Skizza306

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Will rolls with a big entourage, but he’s so famous that anyone else is an afterthought in his presence.

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Likely a reference to Will’s long-time friend and bodyguard Charlie Mack, previously immortalized in the song “Charlie Mack (1st Out the Limo)” from the classic DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince album “He’s the DJ, I’m the Rapper”

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The name of the album the song also appeared on:

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Ryshon is torn up by the confusion and lack of closure in the ending of his relationship

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These are all classic symptoms of clinical depression that Ryshon is describing here: the belief that negative situations will persist forever, the lethargy, abandoning tasks that had once given you pleasure, thoughts of death, etc.

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“Chip & Pepper” was a clothing line that was popular (at least in Canada) with youngsters in the early 90s. Traditionally their t-shirt designs featured some kind of bleached/acid washed/faded element.

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This is a great moral juxtaposition — the Pastor through his sermon is trying to spread the “truth” of God’s love to his congregation while at the very same time these thug’s are putting all of the Pastor’s beliefs into question. Contradictory messages communicated in contradictory fashions.

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This is the polar opposite of O.C.’s legendary “I’d rather be broke and have a whole lot of respect” line — Vakill could give a fuck less about all the underground props he’s received throughout his career — give him the money instead.

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In this bar Vakill weaves the powers of each member of the Fantastic Four into one giant boast about his own lyrical prowess.

Rock — Referring to The Thing’s rocky skin
Fire — Referring to the Human Torch’s ability to burst into flames
Unseen — Referring to the Invisible Woman’s ability to turn invisible
Stretch — Referring to Mr. Fantastic’s ability to stretch his body like elastic

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"But true veterans'll give dap to those who started it / T..." (Aesop Rock – We're Famous) | pending

He’s talking about showing respect for the originators without trying to imitate what they’ve done or “bring it back” like a lot of other underground rappers (including Esoteric, who he’s skewering in the verse) tend to do. Why bring hip hop back when you can bring hip hop forward?

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