Itâs interestingâand somewhat sadâthat this decadeâs only two meaningful rap beefs have involved attempts to sink the same floating dead body.
It started in 2015, when everyoneâs favorite manila-folder-complected, suburban Torontonian, Drake, traded âbarsâ with the somewhat less-meaningful Philly maestro of shout raps, Meek Mill. Though Meek exposed Drizzy for employing ghostwritersâa damning accusation in the world of real hip-hopâDrakeâs legions of postpubescent female fans didnât seem to care that heâs a bona fide goddamn fraud.
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A year later, homie Robert Rihmeek Williams somehow managed to haplessly trip into another beef with the Game, dusty Philly street rapper Beanie Sigel and useless dancehall queen Sean Kingston in a cavalcade of messiness that sounds as if it was cooked up in a game of Cards Against Humanity.
If Drakeâs response tracks (one of which was nominated for a Grammy) were physical entities, theyâd evaporate upon touching water. But Game curb-stomped Meek so bad that Nicki Minaj is probably having earnest conversations with her mama about how to proceed in this life. All of Meekâs responses have been trash-bag, and his loss in both battles is uncontested by anyone who didnât carry him in utero.
But at least bars (or things resembling them) were exchangedâa significant occurrence in an age when they seem to matter progressively less.
Iâd hate for the younger generation to look at todayâs rap âbeefâ and think thatâs what it was always like. Grabbing a notepad and stepping in the studio with bellicose bars of fury has been replaced with bitching via 140 characters on Twitter, which is the rap-beef equivalent of showing your support for a tragedy with a flag filter.
While there are now many who werenât yet drawing breath when rap beef became a significant part of hip-hop. There have been many throughout the past three-and-a-half decades or so, but these are my favorites:
Jadakiss vs. Beanie Sigel
Thanks to his little tangle with Meek Mill and the Game (not to mention a quasi-coherent appearance in a BET Hip-Hop Awards cypher and squabbling with Charlamagne on The Breakfast Club), One-Lung Beans is kinda, sorta back in the public spotlight now. In the year the towers fell, though, he was an East Coast rap titan who got into a bar-trading beef with peer Jadakiss, thanks to a stupid misunderstanding. I wouldnât have put one emcee over the other in relation to skills back then, but Kiss caught the L when Beans murdered him on his own beat. Winner: Beanie Sigel.
50 Cent vs. Ja Rule
As much as I loathed 50 Cent in the midaughts for being a power-hungry douche canoe with two overrated albums, it was impressive to see his crushing influence transform grunt-rap-singing progenitor Ja Rule from a multiplatinum artist into a would-be lettuce supervisor at McDowellâs. Jaâs fall from grace included a two-year bid for gun charges and tax evasion, and a post-prison album that went double Kleenex. While neither man really matters as a rapper in late 2016, Curtis is definitely doing better these days. That they picked the beef back up via Twitter last year is simply a reminder of how sad it is when dusty, 40-something rap niggas settle anything using social media. Winner: 50 Cent.
Common vs. Ice Cube
Unless itâs playing at my salon while Iâm getting a pedicure, Iâll probably never watch the most recent Barbershop film. But I know that Common and Cube are buddy-buddy in the film, and most uninitiated viewers were probably like, âOoh, the guys from Road Trip and Are We There Yet? Awesome sauce!â But heads remember when Rashid suggested in his classic âI Used to Love H.E.R.â that hip-hop fell off when the West Coast went mainstream. Cubeâs Westside Connection clapped back with a record that no one remembers, provoking Commonâs riposte âThe Bitch in Yoo,â a top five GOAT diss record. Both men have had successful careers since 1996, but from a purely rap standpoint, Com takes it. Check out this good retrospective on the beef. Winner: Common.
Boogie Down Productions vs. the Juice Crew
This is for the gray-haired heads too busy driving their children to basketball practice to check for new hip-hop. The battle between KRS-Oneâs BDP and MC Shanâs Juice Crew was strictly about staking a claim to hip-hopâs origins. When Shan intimated on âThe Bridgeâ that hip-hop started in New York Cityâs Queensbridge projects, BDP responded with âSouth Bronx,â letting cats know about the true birth borough of hip-hop. And so on and so forth it went, with a trading of tracks that, letâs be honest, no one is casually listening to in 2016. From a perspective of career longevity, KRS-One has it, but I canât rightly say thereâs a winner here. If you want a less corny peek into the history of hip-hop than Netflixâs The Get Down could muster, read up on this beef. Winner: Draw.
Tupac vs. the Notorious B.I.G.
The genreâs most culturally impactful beef because it defined a generation of hip-hop and (allegedly) resulted in the death of two hip-hop legends. Books and articles (some more credible than others) have been written on the topic of the Pac-Biggie beef and the years long East Coast-West Coast rap war that culminated in their murders. But while Big was the stronger rapper of the two, by far (fight me), Pac issued the strongest salvo with âHit âEm Upâ and the extremely disrespectful accompanying video. Back when it was OK to rap about banging someone elseâs wife and not expect a Salon.com think piece condemning it. Winner: Tupac.
N.W.A vs. Ice Cube
Proof that you donât alienate the LeBron of your team without negative consequences. Anyone who knows what heâs talking about will tell you that N.W.A would not have been the powerhouse it was without Cube. When OâShea found out he was getting bent over on royalties (with no Vaseline), he left the group, which in turn took shots at him on wax. Cube ended the bullshit with âNo Vaseline,â a scathing indictment of a whole crew ofâletâs be honestâfake gangsta-ass niggas. Folks donât remember what N.W.A said about Cube, but everyone remembers âNo Vaseline,â performed to great effect in Straight Outta Compton. Winner: Ice Cube.
Jay Z vs. Nas
The gold standard for rap beef, mainly because the two rappers co-owned New Yorkâand, by extension, hip-hopâin 2001, when they stopped taking little pot shots at each other and went hard body. They are also arguably the two strongest emcees to engage in a war of bars with each other.
âTakeoverâ is a hot, early-era Kanye West track from Jayâs second-best album, but âEtherâ reminded everyone that Nas is the superior rapper. Hov was so butt-hurt over the perceived loss that he crafted âSuper Ugly,â a completely outta-line diss track that makes the Drake-Cudi business seem like light work and even provoked Jayâs mama to have him apologize publicly.
Despite squashing their beef, theyâve yet to create the classic joint album we all wantedâsomething their egos probably wonât abide. Itâs been a long time since there were two truly dope mainstream rappers who could craft a meaningful rivalry like this; it would be akin to Kendrick Lamar going to war with ⊠some dude we donât know exists yet. Winner: Nas.
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