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SMACK/URL Rapper Ave Confronts Aye Verb Requesting a Battle

Aye Verb caught a lot of heat on social media about his recent URL battle against DNA in which fans believe the St. Louis born rapper got 3-0’d on Smack Vol. 5. Ave took the opportunity to confront Aye Verb for his poor performance and even told him he wants to be Verb’s next battle.

“You won’t look in that camera and say ‘give me Ave next,’” the Norfolk battle rapper told Verb in a video posted by 15 Minutes of Fame. “That s–t was ass. I’m disappointed,” Ave told Verb about his battle against DNA.

Verb was mostly nonconfrontational brushing off the idea of battling Ave calling him trash. “This is not gonna get me in the ring,” Verb told a seemingly drunken Ave.

Although Verb seems dismissive and curious why Ave is taking the angle, Ave repeatedly notes that Verb was the one who initiated the idea of a battle in Atlanta. According to Ave, Aye Verb pulled up on him before Verb’s battle with Loaded Lux and told Ave that he was next.

This is not the first time that they went back and forth. Seems like Ave really wants that smoke. Is the Island God ducking?

The post SMACK/URL Rapper Ave Confronts Aye Verb Requesting a Battle appeared first on The Source.

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Nome9 Proves That There Are Levels To This Rapping Stuff

If you love Hip-Hop, you understand that there are levels to this sh*t.

You can be an MC, mastering the art of moving the crowd or being the mic controller. You can also be a rapper, one who understands the industry and how it works, producing rap songs that fit into a particular kind of programming. A rapper can also be define as some who gets busy stringing creative words that rhyme, in a fashion that people get the vibe and love the song. Or, you can be a lyricist. The type of entertainer that values words, and constructs the poetry of them in such a way that the listener is enveloped with ooooohs and aaaaahhhs.

READ MORE: NOME9 Could Also Be Called “A Card Full Of Villains,” Hosting Battle Rap’s Biggest Bad Guys

Battle rap as an industry that takes all three, and melts them into a aural cornucopia bursting with skill, passion and flavor. No other platform nurtures and showcase this top notch talent like the well-oiled SMACK/ URL battle rap league. URL’s most recent card, Night Of Main Events 9 (NOME9) ,was the kind of lyrical smorgasbord that MCs, rappers and lyricists a like take pride in indulging.

And a few of the battlers on the card shined, while others looked tarnished. Check out how the fans reacted to the most elite battlers go bar-for-bar.








The first battle was John John Da Don vs. Jakkboy Maine.

This long standing grudge match was a prime example of a battler not being cooked enough to be a main course meal. Jakkboy allowed his emotionality to shift significantly his standing as a rising star on the “world’s most respected stage.” The pressure was on. After all, he initiated the battle by poking the bear inside of JJDD.

Bad move.

Not because he is not talented, but because he as a battler is immature (not quite developed enough for the big stage). And John John knows that stage, he thrives on that stage and through his Bullpen rap league (a league that JKBM was once down with). On Bullpen, JJDD nurtures others who are willing to follow behind his leadership and make a name for themselves in this competitive rap space. This battle launched the night, showing that there are levels to this rapping stuff that these young whipper-snappers with a fire pen, some exciting moves and social media fan base may not understand. JKBM… did not understand until standing under those big lights and standing in front of THAT particular vet.














The next battle was between Newark’s Shotgun Suge and Canada’s Pat Stay.

This was another example of how levels come into play in battle rap. In this case the levels are manifested in an extraordinary style clash. Smack White himself acknowledged that this battle was (at least in the building) was a preference battle, executed by two skilled performers on a master level. Shotgun Suge might have elevated his game for this contest and by pairing up against the former King of The Dot champion, many thought that Shotgun Suge would out-classed. Nothing could be further from the truth. This battle showed by over and over again that the Newark spit-kicker can’t be taken lightly ever. He came to rap. He came to bully. He came to win (and depending on who you talked to he did). Pat Stay also transferred all of his crowd-controlling appeal to invite the audience into his wonderfully wonky and talent-specific world. For every bomb that was dropped by Suge, Stay found a way to weave is cool and collective manner into something that only Stay can do… a jokey jokey laced with bar-heavy intensity. There were levels to both of their offerings.






After Suge and Stay, Ave and Arsonal took the stage.

READ MORE: SMACK/URLTV Announces Battle Rap Event Of The Year With Loaded Lux, Pat Stay, Aye Verb, Tsu Surf + more

THERE IS SOMETHING NEW ABOUT AVE.

Over the last few months, something has clicked for this Virginia native, making his personality and grown-man swag stand out more than ever. Everyone knows that he can rap… we all know that… why else would he be a part of the Cave Gang team if he couldn’t… but many would admit that he was not main stage exciting.

