Lord Jamar Says Biggie Has The Most Sexually Questionable Lyrics Of All Time
Lord Jamar claims The Notorious B.I.G. has some of the most eyebrow-raising, sexual lyrics of all time.
During an interview with Art of Dialogue, Lord Jamar discussed the late rap icon’s penchant for including lines that could be perceived as homoerotic in nature. “Biggie has some of the most out-of-pocket lyrics of any rapper ever and hopefully there will never be a rapper with worse lyrics,” he said.
The Brand Nubian member also reasoned that the legal troubles currently surrounding Biggie’s former CEO and collaborator Sean “Diddy” Combs, which includes allegations of sex crimes against men, has cast his lyrics in a different light.
“But there’s so much sh*t that Biggie said that people just overlooked at the time and now, when we fast-forward to where we’re at, and hear about all the sh*t with Puff, now, certain things are not aging,” Jamar noted. “It was bad back then but it’s aging even worse.”
The veteran lyricist then referenced Biggie’s 1994 song, “Me & My Bi**h,” as an example of the Brooklynite’s rhymes being sexually questionable. “I don’t care how good a woman looks, I would never give fellatio to her father because she’s so beautiful,” Jamar added. He later mentioned growing speculation that the love interest from Biggie’s “Big Poppa” music video was a transgender woman.
In a previously surfaced clip from Lord Jamar’s Art of Dialogue interview, the New York native recalled hearing a rumor that Combs’ firing from his executive role at Uptown Records was due to an alleged sexual encounter with another man while at the label.
In addition, the rapper claims that Combs is a part of an inner-circle of powerful figures, which he dubs the “Gay Mafia.” “You just saw one of the gay mafia members. That’s who he is, that’s who Puffy is,” Jamar said at the time.
“He is one of the members of the mob. He’s a mafia member. But he might not be the Don Carl, he is not the godfather. He is one of the heads of the family.”
Watch a clip from Lord Jamar’s Art of Dialogue interview below.