Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The title of this 35-second instrumental, the shortest song Yes has ever recorded, was changed after the band learned of Flynn's deal [9] Sep 11, 1970 "Happy Family" King Crimson: The Beatles: Makes fun about the separation of Beatles [10] Aug 2, 1971 "Too Many People" Paul McCartney: John Lennon and Yoko Ono: The Beatles' breakup
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 ...
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
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 ...
NME placed it on their list of '19 Of The Fiercest Diss Tracks In Hip-Hop, Rock And Pop History'. [29] Complex ranked it 26th on their list of the '50 Greatest Hip Hop Diss Songs; [30] additionally, it topped their list of the '50 Best Rap Songs Made By Women'. MTV placed it on their list of 'Rap's Top 10 Diss Songs' list. [31] "
The songs aren’t all insults though: he also tips a lyrical hat to Taylor Swift, alluding to their ongoing friendly battle for No. 1 on the Billboard Top 100 list. For All the Dogs also details ...
This diss track answers Eazy's former N.W.A bandmate Dr. Dre and his debuting, guest rapper Snoop Dogg, who had dissed Eazy on Dre's first solo album, The Chronic. The music video accompanying the song has over 400 million views on YouTube. Dresta wrote his own verses and ghostwrote Eazy-E's verses, and B.G. Knocc Out wrote his own verse. [3]