Absolutely. Ludakrishna is da bomb! <object width="425" height="350"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/c-NKL-Vgt1E"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/c-NKL-Vgt1E" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="350"></embed></object>
"back in my day, we had to walk 50 miles to school, in the snow, with no shoes, arrrrrrrrrrrrrgh, legends?, the only music we had some old phonograph, that you had spin yourself, and then your hand started bleeding, and blood got all over your record, arrrrrrrghh, and you couldn't hear the music, and you had to huddle up next to the phonograph, and then everyone's blood got all over each other, arrrrrrrgh, and then everyone died of typhoid, arrrrrgh, legends my ass." cranky old geezer dana carvey snl
Chamillionaire, Trae, Z-Ro, T.I. just to name a few... It is a little sad that the crunk sound has come to the forefront of hip hop, but there are lots of guys, even mainstream, who have not succumbed to it. Anyway, do we really need this old guy(Not saying you, Rivaldo) attack on rap every week? UGK originates from Port Arthur(And rap accordingly...shoutouts to PAT, not Houston), so I don't know if I would call them Houston legends, but they are legends in their own right.
Sorry, sonnyboy. We're just here to remind you that rap is a completely craptastic joke-like form of music, and that all rappers are no-talent assclowns, that's all.
Ok, so it had a few good songs...since when did having one or two good songs turn you into a legend? And you still haven't give me a list of southern rap legends. Notice I put sometimes in ( ) next to Luda.
yeah...i wouldnt consider z-ro "crunk" at all. Far from it. also, "crunk" type music has been around way before lil jon (three-6, mjg and 8-ball). Now i know what you mean, that alot of it now is just catchy garbage thats only good to get the girls shaking their ass (not that i'm complaining) thats funny. people use to say the same thing about rock n roll. btw, the new CD goes hard.
Rap music just keeps remaining debatable and under fire. And its mostly internal between the rappers and fans themselves, instead of external criticism. The people involved is rap is own worst enemy now, not censors and politicians. How can it be enjoyable when everyone in it just trys to one up the other or slam the other person's taste?