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NFX posted on April 11, 2011 12:20 
How To Appreciate Rap Music #3 - Is Nas The Best Technical Rapper Ever...By Far?
by Martin Connor
Disclaimer: The recordings and transcription of recordings contained in this article are under copyright of the artists, publishers and/or record labels. No copyright is claimed by the author of this article or Warbeats. The transcription and analysis of these performances are done under the Fair Use doctrine as describe by U.S. Copyright Law Copyright Act of 1976, 17 U.S.C. § 107 for purposes of teaching and commentary. The article below is reprinted here with full permission from the author and may not be copied or reproduced in any form without express written permission from the author.
[Editor's note: Be sure to read Breakdown #1 and Breakdown #2]
Let's take a look at another rap analysis. This time we'll be
looking at Nas' 2nd (and only verse) on one of his most recent
collaborations with Dr. Dre, "Don't Get Carried Away"
(although I believe the track is on a Busta Rhymes CD.) It contains two
of my all-time favorite moments in rap music. To do this, we will use
the same techniques that we did in the Game and Eminem analyses to
investigate some of the same areas: for instance, where the accents in
fall in the bar, and what exactly should be counted as an accent.
However, the answers we get this time won't be as clean and tidy as the
ones we got in Eminem and Game. In a way, it's fortuitous that the Game
and Eminem analyses were the first ones that I did. I don't think I
could even begin to have understood Nas' music without knowing what the
Game and Eminem analysis teach me. Perhaps this complexity is one of the
reasons why Nas is considered so complex with his rhymes.
**A quick note: towards the end of this, things get pretty complicated.
But I promise, if you stick with it and work through it all (I explain
it in pretty painstaking detail), it will be very, very worth it. And
I've included the full sheet music of the verse at the bottom of this
post, just scroll down to it if you ever need to clarify something for
yourself that I make reference to.
Nas begins the verse with the first of the two favorite moments in rap
music of mine that are in this song. Right off the bat, Nas utilizes a
certain type of accent that we saw in the Eminem analysis: assonance.
That is, the repetition of a vowel sound will cause a certain note/word
to stick out in the listener's ear. Here, it is starts with the middle
syllable "nig" on the first beat and is then reflected in the same place
on beat 2 (that is, right on the beat): "is". Next, Nas begins his
first extended poetic grouping: harder / smarter / martyr. A solid,
fairly complex rhyme to execute (sidebar: how hard or unique it is of a
rhyme that a rapper uses should also be considered when assessing how
good they are. For instance, Em did accent a single syllable more than
once a beat in the last verse we took a look at, in "Business", but
let's be honest: he was very smart in his choice of the syllable he did
accent so much. That syllable is "ee". There are TONS of words that have
an "ee" sound. Just sayin'.). But the rhyme has nothing to do with one
of my favorite rap moments of all time.
But first, let's do a quick summary of our discussion of accent so far.
(I strongly encourage you, if you haven't read the Game or Eminem
articles yet, to go back and read them now. I do my best to catch you up
on it as we go along, but I explain these things more in-depth in the
other articles.) So far, we've identified different levels of accent.
(Accent can of course first be defined as emphasis on a musical note.)
First, there is the "metrical" level of accent. This metrical level of
accent is the accent that the music's music signature gives to the bar.
In most rap, which is in 4/4 (meaning that there are 4 quarter notes to a
bar), that means that the accents of the bar, on beats 1, 2, 3, and 4,
respectively, will be the following: 1 (very strong) - 2 (weak) - 3
(also strong, just less so) - 4 (weak). The musical space in between
these beats then varies in their amount of syncopation. (This fact we
saw was important in the Game analysis, when we saw that his variation
of the accent between his first 8 bars, when it was right on the the
beat, and his second 8 bars, when it was the 2nd sixteenth note, was
especially felt by the listener because they contrast so greatly in how
accented they feel in the musical 4/4 bar- that is, the 2nd sixteenth
note is very syncopated, while the on-the-beat note is very strong.)
