
deRaNged 4 Phuk'dup
New member
^^^Oh, no doubt. I didn't know that. Wow. I thought they were saying the hook was total gibberish.
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Jersey8five6 said:they say: bismi-llāhi ar-raḥmāni ar-raḥīmi
it means: "In the name of God, Most Gracious, Most Merciful"
then they say: Alhamdulillah
it means: "All praise belongs to God"
deRaNged 4 Phuk'dup said:Maybe I take things too lightly, but the coined phrase is "we get money like Arabs" goes right alongside "we stack money like hebrews" those go back to probably early 90s. Most inner city arabs and hebrews stay on their grind and stay getting money.
deRaNged 4 Phuk'dup said:When I see an episode of Family Guy or South Park picking on stereotypical black folk, I can laugh. Maybe because I'm not the "stereotypical black guy" they pick on. but I'd be lying if I said they were completely off to what african americans are about. I think the same thing is happening here.
DJMateo904 said:..he had a magazine called Grape Soda Weekly...
khanvict said:yeh, I mean Busta is Muslim, so is Akon i think T pain is im not sure, Swizz Beats whose also on the remix, dads Muslim not sure about him tho. Afew of the rappers on that remix track were muslim, i wuda expected them to be more respectful.
K-1ne said:I also read somewhere that the Qu'ran can't be used or mentioned in songs.
Some Thai rapper landed in big **** for his song a while back that had phrases in it.
TheLetterL said:....Where In The World Is Osama Bin Laden.
fatdogs12 said:Sounds right to me. What's wrong with that? of course that's not everyone, but there are plenty of people like in the Saudi Royal family who are basically all those things (except they really don't ride camels). I think that is all busta is saying. I couldn't care less though, they know how to blow him up if they really want to.
By Tai Saint Louis
Only hours after expressing his outrage over Busta Rhymes’ controversial song “Arab Money,” Iraqi-born rapper The Narcicyst told AllHipHop.com that he received a personal phone call from Busta himself last night (December 8), apologizing for the misunderstanding created by the song.
According to Narcicyst, the two rappers spent nearly half an hour on the phone discussing Busta’s original intent in making the song, which the veteran rapper says was meant to pay homage to Arab culture.
The Narcicyst, whose family fled Iraq years ago after they were displaced by the political turmoil said he came to understand that there may have been a bigger culprit in Busta’s lyrical misstep.
“It was a thorough explanation and he was a very respectful man,” the Narcicyst told AllHipHop.com. “He explained to me his experience as an African-American man in the States and [it] seemed to me as an experience that I can correlate as an Arab being in the Middle East and having been displaced from my nation and seeing my country being bombarded in the media, being misrepresented.”
According to Narcicyst, Rhymes revealed that he didn't purposely disrespect Arab culture and that representing it "in a positive light" was important to his fellow rapper.
"He also acknowledged that it was definitely something that spun out of control," Narcicyst continued. "You know, when you put out a song, you can’t really put out an essay on why you put out the song. And it’s always hard to explain to the masses.”
While some YouTube posts of the song and/or video have already been removed from the popular website, there is no word on when or if the controversial song will be officially removed from rotation.
The song is already banned in the U.K., where award winning DJ Steve Sutherland was temporarily suspended by Galaxy FM, for playing the song.
As a result of Busta’s apology and The Narcicyst has also agreed to pull his response to the song, a track titled “The Real Arab Money.”
“This is an example of how two people can come together and create something bigger than them,” The Narcicyst concluded. “I’m a strong believer in truth and breaking stereotypes down and not allowing people to box you in. And this whole experience has been a huge eye opener for me. This is what Hip-Hop is about. Two brothers from another mother can come to a peaceful and just conclusion for all sides.”