Why Battle Rap is Better Than Rap Beef/Diss Tracks
The excitement about rap beef is the bars that you hear, the metaphors, and how clever the rapper can be while insulting whoever their opponent is. If those are the criteria then that is what makes battle rap that much better than actual rap beefs. Battle rappers actually take the time to set up their insults, they study the opponent they’re going up against and thoroughly dissect them with vicious punchlines and bars that you never see coming. They can’t put a hit together to save their lives but when they’re in that battle rap lane they’re untouchable.
When mainstream rappers have beef now a days, they don’t study their opponent in order to put together a good diss track. For instance, this Drake and Kendrick Lamar beef in my opinion is the worst high profile rap beef that I’ve ever seen. The songs that they kept dropping were too quick. Nobody took the time to make a visceral diss track that will forever be etched in rap beef history instead they sound like two school girls mad at each other over a boy that doesn’t want either one of them.
I can watch battle rap all day and tell you my favorite rappers in that genre. I can’t tell you my favorite mainstream rapper that is out right now because the majority of them who are good are past their prime and the new ones are just lazy rappers.
What y’all think?
7 Rappers Who Have Taken Shots At Drake
Hip-hop beefs are nothing new; you can look back at some of the greats Jay-Z vs. Nas, Biggie vs. Tupac, 50 Cent and Ja Rule, and the list goes on and on. Drake has been at the top of his game for over a decade and has since gotten into a couple of rap beefs with his peers.
Rappers Who Have Taken Shots At Drake In 2024
Drake has rap beefs that have been brewing from the beginning of his career, starting with one of his largest with Meek Mill in 2015. In between then and now, several rappers have taken shots at Drake but this year seems a little more personal. Many of his frequent collaborators have ganged up on him on Metro Boomin and Future’s We Don’t Trust You and We Still Don’t Trust You. Kendrick had a guest appearance on from We Don’t Trust You that set the internet on fire.
“Yeah, get up with me, f— sneak dissing/’First Person Shooter,’ I hope they came with three switches,” Kendrick raps.
He adds, leaving no room for confusion: “Think I won’t drop the location? I still got PTSD/Motherf— the Big 3, n—-, it’s just big me.”
“N—-a, bum, what? I’m really like that/And your best work is a light pack/N—-, Prince outlived Mike Jack’/N—-, bum, ‘fore all your dogs gettin’ buried/That’s a K with all these nines, he gon’ see Pet Sematary n—-, bum,” he raps.
It began with J. Cole’s verse on “First Person Shooter” which referred to Drake, Cole, and Kendrick as hip-hop’s “big three.”
“Love when they argue the hardest MC/Is it K-Dot? Is it Aubrey? Or me?/We the big three like we started a league, but right now, I feel like Muhammad Ali,” Cole raps.
However, on that song, Drake dismissed Kendrick as a part of the “big three.”
“Who the GOAT? Who you bitches really rooting for?/Like a kid that act bad from January to November, n—-, it’s just you and Cole,” Drake rapped. At the end of his verse he references Michael Jackson rapping, “What the f—, bro? I’m one away from Michael/N—-, beat it, n—-, beat it, what?”
Cole responded to Kendrick on “7 Minute Drill” which has been removed from streaming services after the North Carolina native gave Kendrick an apology. Drake attacked Kendrick on his diss track “Push Ups (Give Me 50)”– along with several other rappers — but fans are still awaiting a legit response from the Compton rapper. Regardless if Kendrick responds or not, hip-hop is very much alive.
Take a look below at rappers who have taken shots at Drake: