Rap Battle Bootcamp: Learn How To Rap Battle and Freestyle (FREE BONUS COURSE): [ Ссылка ]
Infinite Rhyme Maker: Learn How To Rhyme Any Word (FREE BONUS COURSE): [ Ссылка ]
--
In this video, we’re going to teach you how to write a rap diss, step-by-step.
Even better, we’re actually going to have you CREATING the blueprint for your own rap diss right here, right now by guiding you through each item.
The best part? To make this process even easier, each rap diss tip will come with examples from some of the “flawless victories” in rap diss history:
Nas’s “Ether”, Eminem’s “Killshot”, Pusha T’s “The Story of Adidon”, and Drake’s “Back To Back”.
--
TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 Overview
0:37 Free Bonus Rap Battle Course
1:05 How To Write A Rap Diss Introduction
2:16 #1 “Let Me Explain Why You Failed At Life”
3:01 Pusha T and Drake Examples For #1
4:19 Action Items For #1
6:12 #2 Question Structure – “Why Do You Act This Way?”
6:42 Eminem and Nas Examples For #2
7:47 Action Items For #2
9:03 #3 “I Didn’t Want To Have To Do This”
9:35 Drake and Nas Examples For #3
10:20 Action Items For #3
10:58 Comment and Get Courses
--
FULL ARTICLE ON THIS TOPIC: [ Ссылка ]
--
How To Write A Rap Diss: Introduction
As we were doing research for this video, one thing we noticed after all these years of rapping and listening to great rap disses…
…Is that pretty much EVERY single “flawless victory” classic rap diss was actually a RESPONSE to an initial insult.
Think about it:
Nas’s “Ether” was a response to Jay-Z’s “Takeover”
Pusha T’s “Story of Adidon” was a response to Drake’s “Duppy Freestyle”.
“Killshot” by Eminem was a response to “Rap Devil” by MGK…
…And even “Back To Back” was essentially a response to the tweet that Drake “doesn’t even write his own songs” by Meek Mill.
With this in mind as we begin the steps, try your best to “use your powers for good” and once you know how to write a rap diss in a fire way…
…Save your biggest punch as a response.
It will both make you look better because you’ll be able to play the “I didn’t want to have to do this card” (which we’ll talk about in tip #3), thus looking like the “bigger man” or “bigger woman”…
…And we’ve just pointed out in cold, hard fact… the masses usually respond better to a FIREY response record than to the first so-called “knockout punch”.
#1 “Let Me Explain Why You Failed At Life”
This first tip is really The Holy Grail of understanding how to write a rap diss.
Without mastering the ability to clearly state why your opponent “failed at life” in some way, shape, or form, it’s unlikely you’ll be able to annihilate them, or as we say now… ETHER them.
So, your first major goal in any rap diss is to make sure the audience has NO doubt whatsoever that the other person is a FAILURE at life…
Whether that be their career, their relationships, how they look, and more.
Now, in a minute we’ll have you constructing your own rap disses using this tip, but just to make it clearer, let’s look at some example of rap battle history:
In a somewhat ironic fashion, both Pusha T’s “The Story of Adidon” towards Drake and Drake’s “Back To Back” follow a similar “you’re a failure as a man, you’re a failure at life” structure.
In the case of “The Story of Adidon”, the entire point of the song is that Drake is a prideful, insecure LIAR who would go so far as to deny his own son’s existence, with lines like:
Let’s have a heart-to-heart about your pride…
Your music for the last few years been angry and full of lies…
A baby’s involved, it’s deeper than rap
We talkin’ character let’s keep with the facts
YOU ARE A HIDING A CHILD, let that boy come home
Now there are also other “you’re a failure at life” lyrical through lines in the song, such as the idea Drake hasn’t looked out for his mother and father…
But let’s move onto how Drake himself actually used a similar “you’re not a real man” structure for Meek Mill:
“You love then, you gotta give the world to her
Is that a world tour or your girl’s tour?
I know that you gotta be a thug for her
This ain’t what she meant when she told you to open up more”
I can’t lie, both Pusha T’s “hiding a child” and “open up more” lines still make make laugh until this day.
Anyway, in Drake’s case he is saying Meek failed at life by having his woman “wear the pants in the relationship” by being the headlining act rather than Meek.
FULL ARTICLE CONTINUED: [ Ссылка ]
Ещё видео!