The next level is what I have termed the "poetic" level of accent. This
is formerly what I've referred to as the accent of the rhyme (or the
rhyming accent, etc.) I've changed to the term "poetic" because it is
more all-inclusive for our purposes here of determining what notes are
accented and which aren't. We've seen that rhymed words accent (for
instance, from Eminem early on last time, "FREE-LY." The capitalized
syllables are accented because they rhyme. However, also from Eminem, we
see that there is another way of accenting words: that of assonance, or
the repetition of a vowel sound (again early on from Eminem last time:
the "see" and the "-cee" of "emcee" are accented because of assonance.)
However, it is time now that we consider a third level of accent that
Nas brings to our attention: that is the level of what I call "verbal"
stress. That is the accent of how people say certain words. For
instance, the word "harder" has its accent on the first syllable: "harder"
. (You can check for yourself the rest of the accents of these words at
dictionary.com if you so desire.) Now, almost all of the time a rapper
will always abide first by the verbal accent of the word when placing
the notes in their respective places in the musical bar (from Game, 2nd
bar: "chrome hy-DRAU-lics": the capitalized syllable is on the beat and
thus, it's verbal accent matches up with it's metric accent.) And when
the rapper doesn't abide by the true verbal accent of the word, he
simply changes the verbal accent of the word: early on, from Game again,
3rd beat: "IM - pa- la", when normally the accent of the word impala is
on the second syllable: im - PA - la.
But what if a rapper were to purposefully displace the real verbal
accent of the word (im - PA - la) so that it WASN'T right on the beat?
Hm… and this is exactly what Nas does. He lines up the verbal accent and
the metrical accent exactly the first time around (e - NIG - ma: the
"nig" occurs on the beat), and does the same on the next multi-syllabic
word (one syllable words obviously are only one or the other, weak or
strong, so we don't consider them here): "HAR - der": the "HAR" occurs
on the beat. But with the notes of "smarter", he doesn't line up the
verbal accent of the word (SMAR - ter) with the metrical accent of the
musical bar, which occurs on the syllable "-ter" of "smarter". Game and
Eminem never did this. Nas does it again in the next beat, when he says
"MAR - tyr." To align the verbal accent of the word with the metrical
accent of the bar he would have had to have said "mar - TYR." Now,
pronounce that to yourself. It sounds very, very different from how the
word should be said, and seems very awkward once it is pointed out. But
Nas does this twice, and when you listen for it, it throws the
cumulative level of all the accents WAY out of whack. A huge level of
contrast is created by a strong verbal accent (SMAR - ter, MAR - tyr)
being displaced from a strong metrical accent (remember, that 4th
sixteenth note of a bar feels very syncopated metrically), and is so
unexpected but also awesome-sounding that we finally have arrived at one
of my favorite moments of rap music. Just listen for it a couple times
over and over again. Again, we never saw this kind of thing from Eminem
and Game, who would have changed the verbal accent of the word to align
with the metrical verbal accent: smar - TER, mar - TYR, which would have
been very awkward. (And during all of this, at the poetic level of
accent - rhymes, assonance, and other types that we will identify - all
of the words are rhyming: harder, smarter, martyr.) Nas continues to do
this throughout these first 3, through-composed bars: the verbal accent
of the word "interest" ("INTR-rist") does not line up with the metrical
accent of the musical bar (which matches up with the -rist of int'rist.)
Also, the verbal accent of "catchy" (CA-tchy) does not line up with the
metrical accent. (Although, just as an example, Nas does change the
verbal accent of one of the words in these bars to match the metrical
accent: for "godfather", he says "god FA -ther", although this sounds
much less awkward, due to the fact that he divides this compound word
along it's compon��t��f��BEe�E��+,{��@;
Now, let's turn to another way of analysis of a rapper's flow that we
used in our last two analyses, the area of phrasing. Take a look at Nas'
first 3 bars, and tell me if you can find any phrases, that is, small
rhymthic groupings that are repeated over and over to give a verse
structure, like that of
Eminem's:
or Game's:

Take a look.
Nothing?
