The line up is lit obviously anyone's think of 3 others to throw on here to represent but they definitely held there own and did NY good my line up would be I'd keep Jada obv for that 3rd verse but ima start the song with maybe Juelz Santana and for the mid verse Jay or sum
@@calvinkendrick851 50 petty AF, but hed come off sounding stupid if he said he didnt like this song. This has to be one of the hottest beats ever hands down! Damn 20 years!
@@brandonbarron2891 exactly sir!! Ja’s RAP flame hit its pinnacle in 2001. All his records with the ladies(J-Lo, Ashanti, Christina Milan etc) were so huge!!!
@@highsobriety9465 your right of course and before his Hip Hop R&B Charts people forget his hardcore Debut 1999 Venni Vetti Vecci was also fire before 2000 Rule 3:36, 2001 Pain Is Love, and 2002 Last Temptation.
Bronx NY is the Original Home of Original Hip -Hop Rap Music and Break Dance ing!!! New York, New York !! The Big City the Of the East Coast !!!!! Bronx, Manhattan , Brooklyn , Queens and Stanten Island !!!!
Hip hop, a vibrant cultural and artistic movement that began in the streets of New York City in The Bronx in the 1970s, has become one of the most influential and globally recognized genres of music today. Its roots are multifaceted, drawing from African, Caribbean, and Latino influences, and it has since grown to encompass various sub-genres, styles, and cultural phenomena. It’s almost hard to believe that what started in The Bronx 50 years ago today, August 11, 1973, would eventually span into a global movement that has generated hundreds of billions of dollars (if not more) during the half a century it has existed. Bronx Beginnings In the early 1970s, a remarkable cultural movement was taking shape in the South Bronx, a neighborhood known for its diversity and the rich heritage of its residents, many of whom hailed from Caribbean and African roots. It was a time of great economic decline and urban decay, a period when the city itself seemed to be crumbling under the weight of neglect and social struggle. Yet, amidst this challenging environment, something incredible was happening: the birth of hip hop. Hip hop, as we know it today, is a global phenomenon that has influenced countless artists, musicians, and creatives around the world. But its humble beginnings can be traced back to the streets of the South Bronx. It was here that the pioneers of the genre, such as Kool Herc, Afrika Bambaataa, and Grandmaster Flash, first experimented with a new form of music and expression that would go on to reshape popular culture. Kool Herc, widely regarded as the “Father of Hip Hop,” began hosting block parties in the Bronx, where he would showcase his unique DJing style. He would isolate and extend the breakbeats of funk records, creating a rhythmic foundation that captivated audiences. This new approach to DJing, now known as “breakbeat DJing,” became a defining element of hip hop. But hip hop was not just about the music. It was a multidisciplinary movement that encompassed various art forms and self-expression.Black and Latino kids grew up together and faced similar struggles. Hip-hop, which includes breaking, or break-dancing, graffiti, DJing and rapping, pulled them together, says Rubén Díaz Jr., former borough president of the Bronx and a trustee for the Universal Hip Hop Museum, which is expected to open late next year or in 2025. Carlos Mendes who is Puerto Rican, is best known as DJ Charlie Chase was the DJ for the Cold Crush Crew, pioneers of hip hop and the first rap group to be signed by CBS Records.DJ Kool Herc, a.k.a. Clive Campbell, laid the first building block of hip-hop down in 1973. That was when he reportedly hosted a party in his building at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue with a sound system, or sound equipment used to DJ a party. Herc's sound system was a guitar amp and two turntables. "Kool Herc brought the idea of the Jamaican sound system to America," says Marcus Reeves, journalist and the author of Somebody Scream! Rap Music's Rise to Prominence in the Aftershock of Black Power. Herc also invented the now commonplace DJing technique of breaks, or breakbeats. He would, for example, play James Brown’s “Give It Up or Turnit A Loose” on two turntables, and would spin one of the records back to the break repeatedly. "His innovation was bringing the breakbeat to the sound of this new movement," Reeves says. "He would just kind of drop a needle on the record, and just kind of go back and forth." DJ Afrika Bambaattaa, who formed the famous non-violent hip-hop crew Universal Zulu Nation in the Bronx, used DJ Kool Herc's breakbeats in his own DJing. "Then you would have innovators of that sound, like Afrika Bambaataa, who would take global sounds like West Indian music, salsa music, great beats from rock records," Reeves says." Bambaattaa may be best known for his 1982 song "Planet Rock," which samples an electronic piano sound from the German group Kraftwerk. Grand Wizzard Theodore, a.k.a. Theodore Livingston, also incorporated breakbeats into his music in the Bronx. And he added another technique to the hip-hop toolbox: scratching. Grand Wizzard Theodore reportedly invented the technique (when DJs move records back and forth while they are playing) in his bedroom; while talking to his mother one day, he started moving a playing record back and forth. "He thought it would be a great percussive sound to add to the arsenal," Reeves says. Then, there was Grandmaster Flash, or Joseph Sadler, who may be best known for his song "The Message," which was made with The Fabulous Five. Flash began experimenting with turntables and records at home, and the results were astounding. He invented cutting, which is achieved by playing the same record at two turntables at the same time and cutting back and forth between the two turntables (and records) to repeat a phrase or sound. Another Grandmaster Flash innovation, Reeves says, was "back spinning, pulling the record back, so you could make it repeat."During the height of the destruction, Latino and Black teenagers, like the mambo and salsa musicians before them, held parties and jams in schools, basements, parks and playgrounds - even in the burnt out buildings that became their clubhouses. Tying their turntables, speakers and amps into lampposts for power, teens gathered to rap, break, spin and “scratch” records. A chronicle of both hip hop and salsa in the Bronx, the film shows how the mixing of African Americans and Latinos gave a crucial lift to the musical cultures of the South Bronx.
