I thought you wanted to follow the rules of the previous tournaments?stip wrote:it saddens me that i wont' be making my standard 10th round pick this tournament. I've got two great songs lined up for it too.
Best Decade Tournament - 90s - Numbers wins!
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s:lament, ledbetter/pryto 1+2
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s:lament, ledbetter/pryto 1+2
Basically, you've taken two bands so far that I absolutely expected you to take. But you haven't taken songs by those bands that I expected.
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Also, COFFEE!
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s:lament, ledbetter/pryto 1+2
My 10th pick is going to be a South African band because nobody here will pick 'em, but I have a coupla Stip-like numbers in contention for number 9.stip wrote:it saddens me that i wont' be making my standard 10th round pick this tournament. I've got two great songs lined up for it too.
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s: Numbers, ledbetter/pryto 1
That was beautifultheplatypus wrote:Cozy up with me, RM.
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s:lament, ledbetter/pryto 1+2
Asimbonanga came out in 1987.ABNorman wrote:My 10th pick is going to be a South African band because nobody here will pick 'em, but I have a coupla Stip-like numbers in contention for number 9.stip wrote:it saddens me that i wont' be making my standard 10th round pick this tournament. I've got two great songs lined up for it too.
cutuphalfdead wrote:so glad i don't see signatures
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s:lament, ledbetter/pryto 1+2
I would've Clegg'd all over the 80's tournament if I had been in it - his 90's stuff is not nearly as good.Heathen wrote:Asimbonanga came out in 1987.ABNorman wrote:My 10th pick is going to be a South African band because nobody here will pick 'em, but I have a coupla Stip-like numbers in contention for number 9.stip wrote:it saddens me that i wont' be making my standard 10th round pick this tournament. I've got two great songs lined up for it too.
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s:lament, ledbetter/pryto 1+2
I wouldn’t call Tupac Shakur the greatest rapper of all time. His words were not particularly poetic or anything. He didn’t rhyme in cadences that were especially unique. What he did do, perhaps better than anyone, was convey feeling and emotion. That’s what made him a legend. Those feelings ran the gamut from pure rage to extreme misery and everything in between. It wasn’t what he said, but how he said it that made him stand out.
It’s amazing to think that he was only twenty-five years old when he was killed. His rhymes were obsessed with death, which he predicted over and over again. (See, for example, “Death Around the Corner.) For a guy his age, he recorded a ton of material, most of which has now been released. He left quite a legacy.
It’s hard to pick just one song from Tupac. He released two of the greatest rap albums of all time, one of them a sprawling double LP that cemented his legacy. While he was certainly known for leading the “thug life,” it was his ability to rap with poignancy about softer subjects that made him a fascinating, complex musician. If I were to pick one song from Tupac that stands out to me the most, it would be this ode to his mother, which reveals a surprisingly soft side to the thug lifer. While the words here are pretty spectacular, it’s the delivery that seals the deal.
Tupac Shakur - Dear Mama
It’s amazing to think that he was only twenty-five years old when he was killed. His rhymes were obsessed with death, which he predicted over and over again. (See, for example, “Death Around the Corner.) For a guy his age, he recorded a ton of material, most of which has now been released. He left quite a legacy.
It’s hard to pick just one song from Tupac. He released two of the greatest rap albums of all time, one of them a sprawling double LP that cemented his legacy. While he was certainly known for leading the “thug life,” it was his ability to rap with poignancy about softer subjects that made him a fascinating, complex musician. If I were to pick one song from Tupac that stands out to me the most, it would be this ode to his mother, which reveals a surprisingly soft side to the thug lifer. While the words here are pretty spectacular, it’s the delivery that seals the deal.
Tupac Shakur - Dear Mama
Last edited by PryTo on Wed July 23, 2014 4:36 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s:lament, ledbetter/pryto 1+2
Alive was my backupdurdencommatyler wrote:Erm... only because Alive was still on the table. And I just assumed...stip wrote:yeah, corduroy really came out of left field
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s: Bada, ledbetter/pryto 1+2
This is one of the few holdovers from my short-lived U2 phase. I really like this song, particularly the guitar sound.stip wrote:U2 - The Fly
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s: Bada, ledbetter/pryto 1+2
it's very un U2theplatypus wrote:This is one of the few holdovers from my short-lived U2 phase. I really like this song, particularly the guitar sound.stip wrote:U2 - The Fly
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s:lament, ledbetter/pryto 1+2
Fuck you, man.PryTo wrote:I wouldn’t call Tupac Shakur the greatest rapper of all time. His words were not particularly poetic or anything. He didn’t rhyme in cadences that were especially unique. What he did so, perhaps better than anyone, was convey feeling and emotion. That’s what made him a legend. Those feelings ran the gamut from pure rage to extreme misery and everything in between. It wasn’t what he said, but how he said it that made him stand out.
It’s amazing to think that he was only twenty-five years old when he was killed. His rhymes were obsessed with death, which he predicted over and over again. (See, for example, “Death Around the Corner.) For a guy his age, he recorded a ton of material, most of which has now been released. He left quite a legacy.
It’s hard to pick just one song from Tupac. He released two of the greatest rap albums of all time, one of them a sprawling double LP that cemented his legacy. While he was certainly known for leading the “thug life,” it was his ability to rap with poignancy about softer subjects that made him a fascinating, complex musician. If I were to pick one song from Tupac that stands out to me the most, it would be this ode to his mother, which reveals a surprisingly soft side to the thug lifer. While the words here are pretty spectacular, it’s the delivery that seals the deal.
Tupac Shakur - Dear Mama
This was my next pick.
