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MC GIBBERI$H

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Uploaded by on Sep 10, 2010

Struggling white rapper.

MY LINKS
• Main Channel - http://www.youtube.com/SuperEd86
• 2nd Channel - http://www.youtube.com/iamcrazyeddie
• Facebook - http://bit.ly/SuperEd86
• Twitter - http://www.twitter.com/SuperEd86
• Itunes - http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/id391704136?i=391704243&ign-mpt=uo%3D4

This video was originally part of the 4th episode of MIND TURDS, my sketch comedy web series. Check it out!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mlAZ0qnmMLY

Rapping (also known as emceeing, MCing, spitting (bars), or just rhyming), refers to "spoken or chanted rhyming lyrics". The art form can be broken down into different components, as in the book How to Rap where it is separated into "content", "flow" (rhythm and rhyme), and "delivery". Rapping is distinct from spoken word poetry in that is it performed in time to a beat.

Rapping is a primary ingredient in hip hop music, but the phenomenon predates hip hop culture by centuries. Rapping can be delivered over a beat or without accompaniment. Stylistically, rap occupies a gray area among speech, prose, poetry, and song. The use of the word to describe quick speech or repartee long predates the musical form, meaning originally "to hit". The word had been used in British English since the 16th century, and specifically meaning "to say" since the 18th. It was part of the African American dialect of English in the 1960s meaning "to converse", and very soon after that in its present usage as a term denoting the musical style. Today, the terms "rap" and "rapping" are so closely associated with hip hop music that many use the terms interchangeably.

MCs use many different rhyming techniques, including complex rhyme schemes, as Adam Krims points out -- "the complexity... involves multiple rhymes in the same rhyme complex (i.e. section with consistently rhyming words), internal rhymes, [and] offbeat rhymes". There is also widespread use of multisyllabic rhymes, by artists such as Kool G Rap, Big Daddy Kane, and Eminem.

It has been noted that rap's use of rhyme is some of the most advanced in all forms of poetry -- music scholar Adam Bradley notes, "rap rhymes so much and with such variety that it is now the largest and richest contemporary archive of rhymed words. It has done more than any other art form in recent history to expand rhyme's formal range and expressive possibilities".

In the book How to Rap, Masta Ace explains how Rakim and Big Daddy Kane caused a shift in the way MCs rhymed: "Up until Rakim, everybody who you heard rhyme, the last word in the sentence was the rhyming [word], the connection word. Then Rakim showed us that you could put rhymes within a rhyme... now here comes Big Daddy Kane — instead of going three words, he's going multiple". How to Rap explains that "rhyme is often thought to be the most important factor in rap writing... rhyme is what gives rap lyrics their musicality.

Many hip hop listeners believe that a rapper's lyrics are enhanced by a complex vocabulary. Kool Moe Dee claims that he appealed to older audiences by using a complex vocabulary in his raps. Rap is famous, however, for having its own vocabulary—from international hip hop slang to regional slang. Some artists, like the Wu-Tang Clan, develop an entire lexicon among their clique. African American Vernacular English has always had a significant effect on hip hop slang and vice versa. Certain regions have introduced their unique regional slang to hip hop culture, such as the Bay Area (Mac Dre, E-40), Houston (Chamillionaire, Paul Wall), Atlanta (Ludacris, Lil Jon, T.I.), and Kentucky (Nappy Roots). The Nation of Gods and Earths, aka The Five Percenters, has influenced mainstream hip hop slang with the introduction of phrases such as "word is bond" that have since lost much of their original spiritual meaning. Preference toward one or the other has much to do with the individual; GZA, for example, prides himself on being very visual and metaphorical but also succinct, whereas underground rapper MF DOOM is known for heaping similes upon similes. In still another variation, 2Pac was known for saying exactly what he meant, literally and clearly.

  • likes, 73 dislikes

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Top Comments

  • JEFF should be a gangster Jew

    Jumping into wall but milking from girl to girl

    That old bitch has some plastic gangster bags, they're bags to birth the plastic boy that justice sent

    Hey Gibber, a gin bidder,

    Chippy chippy change your pin, and Pizza Hut

    WHAT? Tubbity butt, the bad bear

    Hey, they're busting bra

    ??quack??

  • Cheaaaa, i hear them bastard jews,

    I can give you what you want,

    But you know what you got to do

    From bad bitches to plastic bags you had the chance to burn them bitches--boi sick!

    I aint cupid- i fuck bitches..

    I flip a couple plastic chicks and get busy!!

    What?!?! chicki- what?

    The bad bear,

    Yea dont be surprised,

    Im right here!!

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All Comments (1,436)

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  • JEFF should be a gangster Jew

    Jumping that you want, but you know what you're going to do

    Damn bitches and plastic tags, tags a bitch who burnt the bitch, boy sick

    Hey gibber, a gin bidder

    Chippy chippy change your pin then Pizza Hut

    What?

    chicki-what?

    The bad bear

    Yeah don't be surprised

    I'm right here

  • Still better than most of the YMCMB members.

  • This is the only rap music I enjoy litserning too.

  • Mick Øgendahl!

  • @stevemak93 Em. I just did buy it. I've bought a fair amount of his songs now because I wan't to help support him. If nobody watched his kid, or bought his music, or donated to his acting; he would cease to do it. And we'd have no more comedy. Most of what he does has a good description, detailing his inspiration for the video and all that too, something I wish more producers did.

  • Welcome to Portland, Oregon

  • who the fuck would buy your crap on ITUNES...this is youtube stuff you cant expect people to actaully pay for this you fucking jew

  • 0:17 i think he's rapping about his huge testicles.

  • Id like it better if he painted himself black.... :(

    Like a rap minstrel

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