True that I'm from chitown wish we had jrule back before it titled ad said I'm from New York. Gotta had it over and confess New York takes baby loveit no matter what!
This shit was so hard. It was design, developped, written and produced heading straight to 50's head. The only fact that this song, which is one of the best of hip hop history, didnt kill 50's career let you know how important 50 was in the rap game in this era of time
50 really can’t rap , just backed by big names bar for bar Ja is better .. even check out his collabos… 50 never did any songs with x or jay , meth, nas , jada , … etc
@@IWTBF For real. I like Ja, but 50 killed all these mofo's on piggy bank alone. This song is still a banger. Had us up in central NY going nuts. I can imagine NYC was poppin when this came out.
@@zicomoney3696 pleasure its a sampled from Nkalakatha by Mandoza a kwaito(south african genre) song which became song of the year in SA on the year 2000 check it out
NYYYYYYYYYYYYY baby shout out to my Puerto Ricans and Dominicans living in NY...Jada had the best verse in this joint but they all went in......representando a Nueva York..
Honestly, Ja's career was saved by this track. Cuz he didnt really make anything "mesmerizing" after this, compared to his 1998-04 run. We all know why. But he went out like a G. And pretty much said "i might never return to my hay day, but ima make sure yall remember one more killer performance from me." This song helped immortalize his legacy. And he needed Joe and Jada to really come thru on this track. And they did.
Jadakiss is always tooo slick " it's guaranteed you gon die and you might be missed for maybe 2 or 3 hours till they light they spliff n that coke get u a long time when I let em know the dope out its like America online "
@@eddie152bang Ja did his thing, Jada had a straight classic verse, but hands down Fat Joe had the best verse. And here's proof, 20 years later i guarantee its only 1 line niggas think of when they reminisce this track. That one bar was so hard, that Roy Jones went to try and knock out Fat Joe because of it 🤣🤣
Never had the chance to grade Ja Rules music because I was young when he was active. Now I'm older I'm realizing Ja Rule was sick with that pen. Every verse is special.
@@robswork2465 my guy clicked on this video to hate? 🤣🤣 ja had more good tracks than 50. Interscope and dr dre is what killed ja's run. If ja was with dre he would have had the followers. People thought dre was death row. 50 had 1album with about 5 good tracks and g unit as a group was okish.
This beat and all the features on it were all absolute 🔥.....I miss this Era of rap so badly. 1997 - 2008 hip hop Era rip. Greatest time for music hands down. Whenever Jada got on a track it was blessed! Damn I want a time machine to go back to 2000 for more then just music. Everything was great back then. Today's world just ain't the same!
I absolutely loved listening to Chamillionaire. Slim Thug. Young Jeezy. T.I. Joel Santana. Ying Yang Twinz. Daddy Yankee. Paul Wall. Mike Jones. B.G Pitbull.
cap.. You just gotta look further than the mainstream bubble. Been like that for like 20+ years. Stuff like this and even doper, gets released EVERY DAY some where on earth. It's just that you don't look for it. But I get the point. But still, don't say it doesn't exist anymore. It surely does.
20 years ago this jawn dropped I miss these days and glad I grew up in this era they had everybody in this video, from terror squad Jadakiss and jLo, remmey ma, Weezy everyone!
Even though Ja Rule gets alot of hate these day's this song will always be a classic.. It let everyone know that New York artists were still on their grind and it never stopped..
i remember this classic being released in 2004. time flies by, people thought Ja didn't have in him to respond but he proved critics wrong by coming back with this track. joe and jada verses were dope.
@@johnb9607 Eminem nor 50 cent end Ja Rule's Career, it was the money laundering indictment that affected Murder Inc. Murder inc was stalled and had their headquarters raided and Def Jam stop promoting them due the legal issues that Murder inc was facing.
Name a better New York anthem than this... Ja Rule was really slept on... Feds seize assets, Def Jam kicked them out. R.U.L.E album was under Universal and shit deal.. Clowns that dont know shit think it was 50 that did Ja dirty... I stood by Ja all those years, Still stand by Ja today!
This song is such a New York anthem! I am jealous that they got to have this song! Ja Rule really put on for the state when he dropped them. Carried New York on his entire back!
