And if you go back, you'll hear me saying, like, Ja’niyah, Summer Walker, I love them-and that didn't change. I think she the best R&B artist in the world, the best R&B artist I ever heard. “Young Bleu, I’m sure you’re familiar with him, but it's another one of my artists, her name is Ja’niyah. It's like a Memphis term or something like that. He hopped out wearing this.’ He gave it, like he dripping. If you go hard at something or if something fresh or you hop out, you pull up, you hop out with that drip, ‘Oooh, he gave it. You got to tell them you sorry.’ A lot of people go through that.” But I'm like, ‘Nah, you gotta fix it how you broke it. They'll try to post stuff, try to get your attention, but then turn around and try to U-turn when they see it don't work or they don't get your attention. “You got people, they'll throw little slick shots on the internet. I just thought it was like a cool idea because at the top of the song, he was like, 'We in here deep as hell…Switches and Dracs.' And I was like, 'Ooh, that’s hard.'” So that's why Durk is on the chorus-I was trying to get him to do a whole verse, but then we had to stop. I think the police or somebody came and we had to stop, and he was like, ‘We just gonna pick back up on this later,’ but then me and him both so busy. Some stuff had ended up happening at the studio. “When I first made the song, it was a late studio night. Below, Moneybagg Yo breaks down the Reloaded additions. “I'm giving them everything they love about Moneybagg Yo.” With A Gangsta’s Pain: Reloaded, the MC added seven more tracks of his undeniable swagger. “I feel like by me sitting down and just figuring it out, I'm going to go back to the roots,” he says. But regardless of which songs he’s referring to, the M-town representer claims that the break in action the world was forced to observe showed him exactly who he is. Here, Yo might be referring to the lead single from his fourth album A Gangsta’s Pain, the Future collaboration and instantaneous smash hit “Hard for the Next.” Or maybe he’s referring to an altogether trippy exploration of relationships through the eyes of a lean addict called “Wockesha.” Maybe he’s just that proud of the hard-charging “Shottas,” where he debuts a completely new flow. The COVID situation had to happen, and by that happening, I sat down and thought about everything and I made the biggest songs of my career-of my life-in the pandemic.” “I just was in a different stage of my life and I was moving around a lot. “I just feel like a lot of my old music the fans didn't accept how I wanted them to accept it,” he says. It is now a word to generally describe full-length albums released for free, which is the modern form of mixtape that was made a popular following by 50 Cent and his group G-Unit in the early 2000s, sometimes containing all original music, other times composed of freestyles and remixes of popular tracks.When it’s all said and done, there’s no telling how COVID-19 will have affected the artistry of some of our favorite music-makers-except in the case of Moneybagg Yo, who tells Apple Music very plainly that it made him a more focused MC. In the hip hop scene, mix tape is often displayed as a single term mixtape. Also since the 1990s, it describes releases used to promote one or more new artists, or as a pre-release by more established artists to promote upcoming "official" albums. Blend tapes became increasingly popular by the mid-1990s, and fans increasingly looked for exclusive tracks and freestyles on the tapes. Ron G moved the mixtape forward in the early 1990s by blending R&B a cappellas with hip hop beats (known as "blends"). In the mid-1980s, DJs, such as Brucie B, began recording their live music and selling their own mixtapes, which was soon followed by other DJs such as Kid Capri and Doo Wop. (who later became known as Whiz Kid) and DJ Super V would create personalized House Tapes which would eventually circulate throughout New York City. In the late 70's into the early 80's DJs began recording mixtapes out of their homes, referring to them as House Tapes. As more tapes became available, they began to be collected and traded by fans. Hip hop mixtapes first appeared in the mid-1970s in New York City, featuring artists such as Kool Herc and Afrika Bambaataa. In hip hop's earliest days, the music only existed in live form, and the music was spread via tapes of parties and shows.
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