The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)

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Date: May 17, 2008, 06:45 AM
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lucabrasi (m)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #64 on: May 07, 2008, 12:04 AM »

Quote from: Meldrick on May 05, 2008, 01:23 PM
I wonder who made Eedris king. Well maybe he is the king of insane people. His arrogance and pride gave him an ignominous fall the first time. Rather than come for a second chance humbly he has made himself king.Nobody hears a word when he raps. Na so e go dey compare himself with 50cent. That guy will go nowhere and his second fall will not be a surprise. He should learn humility from his mates. Who says he is an Icon? Abeg no make me vex. Compare him with Ekwe not Fela or Tupac
so u want him to be humble and kiss 50 cent's ass abi,was he fighting for just himself or the rest of the nigerian artiste?are they not enjoying what he was fighting for then?he did what all of them did not have the balls to do so he is the king.
u think 50cent gives a fck about nigeria if he wasnt paid to come?even the late lucky dube who is our neighbour in south africa,when he was called by cross river,imagine a nigerian state governor,he collected his money in full before stepping out of south africa,he now got here and shoutn i love nigeria ,i love africa,
go check out 50cents interview about his trip to nigeria and u ll realise eedris wasnt boasting when u heard the yeye 50 was sayn about your naija people
abdurrazaq (m)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #65 on: May 07, 2008, 09:25 AM »

Quote from: unix4real1 on May 04, 2008, 01:31 AM

them say i no like government
because them treat my people anyhow
them say them no give me show
them wan see how rude boy wan survive


them say i jagajaga
i yamayama, i scatter scatter
i too get wahala fa
my people suffer suffer
we still dey buy water
when i talk dey say who give me mouth to
talk
when i yarn dey say who give me mouth to
yarn
50 cent na my man you know we kicking it
tight
charly boy and Pman u know dey stab me for
back
Mr Star u knw na we dey drink d beer
if i like i go turn green to black
i go make peace with star
i go do how i like
don`t blame me style
everybody get im mouth, you get your mouth to
yarn
2face get im mouth im get him to yarn
2face wan be like obasanjo oh oh oh oh
me i wan be like fela anikulapo kuti

Ruggedman:
Look pass the money you wan eat and see the
problems
face of the masses abi you need glasses
on the street go teach lessons
you wan loan the classes
do the right thing before water pass garri
before guns turn to wetin everyman dey wan
carry
everyday for the thief one day for the
owner
guess who be the thief and who be the

owner.

Chorus:
till fade.



Eedris is definitely the king. Some artist would have ignore saying the "dangerous" truth in the lyrics above, considering the fact that he is just coming back to reclaim the top spot he truly belongs.

The truth is dangerous while people embrase lies wholeheartedly. Jagajaga was, at some time, criticised despite the fact that the song is the truth in its simplest form.
 
jayon (m)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #66 on: May 07, 2008, 10:14 AM »

 Grin Grin Grin Grin eedris go take a break dude ,ya time is up, mudafuka, we got sauce kidd,neto c and better people who has knocked you off the stage get a life eedris just step down like maise did you ain't welcomed here no more iight ,
lucabrasi (m)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #67 on: May 07, 2008, 01:22 PM »

dude,im dissappointed in you, you started the thread and even if you wanted to mention people that were better than eedris you're sayn naeto c???sauce kid???
lets just wait and see now abi, promise ill dig up your thread and do some "i told you so  dance" lol
for real eedris still got it and very soon the likes of all these people will be the one chilling out,abeg don't mention naeto c or sauce kid or even ikechukwu when talking of lyricist o abeg you,they only try and cover the rest up with yankee phonetics/hype
abdurrazaq (m)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #68 on: May 07, 2008, 01:49 PM »

Thank God the poster is still around.

What's up Jayon, we've been waiting for your response since you start this thread. But, I think is not worth it anymore because, it seems you are down with people like Naeto C and co. They taught you what a motherf****r is, abi? They should have spelt it for you.

