nd every top in here with me got that SMOKE
nd every twink in here gotta look me up and down
I sit on the dick and the dick got thicka
Taytay all on his mouth like lika
Taytay all on his mouth like lika
Taytay all on his mouth like lika
Like like lika like like like lika
Mike Will Made It (Urban)
Emile Haynie (Urban)
Jeff Bhasker (Urban)
Rick Nowels (Pop Alt)
Daniel Heath (Classical)
Dan Auerbach (Rock, The Black Keys producer)
Woo lord
Didn't you read that article in stan-wars?
Quote:
Tips on How To Avoid Getting Dragged By Black Stans:
1. Let’s Stop Using The Term “Urban”
When I hear most pop fans use the term “urban music”, the paranoid and militant Negro inside of me feels that they really want to say “porch monkey music” and it makes me want to start a riot. I feel that “urban” has become synonymous with Black and therefore the term “urban music” is often spoken with an air of inferiority.
I feel that the term “urban” should either be clarified or dropped altogether. Pop music isn’t referred to as “suburban music” and the history of Black music is too multifaceted to be constrained by geographic or demographic classifications. In addition to the Justin Timberlakes and Robin Thickes, there have been many gifted soulful Caucasian singers like Teena Marie, Bobby Caldwell, Tamar Braxton, and Lisa Stansfield.
“Urban” no longer means exclusively Black and “Pop” no longer means exclusively White, especially when you consider the fact that some White artists have done more to advance Black music than some major Black stars.