cait mac can flow

#3
#3
I wonder if that was the music video that Woolridge was supposedly shooting a few weeks ago and which was the center of an NCAA investigation. Certainly looked like the inside of a restaurant and he was obviously there.
 
#4
#4
Not bad. Weird that she is being pushed as a Christian rapper when she is licking her lips and trying to look all sexual in the video though. Oh well....whatever makes Cait happy I guess.
 
#6
#6
Not bad. Weird that she is being pushed as a Christian rapper when she is licking her lips and trying to look all sexual in the video though. Oh well....whatever makes Cait happy I guess.

She mentions god... that's all you really need.
 
#8
#8
Something about that big forehead makes her hot.
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#9
#9
I'm pretty sure this would be better suited in the Pub forum.....

But she's not too bad
 
#13
#13
I grew up with her brother Reese, and Cait was always a little scrapper. I didn't think she would turn out to be a rapper, but it sounded pretty good.
 
#17
#17
Rap isn't music, it's merely noise pollution.

The definition of music: an artistic form of auditory communication incorporating instrumental or vocal tones in a structured and continuous manner

You lose. I appreciate all music, rap/rock/metal/hip-hop, whatever. I even appreciate country music, I hate to listen to it, but I do appreciate the work and creativeness.
 
#18
#18
The definition of music: an artistic form of auditory communication incorporating instrumental or vocal tones in a structured and continuous manner

You lose. I appreciate all music, rap/rock/metal/hip-hop, whatever. I even appreciate country music, I hate to listen to it, but I do appreciate the work and creativeness.

Actually, you loose. Sorry. The lyrics in rap music are not tones in the musical sense of the word. They have no pitch but are merely spoken rhythmic words. The accompaniment (beats, harmonies, etc.) could be considered music but the actual rapping is not.
 
#20
#20
I grew up with her brother Reese, and Cait was always a little scrapper. I didn't think she would turn out to be a rapper, but it sounded pretty good.

Did you go to school with him at William Blount or did you know Reese before that?
 
#21
#21
Actually, you loose. Sorry. The lyrics in rap music are not tones in the musical sense of the word. They have no pitch but are merely spoken rhythmic words. The accompaniment (beats, harmonies, etc.) could be considered music but the actual rapping is not.

Loose or lose? Good try.

And what are you talking about "lyrics in rap music are not tones"? Just because there vocals don't sound like Aretha Franklin doesn't mean it isn't music.

It's got vocals and rhythm, how is that not music?
 
#24
#24
Loose or lose? Good try.

And what are you talking about "lyrics in rap music are not tones"? Just because there vocals don't sound like Aretha Franklin doesn't mean it isn't music.

It's got vocals and rhythm, how is that not music?

Thanks for catching the typo on loose. My mistake.

In all seriousness, the lyrics in rap are not pitched, meaning you can't label them A, B, C, D, E, F, G which is how we in the Western world determine pitch. Each of those letters and their corresponding sharp and flat versions, are based on musical frequencies, which spoken speech simply does not contain. Rap is rhythmic, but it cannot be classified using frequencies as is required for something to have tone and be music in my opinion. I suppose ultimately it depends on what your definition of music is. It varies from individual to individual and I happen to think that the spoken part of rap is not music because of the explanation above.
 

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