Rick Ronson
Banned
you got artist getting down on their knees and no one even asked them to. 

Frank born and raised in New Orleans.
New Orleans has probably the third largest gay black male population after ATL and DC, maybe 4th if you include NYC. Shit is blatant but people don't believe. Even the straight women call their "straight" boyfriends "trade".
Ask one of them...
Okay.. I thought this was complete bullshit.. But listen to this at the :20 Mark.
who? What is this about and why is it on BGOL?
Shit, I doubt that. Some of these hoes be knowingly fuckin' gay dudes.
You shouldn't be involved in Hip Hop if you're a faggy. Sorry but a line has to be drawn. I don't give a fuck how talented you are.
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You shouldn't be involved in Hip Hop if you're a faggy. Sorry but a line has to be drawn. I don't give a fuck how talented you are.
Sent from my DROIDX using Tapatalk 2
Dam. And this guy will likely get even more pussy thrown his way after those well articulated homotional expressions.![]()
True but there's mad faggots in hiphop. Starting with
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White stripper in atlanta back in the late 90's used to tell me how he prefer men to go down on him. She told me multiple stories about him visiting the club and have some sexual encounters with men. She didn't have a reason to lie.
White stripper in atlanta back in the late 90's used to tell me how he prefer men to go down on him. She told me multiple stories about him visiting the club and have some sexual encounters with men. She didn't have a reason to lie.
he dont look like the type who likes bw anyways ... I'm sure he's all about white girls and black boys lmaoooooo
Off the top of my head of people that sing and write:
Curtis Mayfield
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Isaac Hayes
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Prince
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Smokey Robinson
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If we want to expand it past just dudes I'd add the following:
Ashford & Simpson
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Patrice Rushen
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These are A level singer-songwriters and talents. They'e on a level Frank Ocean can't even see.
It says
"my eyes don't shed no tears, but boy they pour when I'm thinking of you"
mean as "boy oh boy, it sure is a lotta hoes in here".
So he is gay. His music is good. We accepted Luther's lipgloss wearing ass, and michaels fucketry. As long as I don't have to hear graphic gay songs, Im fine.
It's good that you did, however living where I live and seeing the young black boys/girls walking around it is clear that they did not have the same benefit as your kids...
Not very many bw find bisexual men attractive
he dont look like the type who likes bw anyways ... I'm sure he's all about white girls and black boys lmaoooooo
Anyways ... the gay agenda is out in full force this year
all i know it doesnt make no difference to me...i wasnt a fan of his before the homo shit and im not a fan after it
THIS....
AND
this was a publicity stunt...all them Odd Future niggas on some different shit
Ok, this actually is some funny shit.Dude been singing about dudes
you niggas dont listen to lyrics
Luther was my favorite artist of all time and he way gay as a rainbow and died of aids.
I could care less what Frank is doing in his personal life, just keep making music that i can bang my girl too
but this song does sound different knowing he's a fag
oh well i have better shit to be upset about
<iframe width="640" height="390" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/F15IjgyHd60" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Well, old heads, look at the bright side: you still got Billy Ocean.![]()
I don't know Frank Ocean's music.
But he needs to ( if he hasn't already ), start singing about universal love ala Luther, Elton in order to come off credible.
I'm aware of all that. What I'm saying is Luther arguably used the song as a signal of his sexuality, by maintaining the original gender of the guitarist as male -- instead of female (unlike Al B Sure's version) -- knowing what the public perception of his choice could be. And, to no one's surprise, the general reaction to Luther's cover was...Norman Gimbel explains the genesis of the writing of the song "Killing Me Softly With His Song" as follows:
"I came to California in the mid-sixties. I was introduced to the Argentinean born composer named Lalo Schifrin (then of Mission: Impossible fame). I ended up writing songs to a number of his motion pictures. I suggested we write a Broadway Musical together. He gave me an Argentinean novel translated into English from the Spanish to read as a possible idea. Suffice it to say, we never made a musical from the book -- but in one of the chapters, the principal character describes himself as sitting alone in a bar drinking and listening to an American pianist 'killing me softly with his blues.'[1] I put it in my 'idea' book for use at a future time with a parenthesis around the word 'blues' and substituted the word 'song' instead.[2] Many years later, Lori Lieberman saw Don McLean in concert. I then wrote the lyric and gave it to Charles Fox to set to music."[3]
According to Lori Lieberman, the artist who performed the original recording, the song was born of a poem she wrote after experiencing a strong reaction to the song "Empty Chairs," written, composed, and recorded by Don McLean.[4] She related this to Gimbel, who took her feelings and put them into words. Then, Gimbel passed the words on to Fox, who set them to music.[3] Fox himself, however, has specifically repudiated Lieberman's having input into the song's creation, saying: "We [ie. Gimbel and Fox] wrote the song and [Lieberman] heard it and said it reminded her of how she felt at [a Don McLean] concert. Don McLean didn't inspire Norman [Gimbel] or I to write the song but even Don McLean thinks he's the inspiration for the song according to his official website!"[5]