Your Favorite Rapper Will Fade Away Some Day — and That’s Okay

The best emcees never fall off, but that doesn’t mean they stay hot forever

Thomas Golianopoulos
LEVEL
Published in
7 min readDec 16, 2019

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Illustration: Adrian Mangel

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TThe photo shoot was a wrap. The interview had concluded an hour earlier. Nas was now off the clock, but here he was, deep in the bowels of Hollywood’s Westlake Studios, refilling his Patron and Country Time lemonade, and gossiping about the rap industry.

It was January 2008, six months before the release of Untitled — the album Nas wanted to name something other than Untitled — and he had agreed to a wide-ranging interview with me for King Magazine to address the brewing controversy over the album title. A notoriously reticent interview subject, on this day Nas was talkative and expansive. We touched all the third-rail topics, everything from his feuds with Jay-Z, Biggie, and 2Pac to his thoughts on interracial relationships. The light mood stretched into the evening as the tequila flowed.

After discussing the prolonged rollout for Tha Carter III — the biggest story in music at the time — talk turned to aging in hip-hop. I had opinions. A veteran’s career is over, I stated with Patron-boosted confidence, once a comparable…

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Thomas Golianopoulos
LEVEL
Writer for

Thomas Golianopoulos is a writer and editor whose work has appeared in the New York Times, Grantland, the Ringer, BuzzFeed, Complex, and other publications.