Vote up the best rap songs about race and racsism. The potency of music as a tool to communicate complex emotions and thoughts is remarkably evident in the plethora of songs about race. These powerful anthems have long been a means of vocalizing societal struggles and advocating for change...
Over 600 music fans have voted on the 60+ Best Rap Songs Of 2023, Ranked. Current Top 3: All My Life (ft. J. Cole), DOGTOOTH, The Light
deny it all he wants, but there’s no chance in hell that Biggie wasn’t talking about 2Pac on “Long Kiss Goodnight.” Even Lil’ Ceaseconfirmed ityears later. Over a haunting RZA production, Biggie goes into demon mode with some of the darkest lines he’s ever spit in his rap ...
#20. Drake – Started from the Bottom How can this song not be in your 25 rap songs that you listen to in the morning? This song is fun, energetic, and inspiring. #21. Big Sean feat. Drake – Blessings In order to have success, one must appreciate the things they have in the ...
Top fastest rap songs ever “Break Ya Neck” by Busta Rhymes “Rap God” by Eminem “Look At Me Now” by Chris Brown, Busta Rhymes and Lil Wayne “Undaground Choppers 6” by DJ Lil Sprite “Mista Tung Twista” by Twista “Midwest Choppers 2” by Tech N9ne Featuring K-Dean & Krayzie...
There are so, so many rap songs about jewelry: acquiring it, flexing with it, hoarding it, even beating people with it. But in the summer of 1999, six rappers from New Orleans changed the way we’d talk about it forever. Thanks to the proliferation of bounce music and early successes ...
Opulent disco-pop, R&B hook-up jams, raging hot-mess anthems: These are the songs and albums that defined the year in pop music.
So, tighten up your Timbs and adjust your headphones, ’cause we’re about to venture into the lyrical labyrinth of the top 10 storytelling rap songs of all time and some of the most captivating narratives ever spun on wax! 10. “Lost Ones” – J. Cole ...
while Kim's introduction was a precursor to the perfected raunchy lyrics that she weaved throughout nearly every single one of her tracks. Between her repping the crew and simultaneously bragging about her sex life on lines like "Huh can't fade the rhinoceros of rap (say what?)/Lil Kim...
the tale could start much earlier. There’s plenty of evidence that rap developed long before the Sugarhill Gang’s “Rapper’s Delight” brought New York hip-hop to the world. “From the nasty tales of Stagolee to H. Rap Brown in the Sixties, most of rap is nothing more than straigh...