Exactly. And here, we get to a great reason for why I consider Nas one
of the greatest rappers of all time, and possibly the greatest technical
rapper ever. Nas is considered so complex because he greatly undermines
with his rapping I've heard termed in pop music the "tyranny of four."
Think about it. How many beats are there in a beat? 4. How is a beat
divided? By 2 (and 2 x 2 = 4) - quarter notes, eighth notes, sixteenth
notes, etc. How many bars are structures of a pop music almost always
(99% of the time probably)? 16 or 8 (or divisions of 4 within these,
such as 8, 12, 20, 24, 28, etc.) It gets very tiring when you notice it
after a while. This is why many classical listeners cannot stand to
listen to pop music: everything is repeated over and over in multiples
of 4, but classical composers are always changing up the structure of
the bar and phrases. Wouldn't it be refreshing if a rapper didn't abide
by these rules?
And that's what Nas does. He doesn't abide by the tyranny of 4 like
Eminem and Game do. For instance, how many beats does Game's phrase
last? 2 (which is half of the 4 beats in a musical bar). How long is
Em's phrase (4, the whole bar, repeated 8 times, 8 = 4 x 2). But Nas
doesn't always use phrases. Sometimes, he creates the rhythm of the
poetic accents of his verse all the way through, one at a time, which is
why I've termed it "through-composed." Look at his first 3 bars: there
is no discernable phrase that is repeated over and over, like you could
see in Game's and Em's verse. This constantly keeps the listener
guessing as to what note/accent is coming where next (and is very
complicated comparatively indeed.) There is no repeating of a musical
idea lasting a multiple of 4 beats in a phrase repeated another
multiple-of-4 number of times. And because of this, you never know where
the poetic accent is coming next. You can describe it more accurately
like this: when considering the accents of Game and Eminem, although you
don't know when or where the poetic accent (again, the notes with
rhymes, or assonance, are accented) is coming next, you know generally
where to expect it because of the nature of phrases: they are repeated
over and over. So although Eminem varies the accent in his phrase, every
time (except two of them) does he place the rhyme any place other than
in the metrical places in the notes of the prototype phrase we
identified above. then point them out. (Game has similar statistics in
his own placement of rhymes outside the confines of his phrase.) But
with Nas, you don't know where the accent is coming next and you have no
idea where to expect it. This is very different and very refreshing
once you recognize it.
And once Nas does use phrases, he places them at a structural point in
the number of bars that is not a multiple of 4 or the number two. For
instance, Nas begins to a use the phrase (the from "pardon Dre..." to
"catchy." at bar 4, which does not submit to the "tyranny of 4" rule
(which would be at bar 5, which divides the 16 bars structurally.) So
although he begins submitting to this "tyranny of 4", he does it in a
way that makes it new-sounding as well. And, although he uses this
phrasing for 4 bars, he makes sets the phrases up in a very interesting
way: A b b, A b b, with the As being the same phrase and the Bs
being the same phrase, and the As being 1 bar long and the Bs being only
half a bar long. And like Eminem, he varies the placement of the poetic
accent in the bar in corresponding phrases. Take a look at the As. In
the first A, the poetic accent (the "drafty" that rhymes with
"scratchy") occurs on the 2nd 2 sixteenth notes of beat 3, while in the
2nd A, the poetic accents (the rhyme of "north" with "drawf") occur in
different places: on the 4th sixteenth note of the 2nd beat and the 4th
sixteenth note of the 3rd beat. And examine how Nas lines up his
corresponding poetic groupings (a poetic "grouping" would be a group of
words that make accents off the same syllable, for instance, from
Eminem, first full bar, "BREATHES so FREE - LY," which is a combination
of assonance rhyme.) Here, in the first Abb iteration, there is a full
