Bombsquad said:
Listen to what you're saying. Reread what I wrote. Dumbing down your music or rhymes means only making music that pertains to appeal and not necessarily exceeding the limits of lets say talking about real issues that pertain to society or the community. What such artists as 50 Cent and Jay-Z did was make music for monetary purposes. And when I say monetary, so many things come in association such as music for radio, video countdowns, clubs, dj's to play, for sales to boost, etc. Those guys came from a more business standpoint with their music and messages. There is nothing wrong with that, but it is what it is, but that is not the same in tupac's case.
Pac did not do that to such extents. He took risks and put out those concious singles that may have less appeal to hip hop consumers just to put out a message. The only difference is that he simply made his rhymes more accessible/universal for everyone to understand. That right there is smart. A 5-9 yr. old could listen to a Pac record and could understand the message more than lets say a Nas record.
Conscious songs like "I Get Around," "Temptations," "How Do You Want It," "2 of Amerikaz Most Wanted," "California Love," "Hit 'Em Up," "All About U," and "Toss It Up"?
You're full of it.
Everything you said about 50 Cent and Jay-Z is the same thing Pac tried to do with
All Eyez on Me. Or was he really trying to reach people with "Thug Passion"? Wait, I guess I can see where you're coming from. My life was truely changed after listening to that one.
Your argument is that Pac dumbed down his lyrics for his listeners so they could hear his message (patronizing, yet you seem to think it's a worthy argument). But what about the songs without a message? Why don't his dumbed down songs have more complex lyrical structure? I mean, there's no point in purposely dumbing down your lyrics if you're not trying to tell you listeners anything, right? So was he just lazy on those ones? Why didn't he show off his uncanny lyricism in "Toss It Up"?
I didn't have anything to say before that I hadn't already said. You didn't trump my previous arguments, so there was no point in repeating them.