2014 was a good year for Iggy Azalea, courtesy of her hit “Fancy.” In addition, contributions from other jams such as “Work” & “Mediocre,” from her national debut, The New Classic. The aforementioned lead me to think that she would be Nicki Minaj’s first real competition. Remember, Nicki reign supreme among female rappers during that time.
Apparently, Nicki felt the pressure because she made a comment, which many felt was a shot at Iggy, at the 2014 BET awards.
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“When you hear Nicki Minaj spit, Nicki Minaj wrote it,” the YMCMB artist said.
That event would birth an anti-Iggy Azalea movement. From that point, more people questioned if she used ghost writers. She even started getting flack for being an Australia-born rapper with a southern flow and cadence.
It wouldn’t stop there regarding a YMCMB artist. But this time around, they were the victim. A year later, it was revealed — courtesy of Meek Mill — that Drake doesn’t write all of his raps. A guy by the name of Quentin Miller allegedly was responsible for many songs featured on Drake’s hit album, If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late. To add insult to injury, the reference tracks were provided, which was allegedly the voice of Miller.
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Drake’s dominance has been unmatched, which has resulted in him being stamped a legend of new age Hip Hop. However, his legacy was in question when the ghostwriter news broke.
And rightfully so.
Hip Hop was built on the blueprint of originality and authenticity. Which leads to debate topic:
Should a Rapper’s Legacy Be Affected Negatively if He/She Doesn’t Write Her Own Rhymes?
Polls Are Closed!!
Yes, absolutely! – Unanimous
No, it doesn’t matter. As long as the music is dope. – 0%