poetic grouping on drafty, scratchy, nasty. But in the second Abb, all
of the rhyme groupings are different : (north/dwarf in A, and lago/narco
in the 2 Bs following it. And there's no way Nas did that by accident…
damn. )
Let's look at another element of Nas' undermining of the tyranny of 4 in
his treatment of the first beat of the bar. Now, all of Game's and
Eminem's adherence to the number 4 when creating structure in their
verses puts a ton of emphasis on beat one. A new idea always begins on
beat 1 when the phrase is repeated. This greatly separates each bar from
the next. But Nas doesn't treat beat 1 as a definite, fact-of-law
arrival point. He runs over beat 1s when he extends his phrase from the
previous bar. Observe: end of bar 4, "to wakin UP my throat scratchy"-
he doesn't start a new idea on beat 1. This is endemic of a general
different treatment of strong metrical accents by Nas throughout this
whole verse. Eminem and Game create the forward motion of their verse
through rhythmic syncopation: they thrive on avoiding the strong
downbeat, and then hitting it later on. Observe even how Eminem's 1 bar
phrase in "Business" is constructed: half a bar of strong syncopation
matched only by a half bar of strong, on-beat, motor-like rhythm. And,
of course, there is the contrast between Game's 2nd sixteenth note hit
and on the beat hit. Nas' rhythm, however, is different. He doesn't mind
landing on the downbeat consistently: bar 10 - 13, he hits 14
consecutive on-the-beat notes. Eminem or Game would never do this
(they'd do this at most 3 or 4 times in a row.) It's almost as if Nas is
just talking and consistently going. (although Nas also does at points
like Game and Eminem contrast syncopation and on the beat: bar 4: "open
windows that's draft to wakin'", all of which avoids the onbeat and
propels the music forward strongly).
After the full AbbAbb phrase grouping is done, Nas goes back to the
through-composed writing style. Here, I'd like to address another point
of Nas' rhyme: how long the words he uses are. For instance, from bars 8
- 11, he uses the words, pyramid, architect, lyricist, poetical,
terrorist, and everest. It's not a consideration of how highbrow the
words are or anything, but only a consideration of how many syllables
they have: all of them 3 (except poetical, which has 4). Compare the
following statistics:
This is a statistical breakdown of the number of words in each of the
rapper's respective verses with 1 syllable, with 2 syllables, etc. If
you follow the data you can see that Nas' words have on average more
than a full quarter of a syllable. What's more is that Nas is the only
rapper among the group who uses a 4 or 5 syllable word, while Eminem
fails to use a 3 syllable word at all. Now, to be fair, each rapper here
has his own different goals. Eminem wants to show off his aggressive
rhyming ability, so he's just trying to squeeze as rhymes as possible
into as small a space as possible. Nas and Game aren't trying to do
this.
Also, consider how Nas structures his poetic groupings. In bars 10 and
11, he fits one poetic grouping inside another poetic grouping -
"tyrant" matches up with "climbed it" on each bars beat 4, but while
that occurs, Nas fits the poetic accent grouping of "terrorist, everest"
inside it. (This is reflected in the notation by a secondary accent
marking, the tiny hat). Bars 10 through 12 are united in the repetition
of a bar long phrase, unified by the poetic groupings on 2 eighth notes
taking up beat 4 (I feel like there is not enough information here to
make a prototype phrase.) Again, this phrasing starts at a structural
point in the verse that is not a strict multiple of 4 (bar 10), and
lasts only 3 bars long (the initial A phrase repeated twice.) And now we
get to my second favorite moment in rap music that is in this song,
another undermining of the tyranny of 4 by Nas.
With this, Nas takes the idea of phrasing to a whole other level. If you
look at bar 12, you will see a rhythmic idea repeated (i.e., a phrase):

is an example of the phrase. It is one sixteenth note, followed by a
dotted eighth note, and the hitting of another note at the end of that.