>>> awkwardly points to the K. Shine battle at Strike 2.5>>>>

But that was last year, almost another lifetime ago. This Ave, with his punching self, brought his new showmanship to NOME9, and basically leveled up on veteran (and debatably Mt. Rushmore contender) Arsonal Da Rebel. When we talk about what levels are in battle rap, you have to address the elephant in the room. And that is that there is a difference between rap styles based on your lyrical generation and heritage. Arsonal, who just bodied Champion of The Year Geechi Gotti on a previous card, could not stand strong against Tay Roc’s Sergeant.







The K. Shine and Rum Nitty and the Tsu Surf and Geechi Gotti battles showed that there are a multiplicity of performance styles that not only elevates the art of lyrical combat, by enhances the experience for the audience. K. Shine and Rum Nitty were excellent opponents, bringing the best out of each other. It is hard to talk about K. Shine without talking about performance and showmanship. As one of the leaders of NWX and The Source‘s 2018 Battler of The Year, K. Shine brings his Harlem grit to the fight out performing anyone in front of him. Nitty is known for bars. Like Ave, Nitty has recently adjusted to the bigger stages with confidence and intensity. Despite his chokes, which may have cost him the battle for battle rap enthusiasts, he had his work cut out for him opposing the the ex-Dot Mobber.  But K. Shine was in rare form. When Nitty pushed to one boundary, K. Shine up the ante. Fans teetered back and forth over who won the competition. The answer is simple: The Culture did.

 












Tsu Surf and Geechi Gotti also was a barfest.

Two style clashes were at play in this performance. East Coast confidence met with West Coast swag to dominate the stage. Two crip brothers, Neighborhood vs. Nutty Block, Motherland vs. a Battle Rap Farm, fans were divided from the start about which way it was going to go. But once Tsu climbed off his surf board and truly invested himself into the battle (you know considering he is on tour and recording with the likes of Mozzy and Chris Brown), he surgically snatched the hopes of a body from Gotti. Surf never sweated. Surf never looked uncomfortable. And even with Gotti’s crew mobbing the stage in support of their hometown hero, Surf backed by his Jersey homies seemed strong enough to stand on his own. And he took everything he could to rip out any momentum pushing Gotti to stardom. Fans who paid their tickets to see The Wave in person, got their money’s worth. To that end, Gotti still was cooking… it just was not enough to survive Tsunami. He took to that stage with the showmanship that only the Newark native could, overwhelming it and unfortunately Gotti, much like the 2004 massive Indonesian tsunami that that killed thousands. JERSEY!!!!


















There is not just one battle of the night, but three: Shotgun Suge vs. Pat Stay, K. Shine vs. Rum Nitty and Tsu Surf vs. Geechi Gotti.

Lastly, Loaded Lux and Aye Verb both performed on various levels and exceeded expectations. Both rappers understood the competition was rooted in more than just contest, but was the culmination of years of conflict. Verb represented the underdog finally addressing the champion that has been in the spotlight for so long, and who remains in the way for this quest to be a legend. Lux represents battle rap royalty, who in the spaciousness of his vocabulary, brings the next level of intellectuality reserved for god-tier emcee. To reiterate there are levels to this… the question is, does Verb step up to match this divine plateau? Verb does transcend to this level of Mt. Rushmoredom. While there surprisingly, it is not his “SHOWTIME” that keeps him flying in the company of the battle rap god… it was his craftiness with words. Showing fans that he too is (in his own words) special… This bout is not as impactful if you are looking to it only to find a winner or a loser (you won’t because there is much more at play here). The real impact is the making of room for Verb in a conversation that he has previously been denied existence in.


















 

 

 

NOME9 proved again, that there are levels to this rap sh*t and that URL keeps pushing those boundaries to let fans get glimpses.

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NOME9 Could Also Be Called “A Card Full Of Villains,” Hosting Battle Rap’s Biggest Bad Guys

Forget the Joker. Lex Luther. Charlie Manson. The Real Four Horsemen and Lucifer himself (well maybe not the devil), NOME 9 promises to be one of the most lyrically gruesome nights in battle rap history, as URL promises to host “a card full of villains.” The stakes are high and with few “good” guys on roster, the classic trope that rests on good and evil dissipates. There are very few “good guys” on deck- even as there are a couple of fan favorites. 

