CNN Crowns Nas With Title- "The Greatest Lyricist Of All Time"

I think these are good times in Hip-Hop. I never thought a time would come when mainstream would give Nas the credit he deserves. 22 years in the game, 10 albums and counting, and Nas keeps getting better. So, when CNN says that Nas is "The Greatest Lyricist Of All Time", you know they did their homework. I remember Nas rhyming on a track off his Nastradamus album- "Don't wait till i'm dead to say I was the best." A lot of people seem to overlook him cos they don't get him...like he said on Hate Me Now- "people hate what they don't understand"...his lyrics fly over their heads.





Read CNN's conclusion below-


With "Life is Good," Nas dropped his ninth No. 1 hip-hop album since 1994. Seven of those have gone platinum, which places him second among rappers only to Jay-Z with 11. (We're not counting compilations or collaborations here, only original solo efforts, and yes, Tupac Shakur had nine, but five were posthumous releases.)
It also ties Nas with Snoop Dogg or Snoop Lion or whatever his name is, and it puts the Queens native one plaque ahead of Eminem, Too Short, OutKast and LL Cool J, all of whom belong in the greatest-ever discussion, as well.






As for the inevitable, "What about Tupac and Biggie?" question, Nas acknowledge the greatness of the late rap icons. "I just think Biggie was something else. He was the Hitchcock of this thing, man," Nas told CNN. "He told you a story. There was a seriousness that came with it that can't compare with nothing."
The "Cherry Wine" rapper added, "I'd probably be better if they were still around. I think I'd be a lot better."
If you're a true rap fans you've already thought of that line from Jay-Z's "Where I'm From": "I from where ni--as pull your card, and argue all day about who's the best MC's, Biggie, Jay-Z, and Nas."
And as for Hova in this debate, according to CNN writer Eliott C. McLaughlin, the Brooklyn MC is most definitely skilled, but only has the edge on Nas when it comes to business side of the game:
Here is where that "lyricist" v. "hip-hop artist" distinction becomes important.
Jay-Z said it best himself: He's not a businessman; he's a business, man. When you consider 11 of his albums have sold at least a million copies -- seven of those 2 million or more -- as have his four collaborations, two with R. Kelly and one each with Linkin Park and Kanye West, it's as if Hova is King Midas, but with platinum.
He's a hit maker extraordinaire, maybe the world's best, but that doesn't translate to best lyricist. Jay-Z acknowledged as much on "Moment of Clarity" when he rhymed, "If skills sold, truth be told/I'd probably be, lyrically, Talib Kweli."
Even in dissing Nas on "Takeover," he explained why he had sampled Nas' lyrics on "Dead Presidents": "So yeah, I sampled your voice; you was using it wrong/you made it a hot line; I made it a hot song." (bossip.com)

No comments:

Post a Comment