We will see, however, that we cannot definitely define the length of
that last note because of what Nas does with the phrase next. He
displaces the phrase metrically in the bar, moving it a sixteenth note
after where it appears on beat 1:

where (as reflected by the beaming of the notes), the first sixteenth
note of beat 2 is actually tied to the end of the word "spray," and that
Nas has moved the phrase to the 2nd sixteenth note of the beat. So
although they do not look the same because they are notated differently
(as a result of the beaming of the notes to reflect the basic beat of
the bar), they are actually still notes of the same duration: a
sixteenth note, followed by a note with the duration of a dotted eighth
note, followed by another note (check it for yourself). Notice that this
displacement of the phrase by a single sixteenth note radically
transforms the rhythmic function of each note in the phrase. The first
time around, "my mind spray", that first single sixteenth note (on "my")
falls right on beat 1, so it sounds very strong, while "mind" is very
syncopated (and "spray" falls right back on the beat after that.) But by
displacing the phrase a sixteenth note, that first sixteenth note of
the phrase (again, on "my" the second time) assumes the role of a
pick-up note (a pick-up note is a note that falls before another note
and serves to emphasis the note it comes before. "Just to get to" is an
example of a full beat of pick-up notes in the Eminem analysis we just
saw; they're the very first words he says.) The "my" sounds like a
pick-up note to the "nine", because although "mind" (by virtue of its
falling on an eighth note in between the beats of the bar) is still
technically syncopated, it is much less syncopated then the sixteenth
note that the "my" that comes before falls on; as a result, you have the
pick-up feel from "my" to "nine." But this is only the set-up for what
is my 2nd all-time favorite moment in rap in this song.
The thing is, he does it twice.
Due to music's unique temporal nature (that is, the fact that what we
hear in the present is able to re-interpret what we've already heard
before while at the same time anticipating what is to come), when we
hear this displacement of the phrase again in bar 14, "freaks styles…
andre, to", it re-characterizes how we heard it the first time around
(in bar 13, "my mind…spray, it"). If he had simply placed the "-dre" of
"andre" in bar 14 back on the beat, on beat 4 (as I actually notated it
the first time around,) the unique and unusual placement of the notes in
bar 13 on "nine" and "spray" could have been explained away very easily
by saying that they were setting up a syncopation that was very soon
later on resolved with a strong downbeat from the rapper, as we've seen
Game and Eminem do over and over. But because he does it twice, he
actual changes a fundamental way of how we hear the rap. I would really
notate these two bars like so:

Now, this may look like nothing you've ever seen before. But don't
immediately think "I don't know what the hell's going on here!" Let's
just do the math. Each 2/8, 3/8, 6/16 time signature grouping (there are
2) really just adds up to one bar of 4/4 (2 8th notes = 4 sixteenth
notes, 3 8th notes = 6 sixteenth notes, add those 10 to the 6 sixteenth
notes of the 6/16 bar and you get… 16 sixteenth notes, exactly equal to
one bar of 4/4.) Those different time signatures just more accurately
reflect how the beat of the music is being felt. Let's do a quick review
of time signatures. The number on the bottom is the beat of the bar,
and the top number says how many beats there are in a bar. So, in order,
above, there are 2 8th notes, and then 3 8th notes, and now we get to
6/16, and why I've notated it as 6/16 and not 3/8. See how in the way
I've notated it above the beat of each musical bar is reflected very
clearly by the beaming of the notes (the "beams" of a notes are those
things that connect them across the top)? It's very easy to see in the
above that there are 2 8th notes in the first bar, and then 3 8th notes
in the 2nd bar. That's what good music notation will do. It will make it
easier for the performer to perform. That is why I couldn't notate the
6/16 bar in 3/8: I would have had to break up the beat when notating it
in 3/8, like so:

This notation is awkward because half of our main rhythmic information
("nine" and "spray", as the "it" is really just a pick-up note to the
next bar) doesn't land on the beat. But in 6/16, it does. Interesting to
note that as a result of this, Nas has broken us out of our strict
duple meter time signatures in 4/4 and 2/8 (duple means that there are 2
or some multiple thereof number of beats in a bar), into triple meter
time signatures (which means that there three beats or a multiple
thereof number of beats to a bar) with the 3/8. And by moving from the
simple time signatures of 2/8 and 3/8 ("simple" here is a technical
term, meaning that the beat - the eighth note of the 2/8 bar above, for
example - is subdivided into two equal parts, as when going from an
eighth note, to a sixteenth note, to a thirty-second note, etc.) to the
compound time signature of 6/16 (meaning that the beat is subdivided
into 3 parts, not 2 parts like simple time,) he is really venturing into
some amazingly complex rhythmic areas in rap.