@@youtubeaccount458 there is part 2 bro Ja should upload it next for those missed it. But now it is time to come back with part 3. Cool&Dre where phenomenal and accepted beats years ago would love to join if a trilogy classic NY3 is wished.
@@youtubeaccount458Mh same artist, same producer, subject NY and 3 years later. What do you miss or is needed except the title is not named NY2? Of course it's the official sequel to the OG NY. "NY Is Back Again" would also be fine.
@@ChrisShine I guess you can look at it like that, although dj khaled was a producer on it. He wasn't on the original. And the original was a Diss record aimed at 50. Second isn't.
I’m from Chicago but when this dropped I can’t lie I was fighting the urge a few times trying to act as if I wasn’t from NYC. A lot of my closest friends are from NYC, I’ve even had the pleasure of living there for two years.. I have nothing but respect for New Yorkers especially being that I grew up Biggie, Jada, Method Man, Dipset, Max B, The Lox list goes on 🔥🔥🔥
This song is dope! It doesn't get more NY than Jadakiss
Jadakiss is good raper
Queenzflip is somewhere foreign kicking a baby rn 😂 that boy carrying NYC rn
Jadakiss was the best verse.
Top 5, dead or alive. 🔥
The line up is lit obviously anyone's think of 3 others to throw on here to represent but they definitely held there own and did NY good my line up would be I'd keep Jada obv for that 3rd verse but ima start the song with maybe Juelz Santana and for the mid verse Jay or sum
The Hip hop I miss.... 🔥 🎉❤
We all do
I also miss this music, I only listen to old songs, because what is on the radio today is shit
Song is hard even 50 liked it
I know 50 cent can’t not hate this song at all.
Yeah that’s why he beefed with Jada and Joe too lol
@@calvinkendrick851 50 petty AF, but hed come off sounding stupid if he said he didnt like this song. This has to be one of the hottest beats ever hands down! Damn 20 years!
He beefed with everyone in this song 😂😂@@calvinkendrick851
Yup the beat is straight fire.@@joeymims5852
❤❤❤❤😮😮😮YO MAN REAL LIFE FAT JOE IS THE KING OF NYC BX N DA HOUSE 1
Ja Rule had it on locked during 1999-2004. I appreciate his music. Say whatever you want about him. Rule has Hits during that time period
1999-2002
@@highsobriety9465 yea he didn't have a great year on 2003, but he bounce back a lil in 2004 with R.U.L.E. just end on good note
@@brandonbarron2891 exactly sir!! Ja’s RAP flame hit its pinnacle in 2001. All his records with the ladies(J-Lo, Ashanti, Christina Milan etc) were so huge!!!
@@highsobriety9465 your right of course and before his Hip Hop R&B Charts people forget his hardcore Debut 1999 Venni Vetti Vecci was also fire before 2000 Rule 3:36, 2001 Pain Is Love, and 2002 Last Temptation.
50 looked at this as abomination
I’m from Dallas but this made me want to be from New York when it dropped
I'm from Morocco 🇲🇦 and we were like: I'm from new Yooork
Nothing worse than a wannabe. If I was from Dallas or Houston ain't no way I would be screaming New York anything.
@@C-Lyfe85 did I say I was song was a hit still listen till this day
Farrockaway queens ny all day
Fax I’m from Killeen Texas but this shit HAD ME FEELING A TYPE OF WAY
Damn remember this song.. Real hip hop... missed you 😍
Ja's new music ruclips.net/video/KZf88xz3nfE/видео.html
@@igormedeiros1615 Ja's new hot song "ruclips.net/video/xPlKfY8uip8/видео.html"
D-low facts realness the south talk all that this right here rings bells all ove 💯💯💯💯💯🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥💰💰💰💰💰
Was this a shot at 50? Lol
@@antontoshaboy8264 yeh then game made a diss track back to ja rule
Still one the hardest songs and videos ever!
Jadakiss killed it❤
2024 im still listening to this masterpiece
2024 💯💯💯🤜🤛💎
Wow! Still make senses 2024!!!
Moi j'écoute ça en belgique Europe 2024😊
2024 me
"& I'm not cocky I'm confident, so when you tell me I'm the best it's a compliment. AHAAA!" - Kiss
Lame
@@younglove3362like u
@@DTC336
More lame than me.
@@younglove3362 I’m smarter and stronger tho 🤷♂️
Bronx NY is the Original Home of Original Hip -Hop Rap Music and Break Dance ing!!! New York, New York !! The Big City the Of the East Coast !!!!! Bronx, Manhattan , Brooklyn , Queens and Stanten Island !!!!
Hip hop, a vibrant cultural and artistic movement that began in the streets of New York City in The Bronx in the 1970s, has become one of the most influential and globally recognized genres of music today. Its roots are multifaceted, drawing from African, Caribbean, and Latino influences, and it has since grown to encompass various sub-genres, styles, and cultural phenomena.
It’s almost hard to believe that what started in The Bronx 50 years ago today, August 11, 1973, would eventually span into a global movement that has generated hundreds of billions of dollars (if not more) during the half a century it has existed.