Now it is clear that you start this thread just to show your hatred for a man that is far better in all standard to all your favourites.

EEDRIS na your king oo. You no like am? Go to court.
Fadajasi (m)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #69 on: May 07, 2008, 07:30 PM »

eedris is simply the best
dready (f)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #70 on: May 07, 2008, 08:28 PM »

Me i have listened to his album the album is just there i fit still open my mouth talk say in this album he was below average i will say it over and over again omo i nor dey see any body face for here.
  I can't compare his album to  Eldee's,  Freestyle's, Sanchez's O.D's not even the few singles i have heard from M.I
   He needs more improvement i don't hate him because i have his album you can call me a fan but dude gotta upgrade .
abdurrazaq (m)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #71 on: May 08, 2008, 06:09 PM »

Quote from: dready on May 07, 2008, 08:28 PM
He needs more improvement i don't hate him because i have his album you can call me a fan but dude gotta upgrade .

He is still growing up (his words in LETTER TO MR. PRESIDENT). Hoping this new album record a very good success commercially. I am also looking forward to an Eedris with more rap tracks in his next album. May be because he always a lot of political messages to pass that is why he sometimes use those styles of Afrobeat, reggae in some tracks.

My mother and my little sisters understand JAGAJAGA very well but, they can't pick a point from CRY by Mode 9 though, the track (CRY) is filled with good rhymes and addresses very vital issues (Violence in campus and driving under the influence of alcohol)

lucabrasi (m)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #72 on: May 08, 2008, 09:03 PM »

Quote from: abdurrazaq on May 08, 2008, 06:09 PM
He is still growing up (his words in LETTER TO MR. PRESIDENT). Hoping this new album record a very good success commercially. I am also looking forward to an Eedris with more rap tracks in his next album. May be because he always a lot of political messages to pass that is why he sometimes use those styles of Afrobeat, reggae in some tracks.

My mother and my little sisters understand JAGAJAGA very well but, they can't pick a point from CRY by Mode 9 though, the track (CRY) is filled with good rhymes and addresses very vital issues (Violence in campus and driving under the influence of alcohol)


totally agree wih you,kennis music interview a deejay in gambia and apart from 2face,the guy said in all the places he s played thatnigeria jagajaga was their favourite,not because of the lyrics but the beats and eedris,i have not listened to most of these  nigerian little wayne,dmx e.t.c wannabes because they are not real real talent to me is rapping in hausa,yoruba,ibo, if not why id 9ice in demand,nigga raw,even rugged man,ibo boy and a whole lot of them i am opportuned to watch mtv 24 hours of the day if i want to so i see the original panadol,why would i want to subject myself to listening to mode 9's pathetic excuse for rap,its gotten to a stage that they now speak naija ceented american phonetics in normal interviews, the funny thing is that people like naeto c,ikechukwu,sauce kid who are american born and bred force themselves to speak pidgin english
eldee (m)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #73 on: May 09, 2008, 08:46 AM »

Quote from: abdurrazaq on May 07, 2008, 09:25 AM
Eedris is definitely the king. Some artist would have ignore saying the "dangerous" truth in the lyrics above, considering the fact that he is just coming back to reclaim the top spot he truly belongs.

The truth is dangerous while people embrase lies wholeheartedly. Jagajaga was, at some time, criticised despite the fact that the song is the truth in its simplest form.

My days, you guys never cease to amaze me. . .
Let me explain to you, diss the government card is just a publicity stunt by a 'has been' musician who's taking advantage of Obasanjo's comments
Aight, what dangerous truth has he said that no one has said before?
Or did you by any chance miss 'For Instance-Tuface', 'Crisis by African China', or any of Sound Sultan's songs? Huh
This is the Music Section not Politics, we care more bout how he presents a message as much as the message itself.
If you're good at what you do, no matter the lyrics, Nigerians will feel you.
Eedris is crap at rap, SIMPLE!!! There's no argument about that.

