Yukmouth has squashed his beef with longtime collaborator Mistah F.A.B., and it was all inspired by a recent hospitalization.
According to the Luniz rapper – who seemed to have taken a bad spill this past weekend during the History of the Bay festival in California — he and Mistah F.A.B. ran into a few issues after Yuk interviewed JT The Bigga Figga following an altercation the pair had at F.A.B.’s Dope Era clothing store a few years ago.
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The Oakland native explained on his Smoke-A-Lot Radio show last year that JT had been “going off” about the situation during their aforementioned interview. Some, including F.A.B., thought JT’s feelings about F.A.B. mirrored Yukmouth’s simply because the interview had been hosted on his platform.
Yukmouth and the “Summer Time” rapper were reportedly not speaking to each other following these issues, but after the former’s recent injury, which required surgery, Yuk posted on Instagram a phone call he had with Mistah F.A.B. during which the pair finally made amends.
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“Get over it, my n-gga! I don’t know what the fuck happened, get over it! Please,” Yukmouth pleaded. “We had some shit that happened like three years ago, get over it, bro. We past that, man. Salute to you, [we all] talk shit about you, good shit. Get over the shit, boy. Period.”
He continued: “When n-ggas got money, n-ggas shouldn’t be worried about nothing else but getting money, right? That’s what you been on, right? So why even worry about it. Come on.”
F.A.B. replied: “I ain’t worried about that shit. As long as you good, man.”
KXNG Crooked, Pete Rock, Celly Cel and Napoleon and Young Noble from 2Pac’s former group, the Outlawz, all left supportive comments underneath Yukmouth’s post.
Yuk and Mistah F.A.B. have collaborated numerous times over the years, most notably on multiple tracks off the former’s Son of a Pimp album in 2005, such as “Kicked Out the Club,” “Big Time” and “Crush On You.”
Yukmouth previously made headlines in February after saying he felt his generation of artists abandoned young people in their neighborhoods.
“The root comes from us. Me and your generation. We fumbled the fucking ball,” he said in an Instagram video. “Because our OGs went to jail or got killed; the n-ggas who gave us the game, the n-ggas that had the code. We became successful in other areas. We didn’t go back to the neighborhood, we left the neighborhood, never came back, never schooled the youth.
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“They was there to figure shit out by they self,” he continued. “And they didn’t have no parents because of course, you know, they locked up or shot up somewhere or whatever. So they ain’t have no parents. They ain’t have no OGs because we all moved out the hood and never came back, we never gave the game to ’em.”