Bronx Beginnings
In the early 1970s, a remarkable cultural movement was taking shape in the South Bronx, a neighborhood known for its diversity and the rich heritage of its residents, many of whom hailed from Caribbean and African roots. It was a time of great economic decline and urban decay, a period when the city itself seemed to be crumbling under the weight of neglect and social struggle. Yet, amidst this challenging environment, something incredible was happening: the birth of hip hop.
Hip hop, as we know it today, is a global phenomenon that has influenced countless artists, musicians, and creatives around the world. But its humble beginnings can be traced back to the streets of the South Bronx. It was here that the pioneers of the genre, such as Kool Herc, Afrika Bambaataa, and Grandmaster Flash, first experimented with a new form of music and expression that would go on to reshape popular culture.
Kool Herc, widely regarded as the “Father of Hip Hop,” began hosting block parties in the Bronx, where he would showcase his unique DJing style. He would isolate and extend the breakbeats of funk records, creating a rhythmic foundation that captivated audiences. This new approach to DJing, now known as “breakbeat DJing,” became a defining element of hip hop.
But hip hop was not just about the music. It was a multidisciplinary movement that encompassed various art forms and self-expression.Black and Latino kids grew up together and faced similar struggles. Hip-hop, which includes breaking, or break-dancing, graffiti, DJing and rapping, pulled them together, says Rubén Díaz Jr., former borough president of the Bronx and a trustee for the Universal Hip Hop Museum, which is expected to open late next year or in 2025.
Carlos Mendes who is Puerto Rican, is best known as DJ Charlie Chase was the DJ for the Cold Crush Crew, pioneers of hip hop and the first rap group to be signed by CBS Records.DJ Kool Herc, a.k.a. Clive Campbell, laid the first building block of hip-hop down in 1973. That was when he reportedly hosted a party in his building at 1520 Sedgwick Avenue with a sound system, or sound equipment used to DJ a party. Herc's sound system was a guitar amp and two turntables.
"Kool Herc brought the idea of the Jamaican sound system to America," says Marcus Reeves, journalist and the author of Somebody Scream! Rap Music's Rise to Prominence in the Aftershock of Black Power.
Herc also invented the now commonplace DJing technique of breaks, or breakbeats. He would, for example, play James Brown’s “Give It Up or Turnit A Loose” on two turntables, and would spin one of the records back to the break repeatedly. "His innovation was bringing the breakbeat to the sound of this new movement," Reeves says. "He would just kind of drop a needle on the record, and just kind of go back and forth."
DJ Afrika Bambaattaa, who formed the famous non-violent hip-hop crew Universal Zulu Nation in the Bronx, used DJ Kool Herc's breakbeats in his own DJing. "Then you would have innovators of that sound, like Afrika Bambaataa, who would take global sounds like West Indian music, salsa music, great beats from rock records," Reeves says." Bambaattaa may be best known for his 1982 song "Planet Rock," which samples an electronic piano sound from the German group Kraftwerk.
Grand Wizzard Theodore, a.k.a. Theodore Livingston, also incorporated breakbeats into his music in the Bronx. And he added another technique to the hip-hop toolbox: scratching. Grand Wizzard Theodore reportedly invented the technique (when DJs move records back and forth while they are playing) in his bedroom; while talking to his mother one day, he started moving a playing record back and forth. "He thought it would be a great percussive sound to add to the arsenal," Reeves says.
Then, there was Grandmaster Flash, or Joseph Sadler, who may be best known for his song "The Message," which was made with The Fabulous Five. Flash began experimenting with turntables and records at home, and the results were astounding. He invented cutting, which is achieved by playing the same record at two turntables at the same time and cutting back and forth between the two turntables (and records) to repeat a phrase or sound. Another Grandmaster Flash innovation, Reeves says, was "back spinning, pulling the record back, so you could make it repeat."During the height of the destruction, Latino and Black teenagers, like the mambo and salsa musicians before them, held parties and jams in schools, basements, parks and playgrounds - even in the burnt out buildings that became their clubhouses. Tying their turntables, speakers and amps into lampposts for power, teens gathered to rap, break, spin and “scratch” records. A chronicle of both hip hop and salsa in the Bronx, the film shows how the mixing of African Americans and Latinos gave a crucial lift to the musical cultures of the South Bronx.
New York may have started it but the west perfected it little homie.
Can’t believe this track is almost 20 years old! Still hits hard! 🔥🔥
😊😊😊
😊
😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
😊😊😊
@@claudensemwa33124:02
@@claudensemwa3312❤indicates7777)77.
Who rocking this in 2024?!?!? 🎉
Me
I from in Kazakhstan 🇰🇿. ✊🏻✊🏻✊🏻 I'm here too ))
We
Me
✈ yep 😊
Jada put out three of 10 hardest verses I’ve ever heard…..this guy just don’t quit
What's the other 2?
@@gjwilliams4098 his verse on Im on with Trae The Truth.... Show Discipline Ft Nas
@@cmoore9354 Facts...that I'm On verse was a masterpiece. Never heard the other one tho.
top 5 dead or alive
Jada don't miss. Top three best ever.