Let me give you a simple assignment, look at that track you posted, and tell me who's verse was harder.
My dayz, even Ruggedman dissed him on that song.
Infact name one rapper in Nigeria that Eedris is better than.
I have no beef with him singing whatever kind of music he likes, but he needs to stay off hiphop. Tongue
And believe me, I have a right to tell him, why? Like Rugged said, I'm a consumer, I want a proof of my spending, even listening Cheesy.
With Eedris, hiphop has never sounded this bad.

PS. For those, dumbasses mentioning Edris in the same breath with Modenine, ask Channel O, why they gave him 3 awards.
Fadajasi (m)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #74 on: May 09, 2008, 11:12 AM »

hmm
abdurrazaq (m)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #75 on: May 09, 2008, 12:09 PM »

Eldee

I want you to answer this question for me.
Why has the former president (Chief Olusegun Obasanjo) deicded to respond to Jagajaga and not For Instance(2face) or any of the songs you mentioned?

I think this is one of the most effective song of all time in Nigeria. The good thing about it is that it is easily understandable. JAGAJAGA would not have attract comments from the then President if it had been delivered or performed like CRY by Mode 9 was performed.
get2bboy (m)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #76 on: May 09, 2008, 12:42 PM »

The King is Back, Oba ju oba lo gbabeski,


* Eedris.jpg (29.63 KB, 434x325 )
lucabrasi (m)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #77 on: May 09, 2008, 12:50 PM »

Quote from: abdurrazaq on May 09, 2008, 12:09 PM
Eldee

I want you to answer this question for me.
Why has the former president (Chief Olusegun Obasanjo) deicded to respond to Jagajaga and not For Instance(2face) or any of the songs you mentioned?

I think this is one of the most effective song of all time in Nigeria. The good thing about it is that it is easily understandable. JAGAJAGA would not have attract comments from the then President if it had been delivered or performed like CRY by Mode 9 was performed.
apart from that,rugged man or anybody can diss whoever he likes,doesnt mean ruggedman is better than him,also ruggedman's new album wasnt all that if not for 9ice who made the album a hit,mode nine got awards because he came into the industry at the time the industry was yearning for that kind of music not because he was good,even the guy said it himself that he almost packed up singing because he wasnt getting the response and had to go do something else,if he was that good then he ll have blown up immediately he got on the scene, look at the likes of 9ice, the industry is gettn wiser to the likes of mode nine and nobody is listening to them like before ,the in thing now is the indegenous rap/hip hop thats why u see most rappers in naija now using their traditional language,9ice,lord of ajasa,even rugged man e.t.c as far as im concerned eedris is back with a bang and its obvious that last man standing is a hit
abdurrazaq (m)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #78 on: May 10, 2008, 12:18 PM »

Quote from: get2bboy on May 09, 2008, 12:42 PM
The King is Back, Oba ju oba lo gbabeski,

Love that.
What about this? Ologinni t'ajo de, ekute ile e para mo.
sun_temi (m)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #79 on: May 14, 2008, 04:11 PM »

 "Awon enermy, Won ma ku ti won ba gbo pe a gba Grammy". Haters try listen to Welcome to Africa. Even 50 Cent teach himself how to dance Yahoozee that very day. See It seems most people hate the truth. Imagine Americans do behave like the world revolve around them that why it very easy to pick up quarell with them. As a Nigerian I don't see myself as been inferior.
 
The truth remains that "Nigerian Hip hop history is incomplete without mentioning Eedris". You can go and die if you can't accept that.
abdurrazaq (m)
Re: The King Is Back (eedris Abdulkareem)
« #80 on: May 15, 2008, 08:58 AM »

Not the history of Nigerian Hip hop alone but, also the success of the Nigerian Hip hop is not complete without the name Eedris. Even everythin about the sustained Hip hop in Nigeria started with The Remedies and, without Eedris Remedies is not complete.
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