Chords for Zack Fox Reacts To New Rap Hits (Baby Keem, 645AR, Duke Deuce) | The Cosign
Tempo:
131.9 bpm
Chords used:
F
G
Am
Em
Ab
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
Hey, this is Zach Fox and I'm gonna see which one of these new rap hits is gonna get my cosign.
Growing up, I listened to a lot of rap music.
I was never really stuck to one region.
I had
all these different phases and all this different stuff.
I would go to Ghostface Killa was my
favorite rapper growing up.
My college years, Future became my favorite rapper.
Nobody should be
coming for my opinion at all.
I just woke up.
I'd be forgetting to clean my fingernails and stuff.
So coming to watch my cosign on rap music, what are you even here for?
Tisa is just pure happiness in a person.
If Tisa's sad, he needs to tell someone
because you can't read it.
You can't tell that he's gone through anything.
I used to watch a lot of dance videos.
It's so funny because this is literally what they do.
They just go find a parking lot somewhere at Home Depot or TJ Maxx or wherever and they just
make cinema.
They do put me in the mind of old Atlanta snap era when dudes would just form a line
and they would just have on tall tees and size 40 jeans on a size 30 waist and crank that,
insert superhero, insert action, insert president name.
They remind me of that energy.
You know why I like them out?
Because it feels like a community is doing it.
Whereas the shoot
dance, I don't know if you've ever been in a crowded party and a dude is like, hold on guys,
I'm going to do the shoot dance and kicks a bitch in the knee.
And now we got to take Melissa to the hospital because you wanted to show out.
[Cm] Never
[Ebm] seen this.
This is cool.
[G] First off, the video is super dope.
And [Bb]
she can really rap.
Yo, Awkwafina, get the fuck out of here.
Yo, get the fuck out of here,
[G] Awkwafina.
Yo, the farewell, the fucking crazy.
No, get the fuck out of here.
I'm not saying
there's only room for one Asian female rapper.
I'm not saying that at all, but you know who has
my vote.
I really do have an appreciation for the new wave of Asian [A] American artists.
I fuck with
Yeji a lot.
The whole 88 Rising movement, I feel like they've really captivated and really got
the community together on one.
Dumbfoundead, since back in the day I was listening to him,
I was like, okay, this dude's dope.
So she seems like she's a very next logical step.
[F] [G] [E]
[F] Hold on.
[G] [A]
[F] [C] [Dm] I know every word to this already, so you can't [Am] even
[Dm]
Wow.
This dude has it all.
Dance moves, amazing lyrics, versatility, looks like an adult baby.
That's everything that I want in a rapper.
He fully encapsulates what Memphis is about.
Krunk, as much as Atlanta can take credit for, it really did start in Memphis way back in the
early 90s was like Krunk tapes, like cassette tapes.
He's taking everything that's very
homegrown and the local level of [G] Memphis.
He's not getting to a point where it's too
Hollywood and too cinematic.
That's kind of where Atlanta is right now.
I've been noticing the move of the center of rap moving kind of from Atlanta up to Memphis,
but now it's really coming to the [Gbm] forefront.
[D] [Bm]
[E] [Gbm] I'm not going to lie to you at all.
[D] I fucking hate this.
[Ab] I could just [Gbm] skip this one entirely.
Are they 3D printing these bitches now?
What is this shit?
Hold on, I'll listen.
I'll listen.
[D] [B] [D] [Gb]
[Bm]
[E] [Gbm]
I like imagining that these are just [Bm] two missing Jenners and [E] they're like,
what are [Gbm] we going to [B] do?
I know what [Ab] we'll do.
We'll be black.
That's how we'll get back at them.
I do like certain parts of the video though.
Certain parts of it look real dreamy and cool,
like a Cocteau Twins video, but God damn.
I need, in Comic Sans, over my head in the video,
I need y'all to do it in post.
This ain't it.
And then I'll wipe it away like that.
I've been on the Baby Keem wave for a minute now.
I think the thing that's most interesting about
him early on, he's paying such close attention to his videos, man.
I don't care what happens
in the next half year or two or whatever, he's going to be more important than a lot of people
who've been around because he sits down and he goes, no, let's make a really, really good video.
Every frame in this is beautiful.
It's super fresh, but it's not so of the times that it's like,
I've heard this before.
I'm like, oh, okay.
This is something special here.
He hasn't created
something that's too insulated into one age group.
I'm sure most, mostly teenagers know
about Baby Keem's music, but Drake knows about Baby Keem's music.
Baby Keem has
connection to Kendrick, correct?
He's a cousin or something [Am] like that.
We can't confirm or deny,
but for a freshman tape to have a video like this connected to it, nigga who your daddy is?
[Em]
[F] [Em]
[F] [Am] Oh [Em] yes.
Don't talk to me for a minute and 35 seconds.
[F]
[C] [G] [Dm] [Am]
[Em] [F] [Am]
[C] [Am] [Em] You know what this reminds me of?
[F] Being a kid, [Am] first time your [G] mom ever gave you an ice cream
[Gm] cone and you held that ice cream cone and you licked it and you looked up at the sky and
everything was okay.
It's like beyond pure.
If you asked me 10 years ago, how do you think
raps will sound in 2020?
I would say something like this.
And the fact that it's actually here
is very impressive.
We can't really talk about people debasing or manipulating the art form of
rap without talking about Lil B.
Lil B broke rap, completely shattered it to where people
could go in and rearrange the parts.
And then you have someone like Young Thug who comes in,
post Lil B.
We can't have Thug without Lil B.
Thug comes in and his voice is the instrument.
I would say maybe the next step after him is a Cardi.
If Cardi is the baby voice, this is the
moment of conception voice.
This is when the sperm cell touches the fucking egg.
645AR sounds
like the spark of life.
[B]
[C] [Gm] I mean, these are all artists that are a little bit left of center,
which is really cool.
Tisa Korean, I'm a huge fan.
I love the video, love the dance.
Audrey is better than Awkwafina.
She has really, really good [Ab] flows.
I think she's a strong
[Gb] contender.
[F] Duke Deuce, one of the best, most exciting things to come out of the South in
recent years for me.
When I hear his songs, I immediately want to kick somebody in the ass.
[D]
Lord Nana, just stop.
[C] Baby Keem, [Ab] a true 360 degree artist in the truest sense.
He's short,
which is a plus.
Everybody likes [Em] something that's compact in the digital age.
645AR,
a [A] crazy [G] rare leap of [F] intelligence, [Ab] an intellectual diamond in the rough.
After watching all of these
new rap hits, the artist that gets my cosign, and this is really difficult for me, the artist
that gets my cosign is going to [Em] be Duke Deuce.
[F] He has a full tape out.
I love almost every song
on there.
From the South, doesn't try to do anything besides what is truly him.
Not afraid
to dance, which means he's got a personality.
He's a human being.
[Ab] He's got my cosign.
If Duke
Deuce wasn't on this list, 645AR, without a doubt, blew all of these people out of the water.
All of these artists have something really, really unique to offer.
I think they're all
underdogs.
[Bb] I think the story of the underdog is just more interesting, man.
[N]
Growing up, I listened to a lot of rap music.
I was never really stuck to one region.
I had
all these different phases and all this different stuff.
I would go to Ghostface Killa was my
favorite rapper growing up.
My college years, Future became my favorite rapper.
Nobody should be
coming for my opinion at all.
I just woke up.
I'd be forgetting to clean my fingernails and stuff.
So coming to watch my cosign on rap music, what are you even here for?
Tisa is just pure happiness in a person.
If Tisa's sad, he needs to tell someone
because you can't read it.
You can't tell that he's gone through anything.
I used to watch a lot of dance videos.
It's so funny because this is literally what they do.
They just go find a parking lot somewhere at Home Depot or TJ Maxx or wherever and they just
make cinema.
They do put me in the mind of old Atlanta snap era when dudes would just form a line
and they would just have on tall tees and size 40 jeans on a size 30 waist and crank that,
insert superhero, insert action, insert president name.
They remind me of that energy.
You know why I like them out?
Because it feels like a community is doing it.
Whereas the shoot
dance, I don't know if you've ever been in a crowded party and a dude is like, hold on guys,
I'm going to do the shoot dance and kicks a bitch in the knee.
And now we got to take Melissa to the hospital because you wanted to show out.