I love his 94 and especially his 96 albums. Shaq very wise he brought lots of emcees together and made some of the most underrated sounds in hip hop
Ja Rule gave New York a sick Anthem 🔥
That’s fat joes tune he gave it to ja
Like the Killa Cam Jay song more to be honest, sounds like a proper anthem that one not saying this doesn't but that one seem more structured.
Hell yea
True that I'm from chitown wish we had jrule back before it titled ad said I'm from New York. Gotta had it over and confess New York takes baby loveit no matter what!
Facts. Til he "let" 50 take his position
Ja Rule is back the game, Haiti 🇭🇹 represents live
"Wise is awoken.....they say you know that you deserved it whenever you die with your eyes open."...... the hardest bar on the track
I’m from 𝑫𝑪 but 𝑵𝒀 niggas had that swag 🫡
I'm from NYC. But got fam in NE and SE DC. Back when Rayful had DC on LOCK. If you know - you KNOW.😎
Thank you❤
West coast had the swag in the 90s
This song was the street anthem. 2004 Rule album was 🔥 🔥 🔥.
Damn this sht is dope!! New York State stand up!!! Reppin Buffalo New York!!
716
Brooklyn NY 😜
You from upstate you don’t count
This beat was ahead of its time. It sounds so fresh and modern it could have been produced just yesterday. One of the best Hip/Hop tracks of all time.
I got a hundred shots a hundred goals player i'm from anfield anfieeeld
@@Trudon LOL
🔥🔥🔥🔥
ja rules shit
Alot of today's rap is garbage.
Yankees back in the World Series!!! This is our anthem!!!! Let’s run it!!! 🏆🏆🏆
Agreed....I can't stop Rockin to this.... Let's Go Yankees!!!!
They need to play this for game 3
@@islip376 big facts!! The way Ice Cube wrecked us last night, we need Jada, Fat Joe and Ja to perform this!
20 years ago yall choked biig time in ALCS up 3-0 🤫
HAHAHA BOW DOWN! WHEN YOU WESTWARD BOUND.
The Fat Joe verse is the best of his career and one of the best in HipHop.
It was the best verse in all 3 of their careers, but Jada is the cornerstone of this song. He spits lyrics people remember
Rule! Made a CLASSIC! 🔥
This track will never get old.
Only song to have me screaming for a place I’m not from!!!!!
Dog every time I see this video I be wishing I’m from New York 😂
💯💯💯💯💯😭😭😭😭
@@davidfontes8188 nl
The msg he talk is same like my city ,daressallam..
@@ukuvukiland2387 uongo bana
❤❤we love you jada ❤️❤️😘
New York City Anthem.
They all murdered this beat.🔥🔥
Yeah they did but Jada did better hands down. And yeah I'm from new york.
I’m not even from NY but this shit hit different every time I hear this song 😭🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥 we grew up on this shit late 90s 2000s kids 💯
We were lucky
No lie here. From Texas but this joint make you feel it!
early 90's kids *
This beat go hard
Where u from IamAski
This shit was so hard. It was design, developped, written and produced heading straight to 50's head. The only fact that this song, which is one of the best of hip hop history, didnt kill 50's career let you know how important 50 was in the rap game in this era of time
50 can't make a song better than this he actually likes the song but got jealous of ja and fat Joe and Jadakiss when the collabed.
Hard😂😂😂😂
50 really can’t rap , just backed by big names bar for bar Ja is better .. even check out his collabos… 50 never did any songs with x or jay , meth, nas , jada , … etc
50 buried ja
@@IWTBF For real. I like Ja, but 50 killed all these mofo's on piggy bank alone. This song is still a banger. Had us up in central NY going nuts. I can imagine NYC was poppin when this came out.
Even if this song is 20 years old or something it still hella lit to this day no cap 🔥🔥🔥.
The vibe to this is next level hip hop. That early 00s NY shit was unstoppable
King Ja Rule.... 🔥 🔥 🔥
This beat will never die!!!!! It's still fire in 2024!!!!!!
South African Beat listen to Mandoza-Nkalakatha.
You mean it's fyre, right?
@@superstarjay2371 😎gm yea agreed 👍
I'm from South FL, this shxt was different here. We're all from the south
@@Fritz2Live4U 😊iam from nyc born rase an my sister ♥️ but shout out to bx
I'm from Jamaica but back in the day this made me feel like I was from NY😂😂😂
Same here. I'm from Japan though😂
Jamaica, NY too my man 😎
@@FUJIWALOVER nipon 😊😊😊
For real bro. Mi memba dem days ya star. Jah Jah
You from NY it's just Queens bro
We don't need this censored. They should have switched out the audio with the uncensored version.
@@REMASTEREDHIPHOP Thank you. 😃👍
@@REMASTEREDHIPHOP subscribed to it, thanks!
Made for TV back in the day.
