翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Let Me Tickle Your Fancy
・ Let Me Try
・ Let Me Try (disambiguation)
・ Let Me Up (I've Had Enough)
・ Let Mortal Heroes Sing Your Fame
・ Let Mother Earth Speak
・ Let My Babies Go! A Passover Story
・ Let My Children Hear Music
・ Let My Love Be Your Pillow
・ Let My Love Open the Door
・ Let My People Come
・ Let My People Go
・ Let My People Go! (2011 film)
・ Let My Pride Be What's Left Behind
・ Let My Puppets Come
Let Nas Down
・ Let No Man Steal Your Thyme
・ Let No One Deceive You
・ Let No-One Live Rent Free in Your Head
・ Let Not Man Put Asunder
・ Let Oceans Lie
・ Let Old Mother Nature Have Her Way
・ Let Our Violins Be Heard
・ Let Pan
・ Let Poland be Poland
・ Let Robeson Sing
・ Let Rock Rule Tour
・ Let sign shine
・ Let Simon Decide
・ Let Sleeping Cops Lie


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Let Nas Down : ウィキペディア英語版
Let Nas Down

"Let Nas Down" is a song by American hip hop recording artist J. Cole, taken from his second studio album ''Born Sinner'' (2013). The song was produced by Cole himself as a dedication to his idols, fellow American rapper Nas, with whom Cole was often compared to early in his career. He sampled the song "Gentleman" by Fela Kuti . The song peaked at #55 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs.
== Background ==
Growing up J. Cole idolized American rapper Nas, even posting his rap verses on his wall. Once J. Cole had signed to Roc Nation in 2009, he begun preparing his debut album ''Cole World: The Sideline Story''. On May 31, 2010 he released the first single "Who Dat" which failed to garner commercial success. After that Cole tried harder to find a good hit record for his record label. Through that long process, Cole had countless meetings with Jay-Z to discuss new songs he had made. Although Jay backed them as good songs, Roc Nation concluded that none of them were hits. Cole explained that soon after all these dead ends,
"One night I was in this hotel room after a show and I was listening to ''The College Dropout'', as I do. And on the worst song on that album, which is my favorite album, so I'm not dissing. But on the worse song on that album, "The New Workout Plan," I heard the shit that I had been hearing for like—eight years now. I heard it different as a producer like oh shit... made a rough version of the beat right there in the hotel room. By the time I got back to Europe a few days later I had "Work Out."”〔

"Work Out" would become the highly successful lead single from his debut album, peaking within the number 13 on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100. Following its release as a single, J. Cole received a phone call from his mentor, producer No ID. No ID told Cole that he was in the studio with Nas, and that Nas had told him that he hated the song "Work Out". Cole was devastated upon hearing that, which made him write the tribute song to his idol, "Let Nas Down" the following year.〔 Less than a week after creating and recording the song, Cole ran into Nas at a Houston airport at six in the morning boarding the same flight as him. As fate would have it Nas would be sitting right behind him on the flight, so right away Cole played the song for him. Nas felt honored by the song and was very impressed by it.
A month prior to ''Born Sinners release, Cole previewed the song for New York radio personality Peter Rosenberg, where he reported the title as "I Disappointed Nas", which Cole laughed off as incorrect. The song has been compared to Kanye West's "Big Brother" and Nas' "Unauthorized Biography of Rakim". Leading up to its release, it was the album's most discussed song.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Let Nas Down」の詳細全文を読む



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