Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In the 1980s, diss tracks began to feature prominently in the hip-hop genre. The first known hip-hop feud (or "beef") was the Roxanne Wars. [20] The Roxanne Wars began in 1984 when Roxanne Shanté and Marley Marl released the song "Roxanne's Revenge", a diss track aimed at the trio U.T.F.O. "Roxanne's Revenge" was a quick success, leading U.T.F.O. to compose a response: they joined forces with ...
A diss track or record is a song ... Diss (music) List of diss tracks; 0–9. 3HunnaK; 6:16 in LA; ... By using this site, ...
It's a response of Paul McCartney's successful lawsuit in the London High Court to dissolve the Beatles as a legal partnership and the diss track "Too Many People" Lennon references the Paul is Dead theories in the song, metion the beef with Allen Klein, talk about the Ego of Paul, and attacks the music and style of Paul [16] [17] Nov 29, 1971
Kendrick Lamar and Drake’s rap feud is so heated that it may burn the hip-hop world to the ground.. Lamar, 36, and Drake, 37, have been waging lyrical war with increasingly personal diss tracks ...
Tyler disses numerous musicians in the song, most notably Hayley Williams, B.o.B, and Bruno Mars.He also dissed Mars in the Game's song "Martians vs. Goblins".In response, B.o.B released a diss track titled "No Future" in reference to Tyler's rap group Odd Future. [2]
The music video ignited a wave of feuds that played out through diss tracks. [20] Among the most notable, on June 6, 2017, YouTuber and amateur rapper RiceGum and Alissa Violet replied with a diss track of their own called " It's Every Night Sis ", which debuted at #80 on the Billboard Hot 100 and also earned a platinum RIAA certification.
"Mia Khalifa" (originally titled "Mia Khalifa (Diss)", also known as "Hit or Miss", and sometimes stylized as "MiA KHALiFA") is a song by American hip hop group iLoveFriday (stylized as iLOVEFRiDAY). The duo of Atlanta-based rappers Aqsa Malik (also known as Smoke Hijabi) and Xeno Carr self-released the song on February 12, 2018, which was later re-released by Records Co and Columbia
"Stop Snitchin" is a diss song towards rapper 6ix9ine, whose feud with YG reignited in 2018 starting with YG's video for his song "Bulletproof", in which a 6ix9ine lookalike is being locked up and taunted by prison inmates before the word "pedophile" flashes, alluding to the child sexual performance charges he pled guilty to in 2015. [2]