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There are album MCs like Nas
And there are rock a show MCs like BDK
And there are rock a show MCs like BDK
This is the answer. Rap evolved extremely fast back thenRap quickly evolved year over year starting in the early 90's before it blew up and went fully mainstream![]()
The flow itself is cool as it's close to the level of the GOD, but ehh..move the crowd rapper which is cool in itself.even he admitted his flow was stale. he sounded like the 80s which helped him until it hurt him.
The flow itself is cool as it's close to the level of the GOD, but ehh..move the crowd rapper which is cool in itself.
The whole multi syllables setting it off, letting it off, rumble, humble, gumble raps without any sort of rhyme and reason leads to trash ass albums.
Dude ended up being Canibus without scaring the hoes.
Why Big Daddy Kane needed a comeback in the first place is an established part of hip-hop folklore: The Casanova guise engulfed him following his beloved sophomore album, 1989’s It’s a Big Daddy Thing. Afterward he made spoken-word love jams with Barry White. He emerged shirtless — bedroom eyes, knowing wink — on the cover of his next album, Taste of Chocolate. He appeared with Madonna in her infamous Sex book and posed for the June 1991 issue of Playgirl.
“Nobody raised that question to me: ‘Do you think there is going to be a backlash?’ It wasn’t until it happened,” says Eugene Shelton, Kane’s publicist at the time of the Playgirl shoot. “But there was some backlash to it. Burt Reynolds and other celebrities had posed nude in women’s magazines, but many people looked at Playgirl as a magazine targeted to gay men.”
More issues factored into Kane’s descent. He rushed his next two albums to fulfill his five-album contract. “I just wanted to get the hell off this label, so I made songs with people I liked,” he says of Taste of Chocolate. “I was a Barry White fan. I was a Dolemite fan. I thought Barbara Weathers was fine.”
And 1991’s Prince of Darkness?
“Prince of Darkness? I don’t know what the hell I was doing.”
Kane noticed concert bookings were down. He also heard the whispers that he’d fallen off. So he pledged a return to his roots on his next album, hooking up with emerging producers such as Easy Mo Bee, Large Professor, and the Trackmasters for 1993’s Looks Like a Job For…. But it was too late. Fans had moved on, and the music had passed him by.
“Production-wise, Looks Like a Job For… is an incredible album. I think that the weak point of the album was really me,” Kane says. “Had I listened to the radio and saw how much the game had changed, I would have noticed that people weren’t rhyming ahead of the beats anymore. Everybody was rhyming so much slower and falling behind the beat. My style really sounded aged. It sounded old.”
His first 2 albums were classics that were highly influential. Then after that it was basically over with dud after dud. He even came out one time and admitted he wasted the production on Looks like a job for![]()
Kane wanted to focus on being LL, but ended up being Woolworth's Cool James at home.
Breh was just a relic of the 80s and never recovered from The Juice Crew getting buried by KRS ONE.
- His first album was his magnum opus and was released in a time where hip hop was evolving
- He never evolved with his style and cadence
- Got caught up with trying to flex and be in Madonna's coffee table book
- Tried to jump on endless waves but looked beyond washed
Your comment is misleading. He said that he "wasted" the production on Looks Like a Job For in the sense that he wasn't flowing in a style that was currently fashionable. That doesn't mean he was "washed up" on that album. He was as sharp as ever, he just wasn't in line with what was trendy at the time.
I think part of his problem is back then trying to sell out was taking a lot more serious. LL got a pass on it because he always came out on the Ladies Man tip and did a better job of playing both sides. Kane at one point went full blown with trying to appeal to the masses plus the optics of all the Madonna shyt. He lost his core audience and when you go the mainstream route you become disposable as they quickly move on to the next hot thing. Kane had the ability to update his style and change with the times but took too long to do it. He showed that versatility in his first two albums.
I thought he was poised for a comeback after his feature run in the late 90s. I remember him having a lot of buzz off that Big L feature (think it got verse of the month in The Source), Prince Paul feature, and I think he was on a track with G Rap and Chino XL on the Sway and Tech album but then nothing.