Peep the break down:

Jakkboy Maine vs. John John Da Don

Dirty and grimey encapsulates Jakkboy’s whole steez. He looks like he wanna rob you, and he talks like already has. The Goonies’ lieutenant has proving that spitting that spit that he is a problem. The current king of ambush, this bottom dweller seems to delight in popping up in battles to take what he believes is his… mastering the art of energy transference in such a way that he makes the audience see his opponent as lifeless. Sorry Tay Roc, JKBM becomes Dracula by sucking the life out battler X when he used his many techniques like Jakkanese or his erratic flow. But he is up against John John (who is a whole other type of villain)

John John is the guy you love to hate. He is Lex Luther. Charming. Successful. Intelligent… but presents the air as if he just does not give a —. Maybe there is some truth to that. A few years back JJDD, the Bullpen League owner, had a falling out with Jakkboy and his folk resulting in not just a ban from his league but a lot of exploitation talk for the DMV rap collective. JJDD most villainous trait was the dismissive disposition that almost appeared as if those murmurings did not matter or did not exist. Jakkboy has since been scratching like a hungry dog to get a piece of who he sees as a nemesis.And he went on smoking people, some of the top lyricists in history, paying them dust. To some, he is a champion… but to others he appears to be arrogant and detached. Which brings us to the battle between him and Goonies’ capo Nu Jerzey Twork. [Spoiler Alert] During that battle, Twork cameo’d Jakkboy during one of his round. Indignantly JJDD refused to finish the battle. For him, this was a sneaky way for JKBM to share a stage w him. The culture boo‘d as they believe a true emcee carries lyrical artilerary for cases just like this. JJDD appears to say “bunk the culture” homie has to earn the right to stand before me. I’m a brand.  At one point, people were really riding with this theory… until Jakkboy tried to jack the stage again.

Check out the second time, JKBM went for his:

Shotgun Suge vs. Pat Stay

We know that Pat Stay is not a villain, villain, villain. But he has been known to piss people off. Mostly because he is a white boy white boy, that can’t be placed in that corny white boy box. Homeboy can really rap, while at the same time can make us laugh. He fits in without adopting some of the Crutches that white battlers lean on… and that makes people siiiiiiick!

But Suge on the other hand is no laughing matter. Newark’s own, Grape Street cripping and block hugging Shotgun looks like a bad guy, just by his overwhelming appearance and no-nonsense disposition. Mr. Pocket-Check is everything that bullies are made of. He makes URL his arena by moving people out of the way and showing up for battle like a warrior. Despite what anyone thinks, with as little as a shoulder bump, or by brodying his competition, Suge is the embodiment of a villain. NOME9 will unleash something else for fans to watch w this guy.

Arsonal vs. Ave

If you look up villain in the battle rap dictionary, Arsonal’s face will pop up. For an entire generation Mr. Disrespect has become “The Godfather of Dingy Talk,” laced with the most despicable and vile vocalization of combat. Battle after battle, people wonder how does he come up with the things that he says. Battling against Ave will be interesting… because while Ave is not necessarily a villain, he doesn’t seem like someone you wan get caught in a dark alley with.

Ave seems like that hustler on the corner that you better not owe no money to. Lately, he has been sonning the newer guys in the league. Owning them with humor, condescension and above all a lyrical prowess, Ave makes fans shutter in combat. Straight like that.

K-Shine vs. Rum Nitty

The Source’s 2018 “Battler of The Year,” K-Shine is hot-headed and always ready to scrap. Aligning w NWX has helped, but even the even keeled DNA has not extinguished the fire that bubbles in his gut. That fire (which we just gonna call fire) pours out of him like the sweat from his brow, making him that much more ferocious as a battler before his opponent. That and the fact that he really seems like he will smack the entire sh$t out of you for trying to test him.

READ MORE: Best of The Culture: Top 20 Battle Rappers And Top Events of 2018

But Rum Nitty is up to testing him. Nitty is not a villain in our opinion… The Source Unsigned Hype Alum is a scrappy street fighter with his eyes on legend status. The West Coast lyricist stands on a few pillars that many battlers in this generation neglect to approach when writing: wordplay and conviction.

Tsu Surf vs. Geechi Gotti

Like Nitty, Gotti does not come off as a villain but as champion. So focused on maintaining his epic rise to battle rap stardom, he is not worried about throwing rocks. When you are deemed “Champion of The Year” by some esteemed battle media outlets, you dodge rocks (we understand).  Not being a villain doesn’t mean that Gotti nor Nitty aren’t beast, should be taken lightly or might not edge out a win. It means that the tried and true vets that they are against have invested in creating personas more worthy of a WWE spotlight then they have, understanding that marketing a contest with the classic good guy/ bad guy motif wine. Watch the HBO Andre The Giant documentary and you’ll get it. To that point, Gotti is going up against the Ric Flair of Battle Rap, Tsu Surf.

READ MORE: Geechi Gotti Finally Gets A Shot At The Wave! Tsu Surf Accepts Challenge

There is an alluring glow around Tsu Surf that borders on the thin line of brilliantly constructed confidence and obnoxiously drenched arrogance. Still, we fans, watch in astonishment as he does something that no other rapper has done: successfully marry his vocation as a battler with his success as a commercial emcee. This makes him a villain because he has the options to skate across the stage and possibly give us 2 rounds and we will f*ck with it because it is him. 

READ MORE: The Rap Community Reacts to Tsu Surf Being Shot

Just peep how high the energy has developed around this match-up.

Aye Verb vs. Loaded Lux

For almost the same reason, people can’t stand Lux.

He picks and chooses when he will grace the stage. His mythological biography is riddled with monumental achievements that few, who will tune in on Saturday, have ever seen in person. More than a Surf comparison, you could rightly compare him to Cassidy. Lux is a GOAT and that god status in battle rap will not be easily stripped from him. Think about the many commercial emcees who give him the nod for being an OG. His pop up cameo in the Dipset documentary, Diplomatic Ties, is serves as proof of his star status.

But, St. Louis’ own Aye Verb is a star in his own right, and will most certainly try to tarnish the crown of this Harlem legend… Much like he did last year, to another head on Mt. Rushmore, Murda Mook.  

Where did this energy come from?

Well… this is the stuff that legends are made of. Back in the day… a hungry Aye Verb wanted beef with a god… a god that maintained that he was not ready for that heat. No one can deny that today Aye Verb is not ready, nor can they deny that he deserves this shot. His journey to get it, aided by so many side steps (some good and some horrible), devastating valleys (can’t forget his battle with Jimz where he lost in a judged battle) and industry-shattering mountains (just look at “The Mook” battle, he proved that he alone can make a battle god bleed), has been long and arduous. Almost single handedly carrying the flag for Midwest battle rap with this battle, should he become victorious, will be the paradigm shift that he has been waiting at least ten years to initiate.

Either way, the two of them will be villains to the opposing team, because so much is at stake.

Check out all the history behind this battle:

 

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Aye Verb Continues To Fight For A Place of Mt. Rushmore; Battles Icon Lux in 2019

Harlem battle rap legend Loaded Lux is set to make his long-awaited return to SMACK / URL next year, with a NOME 9 appearance battling against St Louis’ Aye Verb in Houston, Texas.

Without a doubt, one of the greatest battle rappers of all-time, news of the return of Loaded Lux to the world’s biggest battle rap stage in URL has sent battle rap fans in a frenzy and looks to set up 2019 as the biggest year for battle rap yet. Facing a formidable opponent in Aye Verb (who most recently took it all the way and then some with Murda Mook on RBE earlier this year), this is the battle that fans have been requesting ever since then. The announcement yesterday on Christmas Day was the greatest present that owner Beasley could have gifted fans.

This is just one more battle that URL has lined up, that has fans trembling with joy. The other announced battle that is on deck is Goodz vs. Cassidy. Goodz is one of the most formidable emcees in the culture and Cassidy… well everyone knows about the Philly vet.

Coming up battling for years off-camera throughout New York before making his on-camera debut, Loaded Lux has previously battled in the SMACK/URL DVD era against Midwest Miles (aka Young Miles in 2006), and most famously against Murda Mook over eight rounds back in November 2003 in the Bronx. Lux then went on to battle half a dozen times on the now defunct 106 & Park on BET in 2009. In the most modern era post-SMACK DVD on URLTV, Lux headlined Summer Madness 2 vs. a young Calicoe in a classic and battled a very tough Charlie Clips on a heated Summer Madness 5 three years later in 2015. Lux has also had a classic vs. Hollow Da Don on UW (2014), rematched with Murda Mook on Eminem’s Total Slaughter in 2014 before most recently battling Arsonal Da Rebel on UW mid last year for Arsonal’s then supposed retirement battle.

Verb will be no easy opponent by any stretch of the imagination for Lux. The experienced Verb has had near 50 battles on camera over the last decade since the Grind Time era on multiple platforms. He has stood on that stage and like Lux also faced off against Charlie Clips, Hollow Da Don, Arsonal, T-Rex, Midwest Miles (twice) and of course most recently with Murda Mook in a performance which really made its own case for him to now face Lux. Aye Verb’s complete battle resume is one of the most impressive overall, having also battled the likes of K-Shine, Math Hoffa, O-Red, Pat Stay, Hitman Holla, Dizaster, Tsu Surf, Cortez, Goodz amongst dozens of others.

This battle has been long in the making for seven-plus years already, and Verb’s recent strong showing vs. Mook coupled with strong fan support for this battle to go down now means the time is now finally right for Lux to greenlight it. The battle means a lot to both, a Lux win will really see him cement his place at the top end of battle rap table while a win for Aye Verb would really rattle the battle rap Mount Rushmore. Stay tuned to The Source for news as the lead-up to this monumental battle.

The post Aye Verb Continues To Fight For A Place of Mt. Rushmore; Battles Icon Lux in 2019 appeared first on The Source.

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