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Hip hop music and hip hop culture is widely considered to have originated on the East Coast of the United States in New York City. [4] [5] [6] As a result, New York rappers were often perceived as feeling their hip hop scene was superior to other regional hip hop cultures whereas those on the West Coast of the United States had developed an inferiority complex.
Pages in category "East Coast–West Coast hip-hop rivalry" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
As the investigation into the 1996 killing of Tupac Shakur ramped up, prosecutors dug into the past and took the grand jury back to some of the most pivotal moments in the East-West Coast rap rivalry.
East Coast-West Coast rap war [ edit ] A second updated edition of The Killing of Tupac Shakur was released in September 2002, which includes a chapter about rapper Biggie Smalls ' death, with a third edition released in March 2014.
The feud between Combs and Knight was at the heart of the East Coast–West Coast hip hop rivalry of the mid-Nineties. They were at that point each the respective heads of the most influential rap ...
The theory put forward by prosecutors offered the first confirmation by authorities that Dolph's murder was the result of an ongoing hip-hop war between Gotti’s CMG camp and Dolph’s Paper ...
This category is being considered for speedy renaming to Category:East Coast–West Coast hip-hop rivalry in accordance with Wikipedia's category discussion policy. Any pages in this category will be recategorized ( not deleted).
The album was met with critical and commercial acclaim; [3] it also saw the group partake in the conflict between Death Row Records and Bad Boy Entertainment, making it a more widespread East Coast/West Coast rivalry, responding to West Coast hip hop duo Tha Dogg Pound's single "New York, New York", with their own rendition of "L.A L.A".