5 comments:
- LIT_APOC said...
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There are numerous accounts of the crowd getting unruly AFTER the concert was cancelled. I have yet to hear of an incident that would implicate a riot prior to the announcement. Yet again, media sources are taking to the airways in a desperate attempt to say they covered the story FIRST instead of saying they covered the story Right. Thanks for the first hand account Cly. As for DRAKE, he should really spend less time stressin over payin homage to Lil Kim, and more time stressin over how he's gonna bounce back. You may not want to believe it DRAKE, but when people like you, and you say that you will entertain them for free, the crowds tend to come out in larger numbers. Whether or not large crowds of fans is foreign to you or not, that was a class A bitch move. Seeing as how you can't find the balls to perform for free, i'll be sure to think twice before buying a ticket to one of your shows.
- June 21, 2010 at 7:30 AM
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First of all!!!!! I would like to give a shout out to Cly and DJ PM for putting together an awesome blog. NOW ABOUT DRAKE.. I honestly look at Drake differently after this stunt that he pulled. Don't get me wrong his music is still fire but respect for what he does just isn't there anymore. You left your fans high and dry. What type of Artist does that to his fans?? TWO THUMBS DOWN i can just imagine how many fans he has lost over this. I also understand how he was concerned for his life. But honestly would it of been that bad if he came out. You have thousands of people chanting your name and you show them no love in return.. The Millions of dollars that he spits about are there for one reason only your fans.. that being said.. BOOOO to Drake.. ;0)
- June 24, 2010 at 3:27 AM
- katie said...
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well for me, this was not the turning point of losing respect for drake. i had done so before he failed to show up for his fans. but regardless of how "reckless and riotous" the crowd was, he should have still showed. regardless of the police, whether it be lack of or not, he should have showed. his fans are the only thing that will keep him where he claims he wants to be, at the top of the charts, making music with the best of them. regardless of this being a free concert, so many people showed up. the crowed was so diverse that he had the chance to gain a whole new group of fans, ones who would not give his music five seconds had they been given the chance previously. im not sure what was going through his head, and no one will know the real reason he didnt come out on that stage. we can only judge him from what we do know, that he lost a perfect opportunity to show his already existing fans and new fans what he is capable of. he can obviously draw a crowd, but now were not sure if he can actually please the crowd. with that being said, i agree with lit apoc.. i wont buy tickets to his concert. i wont support his music like i used to. because if you cant please people for free, it really seems to us that youre only in it for the money. that is not a true artist, a true performer, a true love for what you do. yes you have talent, but if you dont do it for the fans, then you will never transpire to them. you will never come off as though you love what youre doing. fans connect with who they listen to, some because they can relate to whats being said and others simply because they can FEEL what you feel. drake was unable to deliver this early in his career, when most artists are so in touch with who are and want to show themselves off the anyone and everyone who will listen. so really, what does this say about drake? maybe he simply is just aubrey graham and jimmy from degrassi, maybe his drake facade is lost in the money he has made and the true celebrities hes had the pleasure of working with. drake doesnt seem to be one for the fans, but one for the industry.
- June 24, 2010 at 11:54 AM
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I can honestly say the day of the "concert" I lost damn near every ounce of respect that I had for Drake as an artist, especially considering I was one of the first people to put my friends on to him. I feel like he set all of his NY fans up to be that typical NYC rowdy bunch and give people a reason not to fuck with NYC niggas. I feel disappointed, especially because he is being deemed as the artist who's supposed to come and change the game and save Hip Hop. You can't save Hip Hop if you're sitting on your tour bus being a lil bitch complaining and tweeting about the NYPD. But I'm even more disgusted at how the media is trying to portray everything that went on. Websites like Mediatakeout and THEYBF as well as the radio are really trying to make it seem like the crowd was really gonna attack Drake and that he was scared for his life. First of all, we were all there to see YOU, with 20,000 people screaming your name its highly unlikely that anyone was really going to hurt him. All the crowd wanted was what we came out there for, A DAMN PERFORMANCE!!! Drake had an opportunity to earn major street cred and show people he's real, instead he flopped on us all like the industry nigga everyone claims him to be.
- June 24, 2010 at 6:41 PM
- Cly! Host of "The 4/20 Lounge"! said...
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I just saw a clip of this man saying "I just can't do pen and paper, the way the blackberry keys are made for the hands.." so on and so forth...You're an artist, but you don't have it in you to write rhymes on pen and paper? That shit is outlandish...contemporary hip hop ass bullshit, i'm losing more respect for it by the day, and it declines faster with that weak ass excuse he gave for not showing up to the concert. Make sure you check those videos because its getting out there. I think the longevity is definitely on the ropes...
- June 25, 2010 at 2:23 AM