[Cm] Never
[Ebm] seen this.
This is cool.
[G] First off, the video is super dope.
And [Bb]
she can really rap.
Yo, Awkwafina, get the fuck out of here.
Yo, get the fuck out of here,
[G] Awkwafina.
Yo, the farewell, the fucking crazy.
No, get the fuck out of here.
I'm not saying
there's only room for one Asian female rapper.
I'm not saying that at all, but you know who has
my vote.
I really do have an appreciation for the new wave of Asian [A] American artists.
I fuck with
Yeji a lot.
The whole 88 Rising movement, I feel like they've really captivated and really got
the community together on one.
Dumbfoundead, since back in the day I was listening to him,
I was like, okay, this dude's dope.
So she seems like she's a very next logical step.
[F] [G] [E]
[F] Hold on.
[G] [A]
[F] [C] [Dm] I know every word to this already, so you can't [Am] even
[Dm]
Wow.
This dude has it all.
Dance moves, amazing lyrics, versatility, looks like an adult baby.
That's everything that I want in a rapper.
He fully encapsulates what Memphis is about.
Krunk, as much as Atlanta can take credit for, it really did start in Memphis way back in the
early 90s was like Krunk tapes, like cassette tapes.
He's taking everything that's very
homegrown and the local level of [G] Memphis.
He's not getting to a point where it's too
Hollywood and too cinematic.
That's kind of where Atlanta is right now.
I've been noticing the move of the center of rap moving kind of from Atlanta up to Memphis,
but now it's really coming to the [Gbm] forefront.
[D] [Bm]
[E] [Gbm] I'm not going to lie to you at all.
[D] I fucking hate this.
[Ab] I could just [Gbm] skip this one entirely.
Are they 3D printing these bitches now?
What is this shit?
Hold on, I'll listen.
I'll listen.
[D] [B] [D] [Gb]
[Bm]
[E] [Gbm]
I like imagining that these are just [Bm] two missing Jenners and [E] they're like,
what are [Gbm] we going to [B] do?
I know what [Ab] we'll do.
We'll be black.
That's how we'll get back at them.
I do like certain parts of the video though.
Certain parts of it look real dreamy and cool,
like a Cocteau Twins video, but God damn.
I need, in Comic Sans, over my head in the video,
I need y'all to do it in post.
This ain't it.
And then I'll wipe it away like that.
I've been on the Baby Keem wave for a minute now.
I think the thing that's most interesting about
him early on, he's paying such close attention to his videos, man.
I don't care what happens
in the next half year or two or whatever, he's going to be more important than a lot of people
who've been around because he sits down and he goes, no, let's make a really, really good video.
Every frame in this is beautiful.
It's super fresh, but it's not so of the times that it's like,
I've heard this before.
I'm like, oh, okay.
This is something special here.
He hasn't created
something that's too insulated into one age group.
I'm sure most, mostly teenagers know
about Baby Keem's music, but Drake knows about Baby Keem's music.
Baby Keem has
connection to Kendrick, correct?
He's a cousin or something [Am] like that.
We can't confirm or deny,
but for a freshman tape to have a video like this connected to it, nigga who your daddy is?
[Em]
[F] [Em]
[F] [Am] Oh [Em] yes.
Don't talk to me for a minute and 35 seconds.
[F]
[C] [G] [Dm] [Am]
[Em] [F] [Am]
[C] [Am] [Em] You know what this reminds me of?
[F] Being a kid, [Am] first time your [G] mom ever gave you an ice cream
[Gm] cone and you held that ice cream cone and you licked it and you looked up at the sky and
everything was okay.
It's like beyond pure.
If you asked me 10 years ago, how do you think
raps will sound in 2020?
I would say something like this.
And the fact that it's actually here
is very impressive.
We can't really talk about people debasing or manipulating the art form of
rap without talking about Lil B.
Lil B broke rap, completely shattered it to where people
could go in and rearrange the parts.
And then you have someone like Young Thug who comes in,
post Lil B.
We can't have Thug without Lil B.
Thug comes in and his voice is the instrument.
I would say maybe the next step after him is a Cardi.
If Cardi is the baby voice, this is the
moment of conception voice.
This is when the sperm cell touches the fucking egg.
