![]() There’s no buildup anymore, there’s no surprises. These days, as I said, everything is available immediately. You’re seeing these rapper’s names and you’re thinking “oh man, they have a new song out? Oh wow those rappers got together on a track?” and it’s a type of pleasure that is hard to achieve these days. It’s hard to explain really, but looking at those cassettes was like looking at the Holy Grail or something. So unlike today where within minutes of a song leaking out it’s on 50 different blogs all thinking they’re the one who’s going to get all the internet traffic looking for it, then it was something different. Unless you had a store in your town that had connections to New York you just were out of luck. I know that probably sounds strange to kids growing up with the internet where everything you could possibly want is right at your fingertips, but it was different back then.īack then if you lived in certain areas of the country, shit was just not available to you. And I was overcome with this wonder and amazement. I was looking through the tapes and seeing all these names of rappers that I had kind of heard about, but not much. I was 20 years old and had taken a trip to the Potomic Mills mall near DC and there was a kiosk inside that had these tapes. ![]() Back in 1995 I first discovered hip hop mixtapes.
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