
Luis
@jordanyroc • 1,988 subscribers
Dada. 🇩🇴. Black. Music. Hip-Hop. Sports. 💎🙌🏾👑
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There’s at least a couple Jay-Z bars for every situation in life…
Luis85,279 görüntüleme • 2 gün önce

Drake is having quite the run… - 2023 got bullied into dropping an EP of new music because the 23-track album he released was terrible. - 2024 took the worst L ever in hip-hop. - 2025 got embarrassed on the Super Bowl stage, and across stadiums all over the world. Then further embarrassed himself by suing over a rap battle he willingly participated in and escalated. - 2026 dropped an entire album full of victim raps and two more albums full of terrible music. Wrap this shit up. It’s over.
Luis874,030 görüntüleme • 23 gün önce

I’ve never understood the confusion behind this record. Jay loved “good kid, m.A.A.d city” and the original “Bitch, Don’t Kill My Vibe.” He was inspired by Kendrick’s work. Recorded a verse, had Guru send the verse over to TDE. And during a studio session for ScHoolboy Q’s “Oxymoron” Kendrick came over and they surprised him with Jay’s verse. Kendrick then recorded two verses of his own and they put the record out as a remix. The end. They weren’t sparring. Kendrick had two verses. Jay had one. Kendrick recorded both of his verses after hearing Jay’s. Jay didn’t have that luxury. Nobody got “bodied.” Just enjoy the fucking music, man. I just want them to collaborate again. It’s long overdue. And now would be a perfect time for it.
Luis228,971 görüntüleme • 1 ay önce

Jay-Z did irreparable damage to Nas, the women in his life, and his fanbase. Jay’s “relationship” with Carmen (Nas’ first child’s mother) is well documented. Mainly by her. But what’s often overlooked is the fact that Jay also planted seeds of doubt, distrust, and jealousy to Nas’ future relationships. Years after the battle Kelis couldn’t even say “hello” to Jay without Nas throwing a fit. Imagine mingling in those circles only to end up fighting because your husband is insecure about you being cordial. 🥴 But let y’all tell it and Jay is the one whose “soul burned slow.” Okay lol
Luis3,055,399 görüntüleme • 11 ay önce

Dame Dash on The Breakfast Club… Charlamagne had that corny nigga in HELL the entire interview. He called him broke, a loser, a child, insecure, a liar, a hypocrite, made fun of his teeth. All to his face. Called his ass “Debt Dash” and told him that he should start a label called “Debt Jam.” He’s a fucking embarrassment.
Luis2,173,957 görüntüleme • 8 ay önce

I noticed that on both, the Tiny Desk performance and the Genius lyric breakdown, Push didn’t even blink when reciting those bars. That nigga didn’t give a single fuck about them cameras. He was talking right to Jim Jones. With a blank stare and an evil grin on his face. Leave this nigga alone, man.
Luis2,515,926 görüntüleme • 10 ay önce

That pen-less ass nigga writing a dope ass rap in his head. Bey see it!
Luis2,425,641 görüntüleme • 11 ay önce

Jay-Z’s “Roots Picnic Freestyle” had a very clear message… STOP PLAYING WITH HIS NAME. He made sure that message was conveyed throughout the verse. Something that stood out to me was him starting the verse by naming Ms. Hattie White (his grandmother) and how important it was for him to clear his name before she transitioned. And had she transitioned before he was able to clear it, he would’ve haunted everyone who had thrown dirt on his name. He then ended the verse with the spelling of his name, another mention of his grandma, and sharing her nickname for him (Shawnies) and how adorable he finds it. Masterful level writing.
Luis15,246 görüntüleme • 2 gün önce

Kendrick Lamar has never publicly credited Jay-Z’s “4:44” as a source of inspiration when creating “Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers.” But when “4:44” dropped he tweeted about it and he also participated in the footnotes episode of 4:44’s title track. So, I don’t believe that it’s far fetched for Kendrick to have drawn inspiration from Jay’s album. There are many similarities between the two albums. Both albums are conceptually built around Jay and Kendrick going to therapy and dealing with their personal issues publicly. And though they are sonically completely different, they address a lot of the same topics… Therapy, the male ego, accountability, family, relationships, infidelity, fatherhood, legacy, daddy issues, family members sexuality, religion/spirituality, breaking generational family curses, Black culture, America, social issues, wealth, financial responsibility, emotional maturity, influence, etc. Two nearly identical albums from two guys in completely different stages in their lives. They unmask in front of their audience and bare their souls on wax with true introspection. Raw and intentional artistic expression. Nothing is surface level.
Luis250,319 görüntüleme • 1 ay önce

It’s hilarious how well this fits and how much better it sounds compared to the original. Ruined one of the most iconic rap songs ever, but whatever lol Also, these albums are a perfect example of what Jay-Z was talking about. Artists creating from a space that isn’t true to their current lifestyle. It’s always gonna come off as inauthentic. And his fans know it. That’s why they took offense to it without Jay naming anyone.
Luis100,716 görüntüleme • 22 gün önce

Nigga gave the world THIS and expected to get Grammy recognition. Throw that whole camp in the trash.
Luis577,219 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce

During his Breakfast Club interview Jay spoke on how at one point they were pretty much signing anybody to Roc-A-Fella. He took the blame. But this was clearly all Dame’s doing. His ego was out of control. I believe that in summer 2002 is when Jay knew it was time to end it.
Luis611,814 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce

Let’s give you the attention you’re begging for. A woman’s entire business just completely took off by Jay-Z quietly wearing her work and Fat Joe posting a picture. That’s influence! Jay-Z wearing a sweater is making more noise than that bum ass album. I know that gotta hurt.
Luis538,148 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce

“American pie is not made out of apples, it’s made out of whatever you can get your fucking hands on” - Dave Chappelle There’s endless Jay-Z lyrics that I can quote that directly speak to this. But it’s pointless. That man has thrived in a system specifically designed for people like him to fail. Jay don’t give a single fuck about Bomani Jones and Marc Lamont Hill’s criticism of him being a capitalist. It’s not mandatory to support anything Jay does. It’s optional. Whatever he’s selling, you have the choice to either buy or pass, that’s on you. But you’re not gonna guilt him into feeling ashamed for getting what he deserves.
Luis249,313 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce

All that shit was diabolical. But this shit right here had to hurt his fucking soul.
Luis847,405 görüntüleme • 9 ay önce

This video pretty much sums up the history of Jay-Z signing JAY ELECTRONICA and how patience and supportive he’s been. - signed in 2010. - first album dropped in 2020 and Hov is featured on 8/9 songs. Hov never put any pressure on him to release music, sell records, or compromise his art. Even now with all these new releases, Jay Elect has the freedom to drop music when he wants, and how he wants. Roc Nation gets behind it and supports it even if it doesn’t sell.
Luis693,318 görüntüleme • 8 ay önce

I could literally post this freestyle every single day on this app. It applies to so many things. TIDAL and Roc Nation take all the hits, simply because they’re Jay-Z’s vision. Meanwhile, the rest of these companies steal his ideas and repackage them as “innovative” and continue to operate with impurity as they rake in billions. Never take your foot off their necks, Mr. Carter!
Luis258,588 görüntüleme • 3 ay önce