645AR sounds
like the spark of life.
[B]
[C] [Gm] I mean, these are all artists that are a little bit left of center,
which is really cool.
Tisa Korean, I'm a huge fan.
I love the video, love the dance.
Audrey is better than Awkwafina.
She has really, really good [Ab] flows.
I think she's a strong
[Gb] contender.
[F] Duke Deuce, one of the best, most exciting things to come out of the South in
recent years for me.
When I hear his songs, I immediately want to kick somebody in the ass.
[D]
Lord Nana, just stop.
[C] Baby Keem, [Ab] a true 360 degree artist in the truest sense.
He's short,
which is a plus.
Everybody likes [Em] something that's compact in the digital age.
645AR,
a [A] crazy [G] rare leap of [F] intelligence, [Ab] an intellectual diamond in the rough.
After watching all of these
new rap hits, the artist that gets my cosign, and this is really difficult for me, the artist
that gets my cosign is going to [Em] be Duke Deuce.
[F] He has a full tape out.
I love almost every song
on there.
From the South, doesn't try to do anything besides what is truly him.
Not afraid
to dance, which means he's got a personality.
He's a human being.
[Ab] He's got my cosign.
If Duke
Deuce wasn't on this list, 645AR, without a doubt, blew all of these people out of the water.
All of these artists have something really, really unique to offer.
I think they're all
underdogs.
[Bb] I think the story of the underdog is just more interesting, man.
[N]
Key:
F
G
Am
Em
Ab
F
G
Am
Hey, this is Zach Fox and _ I'm gonna see which one of these new rap hits is gonna get my cosign. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Growing up, I listened to a lot of rap music.
I was never really stuck to one region.
I had
all these different phases and all this different stuff.
I would go to Ghostface Killa was my
favorite rapper growing up.
My college years, Future became my favorite rapper.
Nobody should be
coming for my opinion at all.
I just woke up.
I'd be forgetting to clean my fingernails and stuff.
So coming _ to watch my cosign _ on rap music, what are you even here for? _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Tisa is just pure happiness in a person.
If Tisa's sad, he needs to tell someone
because you can't read it.
You can't tell that he's gone through anything.
I used to watch a lot of dance videos.
It's so funny because this is literally what they do.
They just go find a parking lot somewhere at Home Depot or TJ Maxx or wherever and they just
make _ cinema.
They do put me in the mind of old _ Atlanta _ snap era when dudes would just form a line
and they would just have on tall tees and size 40 jeans on a size 30 waist and crank that,
insert superhero, insert action, insert president name.
They remind me of that energy.
You know why I like them out?
Because it feels like a community is doing it.
Whereas the shoot
dance, I don't know if you've ever been in a crowded party and a dude is like, hold on guys,
I'm going to do the shoot dance and kicks a bitch in the knee.
And now we got to take Melissa to the hospital because you wanted to show out.
_ _ _ _ [Cm] Never _
_ _ [Ebm] _ _ seen this.
This is cool.
[G] First off, the video is super dope. _ _
_ And _ _ _ [Bb] _
she can really rap.
Yo, Awkwafina, get the fuck out of here.
Yo, get the fuck out of here, _
[G] Awkwafina.
Yo, _ the farewell, the fucking crazy.
No, get the fuck out of here.
I'm not saying
there's only room for one Asian female rapper.
_ I'm not saying that at all, but you know who has
my vote.
I really do have an appreciation for the new _ wave of Asian [A] American artists.
I fuck with
Yeji a lot.
The whole 88 Rising movement, I feel like they've really _ _ _ captivated and really got
the community together on one.
_ Dumbfoundead, since back in the day I was listening to him,
I was like, okay, this dude's dope.
So she seems like she's a very next logical step. _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [F] _ _ [G] _ [E] _ _
[F] Hold on.
_ [G] _ [A] _ _ _
_ [F] _ _ [C] _ _ [Dm] I know every word to this already, so you can't _ [Am] _ even_
[Dm] _
_ _ Wow.
This dude has it all.
Dance moves, amazing lyrics, versatility, looks like an adult baby.
That's everything that I want in a rapper.
He fully _ _ encapsulates what Memphis is about.
