Cormega Ponders When Numbers Replaced Skill In Rap: ‘Somehow The Lines Got Blurred’

    Cormega has shared his thoughts on the current state of Hip Hop and the music industry at large in a lengthy social media post.

    On Tuesday (February 20), the East Coast MC shared a carousel of classic Hip Hop album cover art — including albums by Snoop Dogg, Dr. Dre, Kanye West, Nas and more — on Instagram and reflected on how much the business has changed since the ’90s.

    “The thing that made these albums special was they caught your attention before you even listened to it and they all had no jewelry and cars etc as the vocal point,” he captioned his post. “Their vocals were the point. The beauty of us as a culture is the ability to make something out of nothing. Or to maximize the potential of what we had.

    “Somehow the lines got blurred and #s became more important than artistry. Excessive spending and bragging replaced the main thing rappers should brag about which is skill.”

    He concluded: “I’m grateful for new artist that have bars that make me value lyrical standards made by legends. I’m grateful for artist from my era that still have bars that push the boundaries I also appreciate when new artist blaze new boundaries. That’s the balance. Still waiting on Detox too.”

    Check out Cormega’s post below:

    On a similar note, Russ took Hip Hop fans to task once again earlier this month, claiming that they focus too much on “numbers” and not enough on artistry.

    The 31-year-old MC took to Twitter in early February to expand on his long-held beliefs about quality being the most important part of creativity.

    “Sales and streams should never count towards awards when everyone in the business knows sales and streams are often times manipulated and faked. what can’t be faked is what you’re actually hearing,” he wrote.

    “There is no metric outside of what YOU think is the best. the metric for the Grammys is a small group of industry people voting on who THEY think is best. streams aren’t the ONLY factor, nor should they be especially when it’s known that they are often times fake.”

    He continued: “The younger generation has really let numbers dictate what they think is good or not. No original thoughts of their own, just ‘hey look at the numbers, this means it’s the best.’ All while failing to realize that more than ever, numbers are being faked. Group thinkers are running rampant. I encourage everyone to think for themselves and let their own taste influence their opinion, not numbers.”

    Russ then went on to say that fans who focus too much on numbers are “lost idiots” and called them his “least favorite fans,” saying they have “mush for brains.”

    10 thoughts on “Cormega Ponders When Numbers Replaced Skill In Rap: ‘Somehow The Lines Got Blurred’

    1. Bc y’all slipped and drowned in your contracts. Y’all let corporate *cough juuus” take over and dictate what sells. Which in turn is exploiting black artists to play the field nucca game and have no dignity. Blacks are too conditioned to realize what selling their souls is. They grow up in poverty, see a check that they know is beyond their comprehension, and dawn on the simian persona. We CAN topple the regime by not catering to what they force feed us and support indie artists.

      1. Funny that you mention the word “dignity” when referring to a bunch of self proclaimed nigg@rs with nothing but violent and vulgar mysoginist garbage lyrics. This latest pop wave didn’t kill hip hop. Gangster rap and that absolutely horrible south style rap murdered hip hop a LOOOONG time ago.

      2. You talk like you still in the 80’s. Niccas still signing them deals RIGHT NOW knowing full well what it involves. You don’t give your people enough credit. Fuckin idiot. I bet you molded you life around rappers lyrics too

    2. This isn’t a hip hop problem this is a society problem. That vast majority of humans these days have the attention span of a gnat. Add that with the ease to create content and an oversaturated market. Add that with people understanding how to game the algorithms. Most genre’s of music isn’t based off of talent and skill anymore, it’s appearance and gimmicks. Same can be said about other forms of entertainment (kids will watch tik tok over a show that forces their attention in return for the payoff). Same can be said about how people are informed about politics (adults seem to believe facebook memes rather than spend 5 minutes investigating a claim).

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