Fat Joe has seen it all in his decorated career, and has claimed that other artists have âjackedâ his music without facing legal consequences.
Joey Crack weighed in on Boosie Badazz threatening legal action against artists sampling and interpolating his work without permission during a recent Instagram Live, and named a few acts that he himself couldâve sued for biting his style.
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âIf you use somebodyâs music and you sample it and you donât clear it and you donât give them no money, they can sue you,â he began.
âMe, personally, I have never sued nobody for that. And trust me, they done had âMake it rain, make it, make it, make it rain.â Or âLean wit it, rock wit it.â My shitâs been jacked legendary. âShoooulder leeean.â My shit been jacked!â
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Joe continued: âIf I went to court Iâd be like, âExhibit A â that shit donât look like âLean Backâ to you?â [âŠ] I couldâve sued people for sampling my shit 10, 20 times.â
Watch the clip starting around the 1:30 mark below.
Fat Joe was alluding to Young Droâs âShoulder Leanâ and Dem Franchize Boyzâs âLean Wit It, Rock Wit It,â which he believes both borrowed from Terror Squadâs 2004 hit âLean Back.â
He also suggested Travis Porterâs âMake It Rain,â which dropped in 2010, pulled from his and Lil Wayneâs 2006 song of the same name.
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Interestingly enough, Joe actually referenced âShoulder Leanâ on âMake It Rain,â on which he rapped: âLilâ mama tryna hit me with that shoulder lean.â
The 53-year-old shared more thoughts on the rap game during an appearance on the Chazz Palminteri Show earlier this month, where he acknowledged that Hip Hop has evolved to the point where rappers no longer have to come from the streets to be successful.
âI wonât say that [in] 2023 because, yâknow, thereâs so many different forms of Hip Hop,â he said. âYou get a kid of a celebrity, of a Hip Hop star and they grew up in a little house on the prairie, though, and so the hood is like, âNah, you grew up rich ⊠we donât want to hear your story, you grew up rich.â
âSo itâs very unfortunate for artists who have talented kids who want to become artists because the people in the streets are like, âNah, they didnât grow up like they dad.ââ
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After admitting that MCs needed to have a specific upbringing âto be considered authentic and real back in the day,â Joe acknowledged that ânow itâs alright to grow up, ya know, middle class.â