LL Cool J Says He Paved The Way For Drake & Co's Female Friendly Rap Songs

Started by Freemala Harris, May 04, 2020, 11:57:45 AM

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Freemala Harris

https://twitter.com/ATLBlackStar/status/1257075009903824911

LL Cool J (L) said he created a lane for artists like Drake (R). (Photo: Youtube / Prince Williams / WireImage via Getty Images)
Rapping over such tracks today is commonplace and has become its own subgenre. People like Drake and Fabolous have made long, successful careers out of it.

Cool J talked about the flak that he received when making "I Need Love" because it was released at a time when hip-hop's gatekeepers didn't allow anything that wasn't considered hardcore or "street" through its carefully guarded doors. He recalls that time perfectly.

"You gotta remember, hip-hop was, still is to a certain extent, but back then it was really conservative and if the energy wasn't testosterone, like I'm punching you in your face, kicking the door down, you don't get a lot of credit," he explained.

Drake went from a TV character on "Degrassi: The Next Generation" to an instant rap star by releasing in 2009 "Best I Ever Had," considered a love song.

Cool J said he wouldn't have had that chance if it weren't for what he accomplished many years ago, and he's glad he opened up that lane.

"I'm very grateful, very thankful and I'm glad that it created a genre," he said. "I'm glad that now, years later, a Fabolous can go out and do his thing and still be very well-respected as a lyricist," he said. "A Jadakiss can do his love song and still be well-respected as a lyricist."

He added, "I put Loveland that female, that vibe in there that gives dudes, like, you know, these guys a lane. People compare me to Drake all the time, but we're very different artists because I have a lot of hard records and I'm very diverse. But in that aspect of my career, it paved the way for guys like that... who I'm happy for. I like a lot of his music too."

Cool J went on to make many more songs that were considered female- friendly throughout his career, something for which his core fans and other rappers often have criticized him.

"I Need Love" wasn't the first rap love song he released, although that's often stated. He actually released the songs "I Can Give You More" and "I Want You" on his 1985 debut "Radio."



GRAND ETERNAL SUPREME

oh I guess he mean not calling women bitches and hoes in every song 

L0NZ.

of course he did. But I dont see why this needed to be a thing. Some things we just know.




CHOKE

I guess

Its always cooler when others give this kind of praise not the artist themselves 


Dr Naomi Campbell


Boomz

That Kimberly Jones syndrome 

Gorl, we know what you did and haven't forgotten 

Just Dropped In To See What Condition My Condition Was In

He did and he said it so the younger generation won't forget it. People will just have to deal with it.
I am scarred, so fucking scarred
These are the scars of me
The very fucking scars of me
This is my tragic heart
My tragic heart

-Me "Tragic Heart"

oph.

Quote from: chokeme on May 04, 2020, 12:28:27 PM
I guess

Its always cooler when others give this kind of praise not the artist themselves

yea that was back when the gorls actually gave props

i see no issue w/ this

wizzy



Kaeli.

Quote from: Fuck it! on May 04, 2020, 01:31:19 PM
He did and he said it so the younger generation won't forget it. People will just have to deal with it.
yea pretty much