Krunk, as much as Atlanta can take credit for, it really did start in Memphis way back in the
early 90s was like Krunk tapes, like cassette tapes.
He's taking everything that's very _
homegrown and the local level of [G] Memphis.
He's not getting to a point where it's too _ _
Hollywood and too cinematic.
That's kind of where Atlanta is right now.
I've been noticing the move of the center of rap moving kind of from Atlanta up to Memphis,
but now it's really coming to the [Gbm] forefront. _ _ _
_ _ _ [D] _ _ [Bm] _ _ _
[E] _ [Gbm] _ _ I'm not going to lie to you at all.
[D] I fucking hate this.
[Ab] I could just [Gbm] skip this one entirely.
Are they 3D printing these bitches now?
What is this shit?
Hold on, I'll listen.
I'll listen.
_ [D] _ _ [B] _ _ [D] _ _ [Gb] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ [Bm] _
_ _ _ _ [E] _ [Gbm] _ _
I like imagining that these are just [Bm] two missing Jenners and [E] they're like,
what are [Gbm] we going to [B] do?
I know what [Ab] we'll do.
We'll be black.
That's how we'll get back at them.
I do like certain parts of the video though.
Certain parts of it look real dreamy and cool,
like a Cocteau Twins video, _ but God damn.
I need, in Comic Sans, _ _ over my head in the video,
I need y'all to do it in post. _
This ain't it. _ _ _ _ _
_ And then I'll wipe it away like that. _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ I've been on the Baby Keem wave for a minute now.
I think the thing that's most interesting about
him early on, he's paying such close attention to his videos, man.
I don't care what happens
in the next half year or two or whatever, he's going to be more important than a lot of people
who've been around because he sits down and he goes, no, let's make _ a really, really good video.
Every frame in this is beautiful.
It's super fresh, _ but it's not so of the times that it's like,
_ I've heard this before.
I'm like, oh, okay.
This is something special here.
He hasn't created
something that's _ too insulated into one age group.
I'm sure most, mostly teenagers know
about Baby Keem's music, but Drake knows about Baby Keem's music.
Baby Keem has
connection to Kendrick, correct?
He's a cousin or something [Am] like that.
We can't confirm or deny,
but for a freshman tape to have a video like this connected to it, nigga who your daddy is?
_ _ [Em] _ _
_ [F] _ _ _ _ [Em] _ _ _
[F] _ _ [Am] Oh _ [Em] yes.
Don't talk to me for a minute and 35 seconds.
_ _ [F] _ _ _
_ [C] _ _ [G] _ _ [Dm] _ _ [Am] _
_ [Em] _ _ _ [F] _ _ [Am] _ _
_ [C] _ _ [Am] _ _ _ [Em] You know what this reminds me of?
[F] Being a kid, [Am] first time your [G] mom ever gave you an ice cream
[Gm] cone and you held that ice cream cone and you licked it and you looked up at the sky and
everything was okay.
It's like beyond pure.
If you asked me 10 years ago, how do you think
raps will sound in 2020?
I would say something like this.
And the fact that it's actually here
is very impressive.
We can't really talk about people debasing or manipulating the art form of
_ rap without talking about Lil B.
Lil B _ _ broke rap, completely shattered it to where people
could go in and rearrange the parts.
And then you have someone like Young Thug who comes in,
post Lil B.
We can't have Thug without Lil B.
Thug comes in and his voice is the instrument.
I would say maybe the next step after him is a Cardi.
If Cardi is the baby voice, this is the
moment of conception voice.
This is when the sperm cell touches _ the fucking egg.
645AR sounds
like the spark of life. _
_ [B] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
[C] _ _ [Gm] I mean, these are all artists that are a little bit left of center,
_ which is really cool.
Tisa Korean, I'm a huge fan.
I love the video, love the dance. _
Audrey is better than Awkwafina.
She has really, really good [Ab] flows.
I think she's a strong
[Gb] contender.
[F] Duke Deuce, one of the best, most exciting things to come out of the South in
recent years for me.
When I hear his songs, I immediately want to kick somebody in the ass.
[D]
Lord Nana, _ just stop.
[C] Baby Keem, [Ab] a true 360 degree artist in the truest sense.
He's short,
which is a plus.
Everybody likes [Em] something that's compact in the digital age.
