A quoi sert Lil Wayne ???
Page 4 sur 5•
Page 4 sur 5 •
1, 2, 3, 4, 5 
A quoi sert Lil Wayne ??
Re: A quoi sert Lil Wayne ???
blakousse a écrit:lil wayne est original c pour sa ke les gens la kiff enfin"sutout o state" en france les gens sont pas ouveert a des styles différent pareils lil jon en france c pas toulmonde ki le kiff mé bn sa change un peu de tous ses"YOOOO" ki rape tous dla mm facon très bn rapeur rien dire
fermes ta bouche la question n'est pas là, s'ouvrir à quoi? s'ouvrir à un putain d'produit d'marketing qui a bien baisé tout les states et leur gouts musicaux capitalistes et qui reprend le nom de "hip hop" pour faire beau (faut m'expliquer l'rapport de lil wayne avec le hip hop) ... faut arreter, la france a bien trop ouvert ses cuisse à cette musique (enfin à ce qu'il parrait c'est de la musique) ... et s'il y a des gens qui ont un semblant de culture musicale encore en france, et qui peuvent éventuellement rester réticents en écoutant ces merdes, ben c'est tant mieux, pour l'reste aller vous faire sauter sur du crunk, du hyphy et tout ce que vous voulez

Re: A quoi sert Lil Wayne ???
Personnellement je trouve que certaines morceaux de Lil' Jon sont fort et défoulant. Faut avouer que musicalement le type a quelque chose...
Weezy ? Il a rien à part une sale gueule et une sale voix.
Weezy ? Il a rien à part une sale gueule et une sale voix.

Why so serious ?
Re: A quoi sert Lil Wayne ???
Ouai, entre Lil Jon et Lil Wayne y a un fossé quand meme.
Apres que ce soit l'un ou l'autre j'trouve ça inecoutable ...
Le pire c'est que c'est ce genre de mec qui represente la South.
Apres que ce soit l'un ou l'autre j'trouve ça inecoutable ...
Le pire c'est que c'est ce genre de mec qui represente la South.
Re: A quoi sert Lil Wayne ???
P'tet qu'il faut être américain pour comprendre sa puissance parce que même le Time (magazine plutôt de qualité quand même), lui consacre un article sous le titre de "The Best Rapper Alive" : http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1820148,00.html
Lil Wayne : The Best Rapper Alive

Lil Wayne has a smoke-scarred rasp that makes him sound like Redd Foxx covering Bob Dylan. It's hardly the voice you'd expect from a 25-year-old rap star, but then, it's been a busy 25 years.
Born Dwayne Carter Jr. and raised in Hollygrove, a New Orleans neighborhood famous for producing soul singers, Wayne signed his first deal at age 11 after rhyming on a record executive's answering machine. At 12, he distinguished himself by starring as the Tin Man in his gifted middle school's production of The Wiz--and by accidentally shooting himself in the chest with a .44-cal. while imitating Travis Bickle in his bedroom. After teenage years that were lost to the comically awful gangsta group Hot Boys (like 'N Sync with shivs), Wayne went solo and undertook a transformation almost unprecedented in hip-hop. Over four years, he morphed from a mediocre rapper with a thuggish point of view into a savant who merges sex, drugs and politics with a sneaky intellect, a freakish knowledge of pop culture and a voice out of the Delta. Whether Wayne is, as he claims, the "best rapper alive" is no longer even debated in hip-hop or commercial circles. Since June 10, when his latest album, Tha Carter III, sold 1,005,545 copies in its first week, he's been the undisputed champ.
That number would be huge in boom times, but at a moment when most records languish on the racks like Depression apples, it's titanic. It also represents the victory of a business model every bit as counterintuitive as Radiohead's. Most musicians still carefully dole out an album's worth of songs every few years to keep from saturating the market. Vibe magazine counted 77 new Lil Wayne tracks in 2007. Besides coughing out guest verses for seemingly anyone who asked, he sometimes recorded three songs in a night and gave them away on the Internet minutes later on a series of superb mix tapes. In June, just before Tha Carter III went on sale, Wayne announced on YouTube that he'd be releasing the tracks for free on a tape called The Leak.
If the charts are to be believed, his goodwill has been repaid many times over. Of course, it helps that Tha Carter III is one of the best albums of the year. It's a pop play--and smelling it, everyone from Jay-Z to Robin Thicke jumped on board with contributions--but it's still weird enough to sound like underground Lil Wayne. His wordplay can be thrilling ("My picture should be in the dictionary next to the definition of definition"), and no other rapper finds as much joy in rhyming; "in the way," "everyday," "what we say," "cliché," "Andre 3K," "sensei" is a typical string from Dr. Carter, his prescription for what ails rap. But the impact owes more to his delivery than to his wit. Wayne isn't afraid to sound bizarre. On Phone Home, he rhymes like E.T., and throughout, he stammers, intentionally misses beats and defies most of the rules of contemporary rap. On DontGetIt, over a sample of Nina Simone's Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood, he tells a life story that veers into an indictment of drug laws and finishes some 1,200 words and 10 minutes later by dismissing Al Sharpton with a theatricality even the good Reverend would have to appreciate.
Wayne claims his rhymes are stream of consciousness, but even if they aren't, they sound as though they're hitting the air for the first time, unfolding with an electricity that's--forbid the sacrilege--Dylanesque. Redd Foxx would probably dig 'em too.
Lil Wayne : The Best Rapper Alive