This song gives me chills every time i listen to this true classic 🔥
You're pretty 😍
This is the classic ruclips.net/video/H1kH_loHm3s/видео.htmlsi=RV9EfxY6wXJLYGu7
This beat always gave me goosebumps
Check out Ja Rule - Hearsay, similar style start up, a dope track altogether tho!
The beat is actually sampled from South Africa
@@nkosinathimgidi17 dope. I didn’t know that
@@zicomoney3696 pleasure its a sampled from Nkalakatha by Mandoza a kwaito(south african genre) song which became song of the year in SA on the year 2000 check it out
@@nkosinathimgidi17 thanks. I will
Fat joe really laced him by giving him this song in the middle of a beef. Shit went crazyyyyy
The best new York song ever
He really said the state of the terrorist 📽😂 he is dumb for that sh_t......🇺🇸🏛🎤
💥 let East coast bang / let west coast bang.....🇮🇶⚰🇷🇺
Hahaha it is pretty 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
@@mresco not the best but nostalgia plus bars plus presence pushes it over
NY STATE OF MIND
Verzuz!!!
NYYYYYYYYYYYYY baby shout out to my Puerto Ricans and Dominicans living in NY...Jada had the best verse in this joint but they all went in......representando a Nueva York..
@@andresmorocho-t8l and others aren't. Are u from NY?
@user-lr1yn5uo2c so if you never took coupons you ain't from the ghetto
Fuckkn right...this mf made me feel like i was from NY even tho ima Texas boy
The L.A. Dodgers is that Central American & Mexican team. L.A. gave NY an L.😅😅😅😅. Even Kike Hernandez was dissing yall😅😅😅😅
New rappers can only learn how to do it! They will never reach this level!!! Great song! RESPECT!!!!That is real HIP-HOP!
Og dropped this gem of a jam on my birthday casually ,,he must be Respected.
You Frm Texas?
Honestly, Ja's career was saved by this track. Cuz he didnt really make anything "mesmerizing" after this, compared to his 1998-04 run. We all know why. But he went out like a G. And pretty much said "i might never return to my hay day, but ima make sure yall remember one more killer performance from me." This song helped immortalize his legacy. And he needed Joe and Jada to really come thru on this track. And they did.
This song will forever be in my heart because I was born and raised in New York.
Respect ✌🏿
good for you go on friend,👍
The home of Hip Hop 💯💯
NEW YORRKKKKKK
Send me your fb pls
Raise your hand if you are watching this in 2024
Teacher I have a question
Cut Version is trash - germany 🎉
Man am here for new York
🎉
from Toronto but watching this since the DIDDY DIDLER made the news haha
JA Rule one of the GOATest.
Numbers don't lie
goatest?
This is one Jada's best verses hands down
Jadakiss is always tooo slick " it's guaranteed you gon die and you might be missed for maybe 2 or 3 hours till they light they spliff n that coke get u a long time when I let em know the dope out its like America online "
One of the few yes 😂🤷♂️💯
@@SaeSaeSays few ??? You trippin girl
Ja rule had the best verse son
@@eddie152bang Ja did his thing, Jada had a straight classic verse, but hands down Fat Joe had the best verse. And here's proof, 20 years later i guarantee its only 1 line niggas think of when they reminisce this track. That one bar was so hard, that Roy Jones went to try and knock out Fat Joe because of it 🤣🤣
This is one of the best tracks that hit radio at the time, there was nothing more aggressive coming out at the time this dropped.. 🔥
Except 50 Cent, G Unit, etc. GTFOHSB
Facts i know it must've bothered tf out of 50 cause this was the anthem that year 🤣🤷♂️
50 started shit with all three of them at some point. He didn't like this shit.
GJ Williams I know great entertainment
Lone Wolf this was up
There with what 50
Was bringing out at the time also,
Sak pase Haiti 🇭🇹 Wyclef Fugees is back in the game, Ja Rule is back in the game Good job guys
Sak pase. I'm back too
Never had the chance to grade Ja Rules music because I was young when he was active. Now I'm older I'm realizing Ja Rule was sick with that pen. Every verse is special.
Before 50 came and brainwashed everybody Ja was that dude.
was he tho????? besides holla holla dude got nothing "sick"
@@robswork2465 my guy clicked on this video to hate? 🤣🤣 ja had more good tracks than 50. Interscope and dr dre is what killed ja's run. If ja was with dre he would have had the followers. People thought dre was death row. 50 had 1album with about 5 good tracks and g unit as a group was okish.
Well 50 Cent was PETTY enough to destroy his carrier for literally nothing 😅😅
ruclips.net/video/t48MsgkRkFs/видео.html
This beat and all the features on it were all absolute 🔥.....I miss this Era of rap so badly. 1997 - 2008 hip hop Era rip. Greatest time for music hands down. Whenever Jada got on a track it was blessed! Damn I want a time machine to go back to 2000 for more then just music. Everything was great back then. Today's world just ain't the same!
they sampled a South African song called Nkalakatha by the late legendary Mandoza. should check it out.
I absolutely loved listening to Chamillionaire. Slim Thug. Young Jeezy. T.I. Joel Santana. Ying Yang Twinz.
