Derranged
12-12-2008, 08:12 AM
Who are they???????
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View Full Version : Rappers who are known to be very intelligent.. Derranged 12-12-2008, 08:12 AM Who are they??????? t.boone.pickenz 12-12-2008, 08:19 AM uhh.....immortal technique? SweetScience93 12-12-2008, 08:30 AM Kanye West is actually very intelligent and articulate, and of course my boy Nas res 12-12-2008, 10:51 AM Kanye West is actually very intelligent and articulate, and of course my boy Nas lol yeah, ofcourse with Nas we would have to distinguish between intelligent and articulate. Talib is probably top three as far as mainstream rappers are concerned. Floyd Sinclair 12-12-2008, 11:01 AM Ice cubes never been arrested, at least from what i know Prodigy drops knowledge on the Illuminati, so does immortal tech :davil2: :killyou: Fenom 12-12-2008, 11:13 AM Bun B.... i've heard from multiple people (fans & celebs) hes always carrying a book Lean On Me 12-12-2008, 11:33 AM Ahmad the rapper has put out ‘insightful’ music while denouncing his industry’s glamorization of violence. Ahmad the scholar got a full ride to Stanford and dreams of earning a doctorate. By Larry Gordon August 19, 2008 Ahmad Ali Lewis made a deal with his mother back when he was a student at Palisades High School: He would go to college unless he got a recording contract for his upbeat rap music. It was a big if. But Lewis, 17, an honors student and top football player, skipped the college entrance exams and signed with Giant Records. “I said ‘S.A.T. – whatever. I want to R.A.P.,’ ” he recalls. His 1994 album, immodestly called “Ahmad,” included a hit single, “Back in the Day,” a nostalgic riff on his South Los Angeles childhood. In it, he rapped: “I miss those days, and so I pout like a grown jerk Wishin all I had to do now, was finish homework. It’s true you don’t realize really what you got til it’s gone And I’m not gonna sing another sad song, but Sometimes I do sit and reminisce then Think about the years I was raised, back in the days.” Looking back, Lewis said he does not regret his teenage decision, even though his early success was followed by struggles in a music industry he criticized as promoting violence in the African American community. Now 32 and the father of a 4-year-old son, he is still recording songs but he also is finishing homework. Ahmad the first-name-only rapper has become Ahmad Ali Lewis the Stanford-bound scholar. Lewis enrolled two years ago at Long Beach City College and graduated in May as valedictorian, with a 4.0 grade point average. He was accepted as a transfer student by several universities for this fall and chose Stanford. “When I stepped on campus, something in my gut said, ‘Dude, this is where you belong,’ ” said Lewis, who plans to double major in sociology and African American studies. He said he is “going to be Dr. Ahmad Ali Lewis, the first rapper with a PhD.” He quickly conceded, “Maybe someone else has done it, I don’t know.” No matter, he said, since he expects to get a doctorate in social work and become a professor. “I love teaching,” said Lewis, who recently tutored at an elementary school. “Rapping and teaching are not that far apart. You’re rapping, you’re talking. You’re a professor, you’re talking.” Compact but broad-shouldered at 5 feet 7 and 155 pounds, Lewis still has the build of the running back he was in high school. His head is shaven and he has two tattoos: on his left shoulder, a map of Africa containing a woman’s face, and on his right forearm, “4th Avenue Jones,” the name of the soul-rock-rap band he cofounded with his former wife, singer Tena Jones. When he talks, he waves his hands in the open-fingered style of rap performance. He speaks of his Christian faith and academic ambitions with enthusiasm, humor and what he jokingly concedes is the “egomania” of a well-loved child. His mother, Paulette Holt, inspired him by starting college when she was a divorced mother of three and also “brainwashed me,” he said. “I always thought I was better than average, that I was handsome, smart and talented. It was a trick,” he said. “Being black in America, from the ghetto, you need that extra little bit of confidence. So that’s kind of my mission, to give other kids that kind of confidence.” The odds were against him at Stanford, which accepted just 20 of this year’s 1,200 transfer applicants. But Lewis was admitted and offered a financial aid package that will cover his tuition and room and board, which total more than $47,000 this school year. He’ll also receive funds for books and living costs each year through a highly competitive grant program that the Virginia-based Jack Kent Cooke Foundation offers to community college students transferring to four-year schools. “Ahmad was really a standout in all the areas,” said Vance Lancaster, a Cooke Foundation spokesman. “He is truly a scholar and a humanitarian who just happens to be a chart-topping rapper.” Lewis grew up mainly near 76th and Hoover streets, on a block with a crack house and gangs. His mother arranged for him to be bused out of the neighborhood to honors classes, and eventually to take the hourlong ride to Palisades High.He was both a football jock and a bookworm, with a singing voice that won him attention in church. His Muslim father, John, was a musician as well but Lewis didn’t see him much after his parents divorced. When young Ahmad became consumed with rap, his mother panicked. “I feared him getting involved in drugs, feared him getting involved in a lot of stuff that could have been devastating to him,” said Holt, who earned a masters’ degree in social work from USC in 2002 and is now a therapist for Childrens Hospital Los Angeles. “I told him, ‘if you are going to rap, at least don’t use bad language and don’t talk down about women.’ And he said, ‘Mom, that’s not me anyway, I don’t do that.’ So I was able to hear his music. It wasn’t church music but it certainly was a positive message.” The few curse words in his songs were mild compared with the obscenity-filled lyrics of other rappers. A 1994 Times review called his first album “mostly upbeat, always insightful and sometimes very funny.” One of the album’s cuts offered a cautionary tale about a wannabe gangbanger who tries to impress his crew by planning to rob and shoot a shop owner: “But I didn’t do it quick enough, or he thought of it first Cause he blasted to the chest, and now I’m restin yellin, “Nurse!” And holdin on to life, or at least tryin to hold on In a jailward wearin cuffs Cause I had to be rough Cause you gotta be tough” Lewis admits he wasn’t an angel. He smoked pot, drank and partied during his concert tours. He earned enough to buy a car and a house in Long Beach. But he was also denouncing “gangsta” rap’s influence on black children. “We’re destroying ourselves, teaching our kids low self-esteem,” he said in an interview with The Times when he was 18. And he tangled with music executives who wanted a tougher edge to his unreleased second album and rejected its religious overtones, he said. The subsequent 4th Avenue Jones group had some success, opening shows for big names such as Sheryl Crow and the Black Eyed Peas. The group then had contract troubles and Lewis became disillusioned with life on the road. “What’s this all about? Am I really having a significant impact on people’s lives, just showing up in a city for an hour and doing a show and then leaving?” Lewis recalls thinking. “I thought stardom and fame would bring me a kind of a joy. When I attained that, it was empty.” The big money was gone and the house had to be sold. After nine years of marriage, Lewis and Jones divorced, sharing custody of their son, Yeshuwa. The personal crisis led Lewis to community college. Byron Clift Breland, Long Beach City College’s dean of student affairs, interviewed Lewis during valedictorian selection and learned how he had joined a trip to help orphans in Zimbabwe, but had no idea about his music career. Later, Breland’s wife realized that Lewis was the author of “Back in the Day,” a song she liked so much that she had it included on their wedding video. “I was shocked and excited,” Breland said of learning Lewis’ identity. “To see Ahmad break down a lot of stereotypes of folks who go into the music industry in general, let alone hip-hop or rap, and then return to higher education and go to Stanford is a remarkable story.” Next month, Lewis will start spending weekdays at Stanford and weekends in Los Angeles with his son. Music, however, is not out of Lewis’ life. He is writing lyrics for a new album he hopes to sell to a music label. He lives with his mother and stepfather in Carson and composes at a Salvation Army recreation center in Compton where he draws inspiration from its diverse patrons. In a small office overlooking the noisy gym, Lewis reviews the lines he has written in an old-fashioned notebook. Swaying in his chair, he sings into a laptop over prerecorded musical tracks from collaborators. The autobiographical album, titled “The Death of Me,” is meant to be