Lil Wayne has a smoke-scarred rasp that makes him sound like Redd Foxx covering Bob Dylan. It's hardly the voice you'd expect from a 25-year-old rap star, but then, it's been a busy 25 years.
Born Dwayne Carter Jr. and raised in Hollygrove, a New Orleans neighborhood famous for producing soul singers, Wayne signed his first deal at age 11 after rhyming on a record executive's answering machine. At 12, he distinguished himself by starring as the Tin Man in his gifted middle school's production of The Wiz--and by accidentally shooting himself in the chest with a .44-cal. while imitating Travis Bickle in his bedroom. After teenage years that were lost to the comically awful gangsta group Hot Boys (like 'N Sync with shivs), Wayne went solo and undertook a transformation almost unprecedented in hip-hop. Over four years, he morphed from a mediocre rapper with a thuggish point of view into a savant who merges sex, drugs and politics with a sneaky intellect, a freakish knowledge of pop culture and a voice out of the Delta. Whether Wayne is, as he claims, the "best rapper alive" is no longer even debated in hip-hop or commercial circles. Since June 10, when his latest album, Tha Carter III, sold 1,005,545 copies in its first week, he's been the undisputed champ.
That number would be huge in boom times, but at a moment when most records languish on the racks like Depression apples, it's titanic. It also represents the victory of a business model every bit as counterintuitive as Radiohead's. Most musicians still carefully dole out an album's worth of songs every few years to keep from saturating the market. Vibe magazine counted 77 new Lil Wayne tracks in 2007. Besides coughing out guest verses for seemingly anyone who asked, he sometimes recorded three songs in a night and gave them away on the Internet minutes later on a series of superb mix tapes. In June, just before Tha Carter III went on sale, Wayne announced on YouTube that he'd be releasing the tracks for free on a tape called The Leak.
If the charts are to be believed, his goodwill has been repaid many times over. Of course, it helps that Tha Carter III is one of the best albums of the year. It's a pop play--and smelling it, everyone from Jay-Z to Robin Thicke jumped on board with contributions--but it's still weird enough to sound like underground Lil Wayne. His wordplay can be thrilling ("My picture should be in the dictionary next to the definition of definition"), and no other rapper finds as much joy in rhyming; "in the way," "everyday," "what we say," "cliché," "Andre 3K," "sensei" is a typical string from Dr. Carter, his prescription for what ails rap. But the impact owes more to his delivery than to his wit. Wayne isn't afraid to sound bizarre. On Phone Home, he rhymes like E.T., and throughout, he stammers, intentionally misses beats and defies most of the rules of contemporary rap. On DontGetIt, over a sample of Nina Simone's Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood, he tells a life story that veers into an indictment of drug laws and finishes some 1,200 words and 10 minutes later by dismissing Al Sharpton with a theatricality even the good Reverend would have to appreciate.
Wayne claims his rhymes are stream of consciousness, but even if they aren't, they sound as though they're hitting the air for the first time, unfolding with an electricity that's--forbid the sacrilege--Dylanesque. Redd Foxx would probably dig 'em too.
Re: A quoi sert Lil Wayne ???