Daddy Yankee. Paul Wall. Mike Jones.
B.G Pitbull.
Calm down
@@jordangeorge7042 LOL LOTTA THEM DUDES U NAMED WAS GAHHBAGE BRO U A BOZO LOL
YUP I ALWAYS TELL PEOPLE 2009 IS WHEN RAP OFFICIALLY DIED. WHEN ALL THEM WEIRD BLOG NERD RAPPERS CAME ABOUT AND THATS WHEN SHT STARTED GETTING SKINNY
We can't never get pure hip hop like this ever.
Naa that shit gone forever
@@azunnaashiwe.7479forever ever?
@@neverhungryagain2187 Forever never seems that long until you're grown...
Sure we will, from A.I hahaha
cap.. You just gotta look further than the mainstream bubble. Been like that for like 20+ years.
Stuff like this and even doper, gets released EVERY DAY some where on earth. It's just that you don't look for it.
But I get the point. But still, don't say it doesn't exist anymore. It surely does.
20 years ago this jawn dropped I miss these days and glad I grew up in this era they had everybody in this video, from terror squad Jadakiss and jLo, remmey ma, Weezy everyone!
Still one of the greatest hits of all time💯
"The wise has awoken,
You know they say you deserved it whenever you die wit your eyes open" 🔥🔥😤😤
Jadakiss the coldest
FR
Yeah he's good raper
Even though Ja Rule gets alot of hate these day's this song will always be a classic.. It let everyone know that New York artists were still on their grind and it never stopped..
Ja Rule is best artiste of the Early 2000’s 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
i remember this classic being released in 2004. time flies by, people thought Ja didn't have in him to respond but he proved critics wrong by coming back with this track. joe and jada verses were dope.
Naah he actually didn't have it
Needed all of NY to try a revival still didn't help Jeffrey
@@johnb9607 Eminem nor 50 cent end Ja Rule's Career, it was the money laundering indictment that affected Murder Inc. Murder inc was stalled and had their headquarters raided and Def Jam stop promoting them due the legal issues that Murder inc was facing.
@@davekelly1719 his hands helped him tho
Did he ever really come back tho🤣🤣
Fat Joe GAVE this song to Ja n he gave the weakest verse !!!
ONE of the GREATEST moment in HIP HOP HISTORY, LEGENDARY JA, fat Joe and jada
The dopest diss song ever 🔥🔥🔥
@@bedjourgeorgeamponsah6780Nah. This is nowhere close to Hit’em up, Either, or No Vaseline… It’s still a great track though.
Probably the best song Ja Rule ever did....I'm not a big fan overall of his music but this is classic
Os Anos 2000 foram os melhores. Quanta novidade, quanto coisa incrível, essas musicas surgiram e marcou toda uma geração!!!
💖
🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷
Top
2009 ganhei meu primeiro celular e só tocava essas balas🔥
Tempo bom que não volta mais, hoje em dia as músicas são todas iguais! Melhor época do rap
Ja rule is always underrated but he's one of the best rappers of all time. ✌ I was in high school. But still listening to this song.
Don't talk shit..
Cap
We skip straight past his part
Better than 50 Cent lyrically. And I stand by that.
@@younglove3362my😊
Name a better New York anthem than this... Ja Rule was really slept on... Feds seize assets, Def Jam kicked them out. R.U.L.E album was under Universal and shit deal.. Clowns that dont know shit think it was 50 that did Ja dirty... I stood by Ja all those years, Still stand by Ja today!
Hahahaha you sad sad little man. murder inc spilt the gasoline and 50… better yet Aftermath, Shady burnt the whole house down
Empire state of mind by Nas
Jay z and Alisha keys new York
Mannnn FOH... Ja' was not slept on, them Murder inc. Ni$$as had a good ass run 😂
But u r right bout that Fed shit... really did fu@k them up
Busta Rhymes new york $hit
@@Exitual That shit is soft compared to this
In another universe 50 cent and ja rule dont have beef and 50 spit a verse on this shit would have been 🔥🔥
🤔🤔🤔🤔 wow!🙏🏿🙏🏿🙏🏿
Might get my Brooklyn niggas to run in your house
Man, this was pure 🔥
19 years on and this banger still sounds like it could've been recorded yesterday.
Keep it alive yo!
OMG I miss those days 😩. A true masterpiece 🔥
Me too 😢
Jarule really put NYC on map this track,made me proud to be a New Yorker hell yeah
I can't lie, it was refreshing to see Ja back on the scene with this joint when it first came out.
A song that Never dies 2023 still
2024 now
Fat Joe just killed it, and not in the good way
I’m from Dallas but this song always made me claim New York‼️❤️ y’all New Yorkers💪🏽‼️
All love baby!💪🏾
I'm from Benghazi, Libya we still poppin this shit like we are already from NY
I’m 43 and I still can’t get over this beat. The beat makes me wanna be from New York!🤣
But hey….Chi-town representin!!!
He stole the beat from a south African artist mandoza title nkalakatha
Yessir
@@nevillembulawa215 i thought u were bs’n but i searched that artist and i can hear a big similarity in the beats. 🤯🤯 thats crazy
Buster
🤣🤣💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽💪🏽
This is still my favorite, no D riding but I've always admired this man, growing up we had so much in common.
This is a message to future generations: Do Not Let This Song Die!
A boogies version is dope too, has Jada on it too
This comment is cringe af. Stop copying and pasting absolute garbage.
❤
Legends never die.
@MdoubleHB....2 years one subscriber 😂😂😂😂😂 I’d be mad to.. now go do some push ups buddy
All the 50/Ja stuff aside, this track was dope and timeless.
When the beat dropped during the battle and Jada went off. Goosebumps 🔥
Murder Inc 2020 we did the beat
Battle?
@Rancho Ranking The Lox and Dipset verzuz. Jada destroyed them. Once this song came on, it was officially over lol
Ja rule deserves his props man dude dropped some jaw dropping hits during his time
Nah he trash. All the way sewer music.
This track, John Blaze and "The message" always remind you New York will always be the ones who fathered this thing call rap (hip hop).
Yessir💪🏾💪🏾
Man Ja rule voice is iconic man this is classic
This song is such a New York anthem! I am jealous that they got to have this song! Ja Rule really put on for the state when he dropped them. Carried New York on his entire back!
Los Angeles Dodgers 2024 World Series Champions 🧢⚾️🌎🏆🍾🍾🍾🍾
*Los Angeles Dodgers 2024 rap battle champions 🎤🎶🎵*
I love it we need NY part 3 fam🔥🔥🔥
How we gonna get part 3 when there ain't ain't part 2?????
@@youtubeaccount458 there is part 2 bro Ja should upload it next for those missed it. But now it is time to come back with part 3.
Cool&Dre where phenomenal and accepted beats years ago would love to join if a trilogy classic NY3 is wished.
@@ChrisShine if you're talking about New York is back, that's not really part 2.
@@youtubeaccount458Mh same artist, same producer, subject NY and 3 years later.
What do you miss or is needed except the title is not named NY2?
Of course it's the official sequel to the OG NY.
"NY Is Back Again" would also be fine.
@@ChrisShine I guess you can look at it like that, although dj khaled was a producer on it. He wasn't on the original.
And the original was a Diss record aimed at 50. Second isn't.
Say what you will about Ja Rule but this anthem is a classic!
This the real New York kids pay attention! Ja rule my top 5 💯💯💯
Thank you ja rule for being in our country Brazil 🇧🇷
One of the best tracks of East Coast hip hop
The old,the real and the life of New York back then, can't beat that
It’s nice to see everyone from New York support ja rule on this
"They say you deserved it whenever you die with eyes open". Jadakiss was born an OG.
“I’m in the hood like those little motorcycles “.
Marcou a minha adolescência. Ja Rule, Brasil presente!!
Podes crer mano, sou do Brasil tbm
@@guilhe705don’t let this music die Homie!! 34th ave, 21st st Much Love from the Projects to Brazil ya Dig..
I always loved Ja this real MUSIC 🎼🙏🏽🖤👍🏽🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
What made you click on this video.
Eminem’s the beat
Oiiiiiiiiiiii ❤️
Who’s here after Meeks new tune ..this is the top s&it !!! Fire 🔥 🔥🔥🔥🔥
love when artists tap in to where it all started
Would be so sick to see him get these man on a remix but we can only dream.
Wait what song did he remix this on? Or shout out ? 🤔
Dodgers got ice cube... Yankee should play this song... It goes hard AF!
They did
@@spider_hoss Ice cube was better... 😆.. Go dodgers!!!
@@spider_hoss Had the wrong person singing it!
OMG I love being from NYC. I also love my NY DUDES. KISS , JOE AND JA.... SHOUT OUT TO Y'ALL FOR GIVING US THIS CLASSIC 🥰😍🥰
I’m from Chicago but when this dropped I can’t lie I was fighting the urge a few times trying to act as if I wasn’t from NYC. A lot of my closest friends are from NYC, I’ve even had the pleasure of living there for two years.. I have nothing but respect for New Yorkers especially being that I grew up Biggie, Jada, Method Man, Dipset, Max B, The Lox list goes on 🔥🔥🔥
New York is one of the greatest cities in the world food culture rap the city has always been amazing
Ol skool, still a lot better than today's mainstream hip hop.
💯💯💯 bro all i listen to is old skool hip hop/rap
💯🔥🔥🔥
Ja's new music ruclips.net/video/KZf88xz3nfE/видео.html
Word.
this statement is the 1st sign you're getting old
5 boroughs 1 city we in here 🗽🗽🗽🗽🗽🗽🗽🗽🗽🗽🗽🗽🗽🗽🗽🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥💯💯💯💯💯
🇷🇺 Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin
🇺🇸 George Bush Jr
🇺🇸 George Bush Sr
🔴🌏📺✈😛⚰🎬
🎬🎬🎬