celebratory, he said. In one number, “Smile,” he raps: “Back to college on the low like a panther Finished as valedict’ then went to Stanford And I ain’t paying for it But I’m gon’ pay it forward Who gets the glory? You know I gotta say the Lord.” THE REED™ 12-12-2008, 11:34 AM jay-z WITHOUT a doubt kanye is an idiot Kobe Bryant 12-12-2008, 11:50 AM Industry fact# 1 "All rappers are dumb" Lean On Me 12-12-2008, 11:59 AM Industry fact# 1 "All rappers are dumb" Except for the ones with college degrees or pursuing an education. Truth 12-12-2008, 12:03 PM Nas..................................Talib Kweli.................... MegStarr* 12-12-2008, 02:23 PM Aesop Rock Lupe's gotta be smart. i'm not a huge fan of his music but his lyrics are always on another level of intelligence and awareness. Killah Priest is probably smart. J-Live is probably smart. Just listen to lyrical content. it either sounds intelligent and well-informed or it doesn't.... pbftxrs316 12-12-2008, 04:16 PM eminem is known throughout hip hip as a ****ing genius. imo, he's the most conscience rapper i've ever heard. THE REED™ 12-12-2008, 04:22 PM Industry fact# 1 "All rappers are dumb" Jay-z = 500 Million = NOT DUMB Kobe Bryant 12-12-2008, 04:29 PM Some take statements too literally. Lighten up. Nate126 12-12-2008, 04:32 PM Mickey Factz Chamillionaire neils7147933 12-12-2008, 09:18 PM Jacked these answers... And just because you go to college doesn't make you intelligent...but here's at least a measuring stick: Diddy David Banner: Born Lavell Crump, c. 1975, in Jackson, MS; son of Zeno and Carolyn Crump. Education: Southern University, Baton Rouge, LA, earned business degree; University of Maryland, attended graduate business program. Talib Kweli went to NYU and both his parents are professors Naledge and Double-O from Kidz in the Hall graduated from to the University of Pennsylvania (ivy League) J-live has a B.A. in English from SUNY Albany. Jean Grae has a degree in Music Business from NYU stat quo went to the University of Florida and majored in Economics and international business. Mekka Don graduated cum laude from Ohio State and received a law degree from NYU. impressive and Paul wall has a degree in mass communications from the University of Houston siablo14 12-12-2008, 09:33 PM <object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/B94IHWXWrww&hl=en&fs=1"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/B94IHWXWrww&hl=en&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object> Ahmad - Back in the days Versastyle 12-12-2008, 09:36 PM I heard Weezy was pretty smart. billionaire 12-12-2008, 09:50 PM soulja boy got 93% on his sat......he wanted to be a writer when he was a kid....he was always reading shakespeare at school keepthemhandsup 12-12-2008, 09:58 PM DMX been going to jail and smokin crack.... .................................................. ..........wait a sec Aztec Wanker 12-12-2008, 10:26 PM aceyalone el-p murs slug aesop rock gift of gab GURU (cant believe he hasnt been mentioned) Gza (The Genius LOL) Rza Fenom 12-12-2008, 11:01 PM yea Lupes up there without a doubt Unknown Champ 12-12-2008, 11:14 PM DJ Quik is a smart dude neils7147933 12-13-2008, 07:27 AM soulja boy got 93% on his sat......he wanted to be a writer when he was a kid....he was always reading shakespeare at school Since when do they measure SATs with a percentage rather than a score? Pico Hollywood 12-13-2008, 01:02 PM people who havent been mentioned yet. one be lo Akir Jadakiss Cassidy asheroth Q-tip CaRnAgEViOLaToR 12-13-2008, 04:30 PM canibus? mos def Derranged 12-13-2008, 06:25 PM canibus? mos def I was about to mention Mos Def, but I saw him on Real Time with Bill Maher, he was acting like a dumbass. He actually sounded kinda drunk. MegStarr* 12-13-2008, 07:17 PM I was about to mention Mos Def, but I saw him on Real Time with Bill Maher, he was acting like a dumbass. He actually sounded kinda drunk. and he beat his wife!!!!!! not so smart. but so do a lot of rappers. Eric Holder 12-13-2008, 08:05 PM David Banner Immortal Technique Killer Mike Killah Priest Bun B Plies Rhymefest billionaire 12-13-2008, 08:19 PM Since when do they measure SATs with a percentage rather than a score? top 93% percentile.... The Fix 12-13-2008, 10:00 PM ras kass david banner pharoahe monch rza missy elliot..... i heard she has an iq over 200. IchiBonDj 12-14-2008, 07:44 PM Ras Kass graduated from high school at the age of 15 MegStarr* 12-14-2008, 08:37 PM Ras Kass graduated from high school at the age of 15 no ****, huh? that's crazy. |