Shank part 1 It worked for

Shank part 1

It worked for Soulja Boy and Ice T in 2009, just as it worked for Common and Westside Connection in 1 The beef stemmed from Commons lyrics on I Use to Love, which Ice Cube claimed was a subliminal diss to the west coast. Cue Westside Slaughterhouse, a shank part 1 attack on Common, replete with the grimiest rap video ever made. Common locked himself in a studio with Pete Rock and proceeded to hand Westside Connection a lyrical beatdown on The Btch in Yoo. Eazy-E and NWAs management rubbed Ice Cube the wrong way and shank part 1 had the nerve to dis the groups best lyricist on 100 Miles Runnin. Cube initiated a flame-throwing match with his former allies and came out unscathed. With No Vaseline, Cube single-handedly annihilated an entire group. A rare feat which has never been replicated since then. Prior to his feud with LL Cool J, Kool Moe had dismantled a modest Busy Bee in a freestyle contest. This time, KMDs adversary was Bigger and Deffer. Kool Moe alleged that Cool J stole his style and decided to teach the 19-year old MC a lesson via the lyrical whiplash titled How Ya Like Me Now. LL fired back with the instant classic To Da Breakadawn. Kool Moe Dee wouldnt let LL have the final word, so he struck again with Lets Go. LL hit him even harder with Jack the Ripper, in which he ridiculed Moe Dees trademark Star Trek shades. By the time Moe Dee returned with Death Blow, Cool J had already hung the L on his neck and rocked his bells. As is often the case in hip-hop, this historic beef was mainly an offspring of bragging rights. It pitted one New York borough against another. KRS-One instigated the battle after claiming that MC Shans song The Juice wrongly credited Queensbridge, instead of South Bronx, as hip-hops birthplace. Consequently, BDP took Shan and co to the cleaners with the raw dis South Bronx. Shan struck back with Kill That Noise, thus setting up BDP for the classic The Bridge is Over, which delivered the final blow to Shans rap career. The 2Pac vs Biggie feud was unique in so many ways. Interestingly, Pacs tactic was the antithesis of Bigs approach. Not one to bite his tongue, Pac kept his insults as explicit and aggressive as possible. Who could forget Hit Em Ups opening lines Thats why I f-ked your wife, you fat muthaf-a? Biggie, on the other hand, stung Pac with subliminal disses, often delivered in a poised manner.

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