Nas Speaks On Impact Of Jay-Z Beef On His Career In GQ Interview

BYGabriel Bras Nevares11.9K Views
Link Copied to Clipboard!
Larry Busacca/Getty Images
The Queens icon said that his feud with Hov was one of a few instances of his career taking shocking turns that, according to him, are what rap is all about.

During his recent GQ interview, Nas reflected on how his beef with Jay-Z impacted his career, and perhaps the hip-hop landscape as a whole. While they squashed said issues eventually, their spat is the stuff of legend in the rap community. Elsewhere in the interview, he spoke on a few other topics, including his Madison Square Garden show, his run with Hit-Boy, and his idea of success. However, his reflections on his Hov battles led to some interesting reflections on collaborations in the game. At the time of that beef, he remarked, hip-hop still existed on a coastal binary for many.

"That's just being reminded of what rap is, being shocked, taking it places you didn't think you were going to go with it as an artist," he explained about the shock behind the Jay feud and how it marked a second phase of his career in the early 2000s. "[Like] me on 'One Mic,' making a song slow, low-key, raising an octave higher. 'Got Yourself A Gun' was a Dr. Dre-sounding track, and I had worked with Dre on music before that.

Nas Speaks On Beef With Jay-Z To GQ

INDIO, CA - APRIL 12: Rappers Nas (L) and Jay-Z perform onstage during day 2 of the 2014 Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival at the Empire Polo Club on April 12, 2014 in Indio, California. (Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Coachella)

"So I kind of had a pass to do a Dre-kind of sound because Dre cosigned our friendship and our collabs," he continued. "I feel like that collab [with Dre] brought in the idea, maybe, for things like Bone Thugs-N-Harmony and Biggie together. I didn't invent it, but it made it more of a thing, like, 'Hey guys, we're always so standoffish. You come into my market, I come into your market, and let's have fun. It's all a family thing.'"

Meanwhile, the hip-hop legend chases a very different idea of success to what many might believe or expect from one of the game's greatest. "All records sell," the 49-year-old stated. "If they don't sell at all, then get out of the music business. Or if you love your art, don't let that determine anything. If you need them to sell too quickly, you gotta watch that. lllmatic wasn't the huge seller the first week, but now you look at how well it did. You just have to worry about the music." Check out the full interview in the link below and stick around on HNHH for the latest greatness from Nas.

About The Author
Gabriel Bras Nevares is a music and pop culture news writer for HotNewHipHop. He started in 2022 as a weekend writer and, since joining the team full-time, has developed a strong knowledge in hip-hop news and releases. Whether it’s regular coverage or occasional interviews and album reviews, he continues to search for the most relevant news for his audience and find the best new releases in the genre. What excites him the most is finding pop culture stories of interest, as well as a deeper passion for the art form of hip-hop and its contemporary output. Specifically, Gabriel enjoys the fringes of rap music: the experimental, boundary-pushing, and raw alternatives to the mainstream sound. As a proud native of San Juan, Puerto Rico, he also stays up-to-date with the archipelago’s local scene and its biggest musical exponents in reggaetón, salsa, indie, and beyond. Before working at HotNewHipHop, Gabriel produced multiple short documentaries, artist interviews, venue spotlights, and audio podcasts on a variety of genres and musical figures. Hardcore punk and Go-go music defined much of his coverage during his time at the George Washington University in D.C. His favorite hip-hop artists working today are Tyler, The Creator, Boldy James, JPEGMAFIA, and Earl Sweatshirt.
...