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The song started a musical dispute between artists that is probably the first recorded in history. [1] 1938 "La Gota Fría" Emiliano Zuleta: Lorenzo Morales Zuleta mocks Morales in the lyrics for fleeing from an accordion challenge. The song became a standard and is one of best known in the vallenato repertoire. [2] 1952
In the 1980s, diss tracks began to feature prominently in the hip-hop genre. The first known hip-hop feud (or "beef") was the Roxanne Wars. [20] The Roxanne Wars began in 1984 when Roxanne Shanté and Marley Marl released the song "Roxanne's Revenge", a diss track aimed at the trio U.T.F.O. "Roxanne's Revenge" was a quick success, leading U.T.F.O. to compose a response: they joined forces with ...
No. of artists Notes License Full free access ACRCloud: Music recognition & audio based music retrieval ~40,000,000 [47] Commercially available with SDKs, APIs for file scanning, airplay monitoring, shazam-liked features Free trial available in 15 days Gracenote: Identification service for CDs and other media. ~100,000,000 [48] ~8,000,000 [48]
The song compounds both Lamar's classic talents (he somehow managed to include a full history lesson in between calling his foe a bitch and a colonizer) and Drake's typical forte; it scored five ...
Kendrick Lamar and Drake Getty Images Kendrick Lamar and Drake’s rap feud is so heated that it may burn the hip-hop world to the ground. Lamar, 36, and Drake, 37, have been waging lyrical war ...
L.A., L.A. (song) Let's Go Brandon (song) Liar (Megadeth song) Life's on the Line; Like That (Future, Metro Boomin and Kendrick Lamar song) Little Miss Can't Be Wrong; Live by Yo Rep; London Boys (Johnny Thunders song) Look What You Made Me Do; Loose Change (Ja Rule song) Lord Above; Lost Ones (Lauryn Hill song) Love All (song) Love Yourself
Clarkson’s 10th studio album, which dropped in June, was heavily inspired by her divorce from ex-husband Brandon Blackstock. From singing about grief and rage to acceptance, Clarkson takes ...
"Hit 'Em Up" is a diss track by American rapper 2Pac, featuring the Outlawz. It is the B-side to the single "How Do U Want It", released on June 4, 1996.The song's lyrics contain vicious insults to several East Coast rappers, chiefly Shakur's former friend turned rival, the Notorious B.I.G. (also referred to colloquially as Biggie Smalls).