After this amazing moment, he continues with his through-composed style
of writing, with no clear phrase structure repeated over and over. It
might be noted that here, just as how he began the verse, he ends it by
displacing the verbal accent of the words ( PU -shin, PI - lin') from
the metrical accent of the bar. A note should also be mentioned here as
to some of the reasons for why I've chosen to accent certain notes in
the verse that aren't yet accurately reflected in my notation of the
verse. The critical information I've left out of my transcription is how
Nas actually says the words; for instance, he doesn't pronounce
"godfather" with a perfect accent, he says "gawd-fawther", because
that's just the way he speaks. This allows two words like "martyr" and
"godfather" to be accented together, because although they shouldn't
really rhyme together when perfectly said, Nas' accent allows them to.So
whenever you see notes below accented that don't seem to rhyme, go back
and listen to how Nas actually says the words; it will probably make
sense then.
Finally, we should add that Nas doesn't end the verse anticlimactically
or anything either. He makes the very last eighth note of the 4/4 bar
(the note on "stop") accented (in assonance in a poetic grouping with
the words "hot" and "drops" before that). With that last eighth note
being the syncopated metrical position that it is, when Nas does this,
he allows his own verse to lead very strongly musically into the chorus,
by having beat 1 of the chorus complete his musical idea with its
strong downbeat. This is what a good rapper will do. He will tie two
different structural parts of the song together.
And let's remember that Nas has had very little formal musical training
(if any at all.) And the fact that he's able to do this makes him an
unqualified musical genius, no matter the arena of music (popular,
classical, etc.) I've taken multiple years of music theory analysis
classes and I'm still grasping to get at some of the things he's doing.
(I mean, simple, compound, duple, and triple time signatures? I'm
literally speechless...) I think Nas has more than earned his money. And
also let's remember that all of this occurs in no more than 16 bars, or
about 40 seconds.
Pretty amazing isn't it? Now, unfortunately I think I copied over my
complete notation of this verse, so I'm left with only the normal 4/4
notation of the 2/8, 3/8, 6/16 time signature bar grouping we went over.
But remember, it should be notated the other way. I've tried to explain
everything in as painstaking detail as I can. If you're still a little
lost, I suggest wiki'ing time signatures. It will explain everything you
need to know.
Thanks for checking it out! Like I said, I erased my newest versions of
some of the sheet music (which is especially annoying because I was very
afraid this would happen and did my best to avoid it,) so some verses
(like Eminem's "What's The Difference" which is possibly even more
mind-blowing than this one and will be well worth the wait) won't come
out for longer than I expected.
Hope you enjoyed it!

To be fair, a verse from Eminem was picked from Encore, maybe one of his weakest albums. If you pick almost any verse from Relapse, you'd find literally nothing but multisyllable words and rhymes. His older stuff is also as intense. But I am glad someone decided to break down a verse and show how technical rap can be, because everyone is so caught up saying rap isn't musical or that it takes no talent, yet they couldn't do it if they tried.
When comparing the amount of words and syllables you are comparing 16 bars from Game and Nas with 8 bars from Eminem, I though that was worth mentioning as well as what ShakeSpeaker said. A bit off topic but I think Bustas first verse is also note-worthy, it's very rare to hear a stuttering effect that he displayed there with "See the fact's that I'm tryin to strive and capitalize in / Start to max-a-mimize and b-build a ent-ter-prise"
My brain just melted X( Busta's song 2get you some" is also a good example of this. I recently made a remix and after thoroughly listening to Busta's acapella, I finally found the little bits and pieces he does with time signatures and syllabus's. Very fun stuff.
This was another excellent post! I fully understand a lot better now! And between the rappers you can really tell who reads more or who studies more topics and puts them in their raps! This also made me remember Biggies one song when he used these lyrics! Some kid named Jason In a Honda station waggon Was bragging Great post man!
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