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Anyone ever wonder what happened to this track? This had me so excited years ago when Good *** Job was announced
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i always wondered why crack music only had game on the hook
I still don't' see how this discredits the music? So he had a team assist him and gave credit to every single person. It's his name and his product in the end....Do you like or dislike the product. It is music....we aren't talking like oh the ingredients in the food are terrible so when i eat it its bad for me...but it tastes good. This isn't effecting your health...its just music. If you read the credits and let it sway your opinion on the music as a final product thats just stupid to me.
There is an argument to make for everything. Kanye has a huge team so he isn't really that talented...but it takes a big man to surround himself with people that are better then you at certain things and acknowledge that and let them help you. A lot of people can't do that and that can stunt growth. Its all circular to me and in the end there is one thing...the music...so take it or leave it...but trying to discredit the artist by saying he had too many people help him is just pointless.
I didn't even read the credits to arrive at my own conclusion that the album was one of, it not the worse I've ever heard.
People mention Kanye and growth in the same breath, but have we come to the point where dudes are just ignoring lyrical content?
Remember if a dude puts out an album that is within the genre of hip hop, more so than any other genre the lyrics will be placed under a microscope. Kanye seems to get a pass for being a trash rapper.
All because he enlists 10 dudes to give a track some type of orchestra feel, stadium music feel, or now is it called "goon house"?
"Goon house" is catching on!
I'm bout to get tshirts made.
ill buy a couple"Goon house" is catching on!I didn't even read the credits to arrive at my own conclusion that the album was one of, it not the worse I've ever heard.I still don't' see how this discredits the music? So he had a team assist him and gave credit to every single person. It's his name and his product in the end....Do you like or dislike the product. It is music....we aren't talking like oh the ingredients in the food are terrible so when i eat it its bad for me...but it tastes good. This isn't effecting your health...its just music. If you read the credits and let it sway your opinion on the music as a final product thats just stupid to me.
There is an argument to make for everything. Kanye has a huge team so he isn't really that talented...but it takes a big man to surround himself with people that are better then you at certain things and acknowledge that and let them help you. A lot of people can't do that and that can stunt growth. Its all circular to me and in the end there is one thing...the music...so take it or leave it...but trying to discredit the artist by saying he had too many people help him is just pointless.
People mention Kanye and growth in the same breath, but have we come to the point where dudes are just ignoring lyrical content?
Remember if a dude puts out an album that is within the genre of hip hop, more so than any other genre the lyrics will be placed under a microscope. Kanye seems to get a pass for being a trash rapper.
All because he enlists 10 dudes to give a track some type of orchestra feel, stadium music feel, or now is it called "goon house"?
I'm bout to get tshirts made.
Whoa...Kanye didn't do All About the Benjamins and Sauce definitely didn't write a lot of Reasonable Doubt. Where did you get any of that ******** from?Back then, hip-hop albums weren't giving credits to ghost producers.
Kanye produced It's All About the Benjamins.
Sauce Money wrote a lot of Reasonable Doubt.
No one knew.
Things change. Today if you tell Kanye to pronounce words differently or switch up a word altogether you might get a writer credit.
Game had a writer credit on Crack Music (even though his verse was removed).
The stuff Kanye did do with D-Dot he got credit for, and it didn't include the stuff on No Way Out.
Next, there's a difference in a beat maker and a producer.
When he first came out Kanye said he ghost produced on a lot of D. Dot's beats and strongly implied "All About the Benjamins" was one of them. D. Dot even had to address it at some point and say Kanye lied and that he gave him credit for everything he worked on. *shrug*Kanye produced what?!!!!!!
It's common practice outside of rap.
Michael Jackson wasn't writing and and producing his work.
And Quincy Jones wasn't doing all the writing and beat making.
When he first came out Kanye said he ghost produced on a lot of D. Dot's beats and strongly implied "All About the Benjamins" was one of them. D. Dot even had to address it at some point and say Kanye lied and that he gave him credit for everything he worked on. *shrug*
And Sauce Money wrote on a lot of Reasonable Doubt. He said so himself. People co-signed the claim. Jay wouldn't address it other than brushing it off.
*shrug*
All hip-hop artists collaborate. This myth of one man and a producer is just that - a myth.
Let's not bring up the video of Drake in a studio with eleventeen writers before So Far Gone came out.
Sauce Money wrote a lot of Reasonable Doubt.
And Sauce Money wrote on a lot of Reasonable Doubt. He said so himself. People co-signed the claim. Jay wouldn't address it other than brushing it off.
A producer isn't always the one who plays all the instruments and writes all the music. A producer is a constructor of different parts to make a whole. Look at Dre. Dude constructs all the pieces everybody else plays for him. Why do you think everything Scott Storch made on his own sounded Chronic 2001 2.0.
You're annoying.You're spreading ********When he first came out Kanye said he ghost produced on a lot of D. Dot's beats and strongly implied "All About the Benjamins" was one of them. D. Dot even had to address it at some point and say Kanye lied and that he gave him credit for everything he worked on. *shrug*
And Sauce Money wrote on a lot of Reasonable Doubt. He said so himself. People co-signed the claim. Jay wouldn't address it other than brushing it off.
*shrug*
All hip-hop artists collaborate. This myth of one man and a producer is just that - a myth.
Let's not bring up the video of Drake in a studio with eleventeen writers before So Far Gone came out.
First, it's not ghost producing if you get the credit. Kanye is listed as the co-producer of the songs he did with D Dot. It was for the Mad Rapper album, Mase and I forgot what else. Kanye was still with No ID when All About The Benjamins came out. All About The Benjamins was done in Dominican Republic, because Puff took all the Bad Boy producers there for a month. Kanye wasn't on that trip with the rest of The Hitmen.
Sauce never said he ghost wrote for Jay-Z. So Sauce was writing for Jay-Z while Jay was writing for Bleek and Foxy? This doesn't even make sense. So Big was impressed by the way Jay-Z was repeating Sauce Money lyrics in his head? Sauce wrote on Bring It On, that was it. Who cosigned it? Post some **** as proof.
Please stop repeating any of this, because all of it is factually incorrect. Dudes hear some **** someone else told them and run with it. I know dudes who know Sauce.
this album is amazing, definetly picking up another 10 copies teusday
Hitboy said he's no longer on G.O.O.D, did he have any production credits on Yeezus?
i always wondered why crack music only had game on the hook
there was one with his verse on it.