645AR, _
a [A] crazy [G] rare leap of [F] intelligence, [Ab] an intellectual _ diamond in the rough.
After watching all of these
new rap hits, the artist that gets my cosign, and this is really difficult for me, the artist
that gets my cosign is going to [Em] be Duke Deuce. _
_ [F] _ He has a full tape out.
I love almost every song
on there.
From the South, doesn't try to do anything besides what is truly him.
Not afraid
to dance, which means he's got a personality.
He's a human being.
[Ab] He's got my cosign.
If Duke
Deuce wasn't on this list, _ 645AR, _ without a doubt, blew all of these people out of the water.
All of these artists have something _ really, really unique to offer.
I think they're all
underdogs.
_ [Bb] _ I _ think the story of the underdog is just more interesting, man.
[N] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Growing up, I listened to a lot of rap music.
I was never really stuck to one region.
I had
all these different phases and all this different stuff.
I would go to Ghostface Killa was my
favorite rapper growing up.
My college years, Future became my favorite rapper.
Nobody should be
coming for my opinion at all.
I just woke up.
I'd be forgetting to clean my fingernails and stuff.
So coming _ to watch my cosign _ on rap music, what are you even here for? _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Tisa is just pure happiness in a person.
If Tisa's sad, he needs to tell someone
because you can't read it.
You can't tell that he's gone through anything.
I used to watch a lot of dance videos.
It's so funny because this is literally what they do.
They just go find a parking lot somewhere at Home Depot or TJ Maxx or wherever and they just
make _ cinema.
They do put me in the mind of old _ Atlanta _ snap era when dudes would just form a line
and they would just have on tall tees and size 40 jeans on a size 30 waist and crank that,
insert superhero, insert action, insert president name.
They remind me of that energy.
You know why I like them out?
Because it feels like a community is doing it.
Whereas the shoot
dance, I don't know if you've ever been in a crowded party and a dude is like, hold on guys,
I'm going to do the shoot dance and kicks a bitch in the knee.
And now we got to take Melissa to the hospital because you wanted to show out.
_ _ _ _ [Cm] Never _
_ _ [Ebm] _ _ seen this.
This is cool.
[G] First off, the video is super dope. _ _
_ And _ _ _ [Bb] _
she can really rap.
Yo, Awkwafina, get the fuck out of here.
Yo, get the fuck out of here, _
[G] Awkwafina.
Yo, _ the farewell, the fucking crazy.
No, get the fuck out of here.
I'm not saying
there's only room for one Asian female rapper.
_ I'm not saying that at all, but you know who has
my vote.
I really do have an appreciation for the new _ wave of Asian [A] American artists.
I fuck with
Yeji a lot.
The whole 88 Rising movement, I feel like they've really _ _ _ captivated and really got
the community together on one.
_ Dumbfoundead, since back in the day I was listening to him,
I was like, okay, this dude's dope.
So she seems like she's a very next logical step. _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [F] _ _ [G] _ [E] _ _
[F] Hold on.
_ [G] _ [A] _ _ _
_ [F] _ _ [C] _ _ [Dm] I know every word to this already, so you can't _ [Am] _ even_
[Dm] _
_ _ Wow.
This dude has it all.
Dance moves, amazing lyrics, versatility, looks like an adult baby.
That's everything that I want in a rapper.
He fully _ _ encapsulates what Memphis is about.
Krunk, as much as Atlanta can take credit for, it really did start in Memphis way back in the
early 90s was like Krunk tapes, like cassette tapes.
He's taking everything that's very _
homegrown and the local level of [G] Memphis.
He's not getting to a point where it's too _ _
Hollywood and too cinematic.
That's kind of where Atlanta is right now.
I've been noticing the move of the center of rap moving kind of from Atlanta up to Memphis,
but now it's really coming to the [Gbm] forefront. _ _ _
_ _ _ [D] _ _ [Bm] _ _ _
[E] _ [Gbm] _ _ I'm not going to lie to you at all.
[D] I fucking hate this.
[Ab] I could just [Gbm] skip this one entirely.
Are they 3D printing these bitches now?
What is this shit?
Hold on, I'll listen.
I'll listen.
