Tag Archives: SmackURL

BREAKING!!!! The Long Awaited SMACK Battle Rap Experience in Philly, Cassidy Vs. Arsonal Headline ‘Lock Down’

Hold your cheesesteaks! Hold your motherflubbing cheesesteaks! For the first time in the history of the league, SMACK URL will host their first battle rap experience in Philadelphia, PA on the Lock Down card on October 6th. The announcement was made exclusively on the SMACK URL app.

Emceeing and Philly actually goes hand-in-hand.

Approximately 94 miles up i95, access to the bubbling rap scene in the 70s was easy and open. In fact OG’s from the Hilltop section of West Philly, Lawrence “L.G.” Goodman and Dana Goodman, made that b-line up to the Big Apple with their early rap label Pop Art Records. Contracts in hand, they created reality out of the dreams of many of Hip-Hop’s early stars (just ask Salt-N-Pepa and the entire Juice Crew)! Out of this lot came the Godmother of Battle Rap, Roxanne Shante… and so having an eye for battle rap is something in the Schuylkill punch.

But you don’t have to go back into the glory years of Hip-Hop to find that NYC/ Philly connection. Over the last 15, artists like Beanie Sigel, Freeway, Shawn Smith, E Ness, Black Thought, Meek Mill and yes, Cassidy have kept bars alive by see-sawing between the commercial success of the industry and having one foot squarely in the sand of underground Hip-Hop. They all have done this by performing in cyphers, spitting fire freestyles and battling.

READ MORE: Jaz and O’fficial Debut As “The Bardashians” The Two Set The Tone for Summer Impact With Body of The Night

And so today, what in the name of Ishkabibles does that really mean?

It kinda means that SMACK URL took too damn long to set up a franchise event in the City of Brotherly Love.  It also means that now that they they are scheduled to execute this card, the ink is dried on the contracts and fans have been alerted… fans will experience one of the most incredible explosion of battle rap culture and authentication ever seen in the culture. Headlining will be Philly hometown hero Cassidy (who contends he is 5002-0).

No one can deny that Cassidy is instrumental in building the legacy of battle rap. Arguably one of the best to ever touch the mic, he is about to face one of his toughest opponents ever in Arsonal da Rebel.

READ MORE: Cassidy Throws Shots At Tsu Surf,  But Does He Really Want That Smoke

Both incredibly cocky. Both incredibly skilled with the lyrics. Both on a mission to cement their legacy. This is gonna be a battle for the ages.

It took years to come… but now that it is here…and  the city where the underdog Rocky is the municipal god, the soft pretzel is the city staple food, they laugh at Auntie Annie’s pretzels (what are those) and hoagies are not subs is about to get SMACK!

The post BREAKING!!!! The Long Awaited SMACK Battle Rap Experience in Philly, Cassidy Vs. Arsonal Headline ‘Lock Down’ appeared first on The Source.

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The Goonies and Jersey Dominated Banned Legacy 3… Where Did Nu Jerzey Twork Stand?

It’s becoming a broken record.

SMACK/ URL is the Def Jam of the battle rap industry creating platforms for some of the most gifted lyricists in the culture to showcase their gifts.  Retired rapper, media influencer, and former Def Jam artist, Joe Budden, says that one of the most essential contributions that labels from the 90s and 2000s provided for their roster was to create spaces for artist’s development. While the average eye might have thought labels like Def Jam were ignoring new and rising talent, the Cohen/Liles/Greenwald Trifecta institutes a baking period that never let acts drop before they were really cooked. Why put a spotlight on a soufflé before it was just right for public consumption. The figurative Def Jam boot camp allowed for the co-mingling of creative tiers, you’d find a hungry State Property studying the blueprint set by their leader Beanie Sigel, a Redman learning the ropes on tour with EPMD, or a then green Kanye West testing his genius against the prowess of a JAY-Z. There were ranks that could easily be climbed or dismantled- Juelz Santana with his break out hit “Oh Boy” or Budden with his “Pump It Up,” and some people who found themselves on ice- Lady Luck

Giving artists the co-signs to rock with the brand is dignity provision that most of them not only need but crave like sex. It takes them from the juvenile gratification of masturbation (stroking their own egos by self-proclamation) to the ecstatic expression of social and professional orgasm- “Yes! I made it to the mountaintop. And this feels good.”

Cheeko, Beasley and Smack White seem to have figured it out.  With the Banned Legacy franchise, they formatted a three-day experience that allows artists to bake until their ready, but give them the “this feel-good” climax.

Can’t figure out what’s better… the feeling or the look. 

Banned Legacy is a hybrid franchise that combines the wildly popular Banned series with the successful advancement card for PGs, Born Legacy. As each one grows, the public is treated to surprise main event battles and also some polished up Proving Ground match ups.

Born Legacy 3, the card from the past weekend, seemed like a music festival. Flashes of battle rap royalty filled the room, Tay Roc, Ave, Chess, and Arsonal yucked it up with fans, while We Go Hard’s Ms. Jade, Battle Rap Trap’s Hennyman and vet Danja Zone pressed forward their influencer power. While BL3 had the potential of being one of the most diverse events of the franchise’s history, it seemed to be more of a Goonies (translation DMV) vs. Jersey set (with a few nods to the midwest and west). And not just because it was in VA.

But first… let’s look at the PG battles:

  • Goddie Lumenati vs. Yo Bull Pnut
  • Kid Chaos vs. J Krooger
  • RACCS vs. Stumbles
  • Rad B vs. C-Moneii
  • Luck Dollaz vs. Tubbs
  • 280 Zay vs. Radio B
  • G Lowe vs. Skatez
  • Joe Gambello vs. Ru Bando

BANNED BATTLES

  • Cortez vs. JC
  • Series Jones vs. Mike P
  • Ill Will vs. Geechi Gotti
  • Shotgun Suge vs. Jakkboy Maine
  • Bill Collector vs. Your Honor
  • O-Red vs. Danny Myers
  • Ryda vs. Mackk Myron
  • Jai 400 Block vs. Lu Castro
  • Holmzie Da God vs. Don Marino
  • Mr. Wavy vs. Mack Mell
  • Bonus vs. Swagtanna
  • Nunn Nunn vs. Burke Bucs
  • Ha Double vs. Duce
  • J Morr vs. Deizal
  • Ish Mulah vs. Funeral F.A.M.E.

Stand-Outs from the weekend were J. Krooger (who proved that he deserves to be on the URL stage), Mike P (who said keep your white boys can’t rap back there in the wacky woods) and Mack Mell (who stayed afloat in crashing waters of Mr. Wavy).

Battles that made you take a second look were Ill Will vs. Geechi Gotti (a preference bloodbath), Bill Collector vs. Your Honor (one of the best and funniest battles of the weekend) and Ryda vs. Mack Myron (style clash and bar fest).

The elephant in the room (and later out on the street) were the Goonies apparent takeover of the Banned Series and the Jersey guys saying- “Eh No!”

The Shotgun Suge vs. Jakkboy Maine battle and the Jai 400 Block vs. Lu Castro battle had Nu Jerzey Twork defending his loyalty. Twork, arguably the leader of The Goonies clique has come under fire for seeming like he is a crew switcher (remember the Cave Gang thing… put a pin in that)… But this technically can’t be called crew switching. He lives in Jersey and rocks with the Jersey dudes… so when the battle rap superstar stood on the side of his battle rap crew instead of his home-state… many scratched his head.

This was particularly true during the Shotgun Suge against Jakkboy battle.  Suge and Twork will together form the Monstars for this the URL battle event of the year (yes… another battle of the year… they keep pushing the bar), Summer Impact. There was an expected allegiance in the air during the beginning of this battle. Where was Twork going to stand?

Even Suge was unsure… (or at least he acted like that).  And when Twork stood in the back of Jakk, the added fuss was like “How you gonna go over there?”

It reminded fans of the storylines of Andre The Giant and Hulk  Hogan- him siding with Bobby “The Brain” Heenan on the Piper’s Pit, going against the ally that had seemed to walk in true friendship. While it might not be that deep… the entertainment value of not just URL, but battle rap culture, is definitely on WWF/WWE levels. Twork and Suge make a great team as bullies and bad guys, making them storybook villains. Twork’s standing behind Jakk (which really makes sense), placed the “Strapped In” bar-master in a conundrum. Who are you really down with Twork? It also pushed the narrative forward… that anything can happen… and that the position behind the battling rapper says just as much about your folk… as it says about your rapping ability…

PROVING CLEARLY BY HOW QUICKLY SUGE AND TWORK (WHO WERE UNITED IN THEIR JERSEY ‘ISH BEHIND SERIUS JONES… QUICKLY LEFT AFTER HOMIE FOR CUT BY THE WHITE BOY WHO PLAYS WITH HIS HAIR AFTER HIS BARS).

Don’t believe me… just look at where the Cave Gang guys stood (pit or behind the lyricists). Look at whenever Tay Roc positions himself on stage… it is just for the look… it is for the messaging of it all.

Standing behind Suge was not the only conflict with Twork… but that is the only one we will talk about here.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The post The Goonies and Jersey Dominated Banned Legacy 3… Where Did Nu Jerzey Twork Stand? appeared first on The Source.

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