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s: Bada, ledbetter/pryto 1+2
stip wrote:it's very un U2theplatypus wrote:This is one of the few holdovers from my short-lived U2 phase. I really like this song, particularly the guitar sound.stip wrote:U2 - The Fly
The first few notes of the guitar solo were stuck in my head for years.
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s: lament and ledbetter
The Notorious BIG is another dead rap legend from the 1990s. Only 24 when he was murdered, he released just one album while he was alive. But album number two (a double disc) was slated for release. Biggie didn’t record much else, but what he left us was enough to cement his legend.
With Biggie it was all about the wordplay, how he twisted phrases and lines into unique shapes. He also had a wicked sense of humor that came across in even his most serious songs. Like Tupac, it’s hard to pick a favorite, but this song, the last track on his second album, is one of the best. Just listen to the way he uses words, the rhymes that he stacks on atop the other with panache:
Green with envy, the green tempts me
to make the richest enemy, and take their cheese
Take their spots, take their keys, make my faculty
live happily, ever after in laughter
Hah, never seen Cristal pour faster
And the humor is there, too (“The kids, the dog, everybody dying -- no lying.”) Like much of Tupac’s work, it’s pretty haunting material but it’s one of Biggie’s greatest songs.
The Notorious B.I.G. – You’re Nobody (Til Somebody Kills You)
With Biggie it was all about the wordplay, how he twisted phrases and lines into unique shapes. He also had a wicked sense of humor that came across in even his most serious songs. Like Tupac, it’s hard to pick a favorite, but this song, the last track on his second album, is one of the best. Just listen to the way he uses words, the rhymes that he stacks on atop the other with panache:
Green with envy, the green tempts me
to make the richest enemy, and take their cheese
Take their spots, take their keys, make my faculty
live happily, ever after in laughter
Hah, never seen Cristal pour faster
And the humor is there, too (“The kids, the dog, everybody dying -- no lying.”) Like much of Tupac’s work, it’s pretty haunting material but it’s one of Biggie’s greatest songs.
The Notorious B.I.G. – You’re Nobody (Til Somebody Kills You)
Last edited by PryTo on Wed July 23, 2014 4:46 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s:lament, ledbetter/pryto 1+2
Whew, that was close!durdencommatyler wrote:Fuck you, man.PryTo wrote:I wouldn’t call Tupac Shakur the greatest rapper of all time. His words were not particularly poetic or anything. He didn’t rhyme in cadences that were especially unique. What he did so, perhaps better than anyone, was convey feeling and emotion. That’s what made him a legend. Those feelings ran the gamut from pure rage to extreme misery and everything in between. It wasn’t what he said, but how he said it that made him stand out.
It’s amazing to think that he was only twenty-five years old when he was killed. His rhymes were obsessed with death, which he predicted over and over again. (See, for example, “Death Around the Corner.) For a guy his age, he recorded a ton of material, most of which has now been released. He left quite a legacy.
It’s hard to pick just one song from Tupac. He released two of the greatest rap albums of all time, one of them a sprawling double LP that cemented his legacy. While he was certainly known for leading the “thug life,” it was his ability to rap with poignancy about softer subjects that made him a fascinating, complex musician. If I were to pick one song from Tupac that stands out to me the most, it would be this ode to his mother, which reveals a surprisingly soft side to the thug lifer. While the words here are pretty spectacular, it’s the delivery that seals the deal.
Tupac Shakur - Dear Mama
This was my next pick.
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s: lament and ledbetter
Good job Pry. nice picks
Pac > Biggie btw
Pac > Biggie btw
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s: lament and ledbetter
Thanks. To be fair to Biggie, Pac had a lot more material to judge. His later material is better than his early stuff. (People forget that Pac was in Digital Underground!)Kaius wrote:Good job Pry. nice picks
Pac > Biggie btw
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s: lament and ledbetter
I was a big Digital Underground fan and you could just tell that Tupac was going to be a star.
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s:lament, ledbetter/pryto 1+2
I really REALLY thought about taking it at #2. I'm sure it'll feel more at home on your squad. I wanted it. But I can't think of better home, really.PryTo wrote:Whew, that was close!durdencommatyler wrote:Fuck you, man.PryTo wrote:I wouldn’t call Tupac Shakur the greatest rapper of all time. His words were not particularly poetic or anything. He didn’t rhyme in cadences that were especially unique. What he did so, perhaps better than anyone, was convey feeling and emotion. That’s what made him a legend. Those feelings ran the gamut from pure rage to extreme misery and everything in between. It wasn’t what he said, but how he said it that made him stand out.
It’s amazing to think that he was only twenty-five years old when he was killed. His rhymes were obsessed with death, which he predicted over and over again. (See, for example, “Death Around the Corner.) For a guy his age, he recorded a ton of material, most of which has now been released. He left quite a legacy.
It’s hard to pick just one song from Tupac. He released two of the greatest rap albums of all time, one of them a sprawling double LP that cemented his legacy. While he was certainly known for leading the “thug life,” it was his ability to rap with poignancy about softer subjects that made him a fascinating, complex musician. If I were to pick one song from Tupac that stands out to me the most, it would be this ode to his mother, which reveals a surprisingly soft side to the thug lifer. While the words here are pretty spectacular, it’s the delivery that seals the deal.
Tupac Shakur - Dear Mama
This was my next pick.
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s: lament and ledbetter
Honestly I've just never been a big fan of Biggies tone.
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Re: Best Decade Tournament - 90s: lament and ledbetter
File under: Things Said by West Coast Rappers in 1997Kaius wrote:Honestly I've just never been a big fan of Biggies tone.
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