_ [D] _ _ [B] _ _ [D] _ _ [Gb] _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ [Bm] _
_ _ _ _ [E] _ [Gbm] _ _
I like imagining that these are just [Bm] two missing Jenners and [E] they're like,
what are [Gbm] we going to [B] do?
I know what [Ab] we'll do.
We'll be black.
That's how we'll get back at them.
I do like certain parts of the video though.
Certain parts of it look real dreamy and cool,
like a Cocteau Twins video, _ but God damn.
I need, in Comic Sans, _ _ over my head in the video,
I need y'all to do it in post. _
This ain't it. _ _ _ _ _
_ And then I'll wipe it away like that. _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ I've been on the Baby Keem wave for a minute now.
I think the thing that's most interesting about
him early on, he's paying such close attention to his videos, man.
I don't care what happens
in the next half year or two or whatever, he's going to be more important than a lot of people
who've been around because he sits down and he goes, no, let's make _ a really, really good video.
Every frame in this is beautiful.
It's super fresh, _ but it's not so of the times that it's like,
_ I've heard this before.
I'm like, oh, okay.
This is something special here.
He hasn't created
something that's _ too insulated into one age group.
I'm sure most, mostly teenagers know
about Baby Keem's music, but Drake knows about Baby Keem's music.
Baby Keem has
connection to Kendrick, correct?
He's a cousin or something [Am] like that.
We can't confirm or deny,
but for a freshman tape to have a video like this connected to it, nigga who your daddy is?
_ _ [Em] _ _
_ [F] _ _ _ _ [Em] _ _ _
[F] _ _ [Am] Oh _ [Em] yes.
Don't talk to me for a minute and 35 seconds.
_ _ [F] _ _ _
_ [C] _ _ [G] _ _ [Dm] _ _ [Am] _
_ [Em] _ _ _ [F] _ _ [Am] _ _
_ [C] _ _ [Am] _ _ _ [Em] You know what this reminds me of?
[F] Being a kid, [Am] first time your [G] mom ever gave you an ice cream
[Gm] cone and you held that ice cream cone and you licked it and you looked up at the sky and
everything was okay.
It's like beyond pure.
If you asked me 10 years ago, how do you think
raps will sound in 2020?
I would say something like this.
And the fact that it's actually here
is very impressive.
We can't really talk about people debasing or manipulating the art form of
_ rap without talking about Lil B.
Lil B _ _ broke rap, completely shattered it to where people
could go in and rearrange the parts.
And then you have someone like Young Thug who comes in,
post Lil B.
We can't have Thug without Lil B.
Thug comes in and his voice is the instrument.
I would say maybe the next step after him is a Cardi.
If Cardi is the baby voice, this is the
moment of conception voice.
This is when the sperm cell touches _ the fucking egg.
645AR sounds
like the spark of life. _
_ [B] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
[C] _ _ [Gm] I mean, these are all artists that are a little bit left of center,
_ which is really cool.
Tisa Korean, I'm a huge fan.
I love the video, love the dance. _
Audrey is better than Awkwafina.
She has really, really good [Ab] flows.
I think she's a strong
[Gb] contender.
[F] Duke Deuce, one of the best, most exciting things to come out of the South in
recent years for me.
When I hear his songs, I immediately want to kick somebody in the ass.
[D]
Lord Nana, _ just stop.
[C] Baby Keem, [Ab] a true 360 degree artist in the truest sense.
He's short,
which is a plus.
Everybody likes [Em] something that's compact in the digital age.
645AR, _
a [A] crazy [G] rare leap of [F] intelligence, [Ab] an intellectual _ diamond in the rough.
After watching all of these
new rap hits, the artist that gets my cosign, and this is really difficult for me, the artist
that gets my cosign is going to [Em] be Duke Deuce. _
_ [F] _ He has a full tape out.
I love almost every song
on there.
From the South, doesn't try to do anything besides what is truly him.
Not afraid
to dance, which means he's got a personality.
He's a human being.
[Ab] He's got my cosign.
If Duke
Deuce wasn't on this list, _ 645AR, _ without a doubt, blew all of these people out of the water.
All of these artists have something _ really, really unique to offer.
I think they're all
underdogs.
_ [Bb] _ I _ think the story of the underdog is just more interesting, man.
[N] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _