Download the ja rule mesmerize edited torrent
That’s why I’m doing things that hurt you! I’m ONLY trying to verify the enduring power of our love! But hey, you know that's who I am! I’m a rich rapper! And besides, love is SUPPOSED to be about pain. RC: Yeah, I know I’ve done very disrespectful things to you in the past. Ja: I know, I got a lot of things I need to explain,īut baby you know the name and love is about pain You know, the one that swing dick like no other! Ja: C'mon and get a piece of this late-night lover, RC: However, when the verses are coming from a rapper who’s still trying to be hardcore… You can easily deduce a sexual or emotional context from what they’re saying. RC (V.O): But, it’s just innocuously worded enough that someone could interpret it in a more innocent context, and that’s a great way that R&B writing works. And, seeing that the context is, “Yeah, I don’t always answer my phone, but when you need me, I’m there, giving you my “all” and since, after giving him her “all”, she still doesn’t know whether or not he wants to be with her, I’m going to forgo any thought that she’s talking about spending quality time together as a loving couple and just assume that she’s talking about her… RC (V.O): Okay, the word she actually says there is “all”. RC: Oh… why was that edited out the first time? Did the first take have a… different word there? RC (Falls off his chair) :Ah! Oh shit! What the fuck!Ĭut back to RC being perplexed by the pauseĪshanti: I gave you my all, now baby be mine RC (singing): Ooh boy, I really love you! Tell me what you got to say about that! RC (V.O): Smooth, R&B singer crooning about love for the girls, but we’ve still gotta be hardcore, so I gotta talk about shooting guns for the fellas! Despite the fact that that has nothing to do with the mood she’s trying to set. RC: RIGHT THERE! That’s exactly what I’m talking about.
DOWNLOAD THE JA RULE MESMERIZE EDITED TORRENT TORRENT
RC (V.O): By the end of 2002, there was a never-ending torrent of “I wanna be gangsta for the fellas and lovey-dovey for the ladies” songs that dominated the airwaves for a while, the biggest single of which was “Always On Time”, which is pretty much the first and last song from him that you really needed to hear when it comes to this topic. Ja: Cause in the bed a nigga go hard like Jordan. Ja: To bring pain to pussy niggaz and pussy hoes, it's one in the same. RC (V.O): While he, in return, spits rhymes about hardcore sex and how much of a gangsta and playa he still is, despite his relationship with her. Jennifer Lopez and Ja: I can't go on without you
RC (V.O): These were Ja Rule’s Bread and FREAKING butter: songs with females on the chorus singing soulfully about how much they need Ja Rule and declaring their loving loyalty to him. RC: The “thugs need love too” songs.Ĭhristina Milian: Cause every little thing that we do. RC (V.O) Now, Ja and DMX were actually cool with each other at first, that is until right around the release of his second album, Rule 3:36, which is about the time Ja started going from run-of-the-mill gangsta rapper to employing one of the worst trends in Hip Hop.
RC: Not by trying to achieve the same intensity or ability as DMX, but by taking his exact aesthetic, and watering it down to hell RC (V.O): That, coupled with the fact that, in 1998, both his first and second albums went number one in the same year, and you can bet your ass people were trying to imitate the formula. His material was not only more clever and diverse, but also grittier, making you believe every word he viciously growled.ĭMX: If I'm strong enough I'll live long enough to see my kidsĭoing something more constructive with they time
X had diversity in his topics, ranging from hardcore anthems to tracks about multiple personalities to songs detailing his life like “Slippin’”. RC (V.O): And this is a comparison that must be noted, because not only did DMX arrive on the scene about a year before Ja Rule, but he also had an energy, griminess, and passion in his rhymes that made Ja Rule look like a corny knock off. And fourth, we already had a late 90’s, east coast version of 2Pac.ĭMX: Let's take it back to the streets, motherf**ker RC (V.O) : And Third, he had all of the mannerisms of 2Pac with absolutely none of the substance.
he sang WAY too much for someone who CAN’T SING. RC (V.O): First of all, he sang WAY too much for a hardcore thug, as he kept claiming to be. RC (V.O): Well if you do, you’ll remember that he was one of the more successful 2Pac Knock-offs that tried to capatilize off of his likeness in the aftermath of his death, as made obvious by the bald head, red bandana, and perpetual shirtlessness, but whereas Tupac’s musical material, no matter how controversial or disagreeable, at least came across as genuine, intricate, insights of a man trying to sort out his world, Ja Rule’s music came across as very.