate radio stations playing the music, and schools teaching you how to dance it, guys like Puff Daddy (or whatever his name is this month) being the multimillionaire mogul, and your favorite hip-hop outfit ( :p ) playing the Grey Cup halftime.
 

wolverine

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Oh, and BTW smackdown, don't worry:
Give 'em another couple of years, and Fergie will leave to embark on a successful solo career a la Gwen Stefani.
 

smackyo

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May 18, 2005
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wolverine said:
I don't really follow hip-hop/rap much, but I've observed that it's really not that rebellious anymore, is it? Not when there's corporate radio stations playing the music, and schools teaching you how to dance it, guys like Puff Daddy (or whatever his name is this month) being the multimillionaire mogul, and your favorite hip-hop outfit ( :p ) playing the Grey Cup halftime.
that is my problem right there, exactly what you just said. what you see as hip hop culture and music is not hip hop culture and music. the version you get to see and hear is bullshit sellout garbage that has nothing to do with the original culture and art forms.

put it this way. if you hear a (what you think is) hip hop song on mainstream radio then that is not hip hop.

puff daddy never was nor will ever be a part of hip hop culture. he sucked ass right from the beginning.

the dance that you see that is called "hip hop dancing" is not representitive of it. the dance is actually called "break" not what you see on tv.
 

wolverine

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You can say the same for many other musical genres. Look at punk for example. It's still churning along and attracting the underground anti-establishment types who piss on Green Day for being sellouts.
 

westwoody

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Jun 10, 2004
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smackyo said:
band wagon jumping posers
All you guys that use computers nowadays are just bandwagon jumpers. I was programming a GE115 back in 1972, in Assembler and Fortran. And we used punchcards, like real men, not like those sellouts who use keyboards because they're "easy".
 

smackyo

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westwoody said:
All you guys that use computers nowadays are just bandwagon jumpers. I was programming a GE115 back in 1972, in Assembler and Fortran. And we used punchcards, like real men, not like those sellouts who use keyboards because they're "easy".
not even close to being the same thing. also yes, green day are sellouts too. funny also how in the 80's mainstreams idea of punk was billy idol?????? now i like billy idol for what he is. he never said he was punk rock, that is just what the industry labled him.
 
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