Le chroniqueur n'a jamais écouté un MC technique de sa vie apparemment (ou bien est une groupie de Lil' Wayne). Il perd toute crédibilité pour ma part quand il se touche parce que Lil' Wayne a réussi à faire rimer les mots "in the way," "everyday," "what we say," "cliché," "Andre 3K," "sensei" (qui en passant ne sont même pas des rimes multisyllabiques pour la plupart puisque malgré une nombre similaire de syllabes, elle ne rime pas entre elles). Le chroniqueur affirme qu'aucun autre rappeur ne s'amuse autant avec les mots (j'ai failli avoir l'arrêt cardiaque à ce moment-là, j'ai vu Big Pun se dressait devant moi en train de faire 20 tours dans sa tombe)
Bref Big Daddy Kane a dû rigoler s'il a lû cet article, Rakim aussi, Em aussi, Pharoahe Monch & Jay-Z aussi, Nas aussi, Lloyd Banks aussi tiens... Enfin bref tout la communauté Rap. Avec un tel article on peut dire que même un magazine comme TIME n'a finalement pas forcément une crédibilité absolue
Non Lil' Wayne n'est pas un grand MC, j'ai matté ses textes, j'ai matté ses skillz, et faut arrêter la branlette immédiatemment.
"Tha Carter III is one of the best albums of the year"
même le dernier G-Unit dont je ne suis pas fan est beaucoup plus intéressant.
Bref Big Daddy Kane a dû rigoler s'il a lû cet article, Rakim aussi, Em aussi, Pharoahe Monch & Jay-Z aussi, Nas aussi, Lloyd Banks aussi tiens... Enfin bref tout la communauté Rap. Avec un tel article on peut dire que même un magazine comme TIME n'a finalement pas forcément une crédibilité absolue
Non Lil' Wayne n'est pas un grand MC, j'ai matté ses textes, j'ai matté ses skillz, et faut arrêter la branlette immédiatemment.
"Tha Carter III is one of the best albums of the year"
Dernière édition par Blacko le Lun 7 Juil - 22:47, édité 1 fois
Re: A quoi sert Lil Wayne ???
skillz?? 
Moi Lil wayne connait pas plus que ça, il à souvent de chouette prod après jcomprend rie à ses texte, sa voix passe pas trop mal, c'est surtout son flow ordinaire, même limite off beat desfois qui me plaît pas.
J'dirais pas qu'il sert à rien, mais qu'il à rien de plus qu'un autre...ah si, le buzz ^^
Moi Lil wayne connait pas plus que ça, il à souvent de chouette prod après jcomprend rie à ses texte, sa voix passe pas trop mal, c'est surtout son flow ordinaire, même limite off beat desfois qui me plaît pas.
J'dirais pas qu'il sert à rien, mais qu'il à rien de plus qu'un autre...ah si, le buzz ^^
Re: A quoi sert Lil Wayne ???
pour ma part lollipop j'la trouvai moche mais a fond
et a force de voir le clip,j'l'ai kiffé.....jme siu interessé a carterIII
et lollipop j'crois sa sera mon tube de l'été....
et a force de voir le clip,j'l'ai kiffé.....jme siu interessé a carterIII
et lollipop j'crois sa sera mon tube de l'été....

Re: A quoi sert Lil Wayne ???
pour moi sa voix et son flow est insuportable et lolipop je la trouve degueulasse comme chanson, j'suis pareil que beaucoup de monde ici je comprend pas trop sa cote de popularité
Re: A quoi sert Lil Wayne ???
En fait il sert juste à foutre la zone ce Lil'Wayne.
Tu lui as prêté l'espoir mais la vie ne te doit rien...
Re: A quoi sert Lil Wayne ???
ditwizi a écrit:pour moi sa voix et son flow est insuportable et lolipop je la trouve degueulasse comme chanson, j'suis pareil que beaucoup de monde ici je comprend pas trop sa cote de popularité
Ouais pareil, même si y'a quelques morceaux delui d'anciennes tapes ou d'albums qui sont, à mon avis, bons, mais Lil Wayne en général non merci.

I came to a tattoed conclusion
That the big one was knocking on the door
What started as a mass delusion
Would take me far from the place I adore
Re: A quoi sert Lil Wayne ???
Il sert à me faire chier et a bourrer le forum de pseudo-explications qui ne justifieront jamais en soi son buzz actuel.

Why so serious ?
Page 4 sur 5 •
1, 2, 3, 4, 5 












