Xzibit


(High point)
Votes

Minute Man 0
40 Dayz & 40 Nightz 1




Xzibit's best album by far was 1998's 40 Dayz & 40 Nightz , but his ultimate high point came when he absolutely embarrassed Snoop on "Bitch Please" from Snoop's Top Dogg album. This is when X to tha Z stepped up out of the underground and showed that he could not only roll with the big dogs, but roll over 'em. Of course this is before he ran out of things to say and went Hollywood. Nevertheless, there's no arguing about the quality of his "Bitch Please" verse --
"...Xzibit backin down from a conflict
Fuck the nonsense, terrorist, hidden bomb shit
Glass and metal in every direction
Innocent bystanders taught a very hard lesson
I'm the reason there's no time to reach for that weapon
and reason why niggaz with problems keep on steppin
Xzibit ready to scrap, like Mike Tyson with his license back ..." — JC - L.A.











(Fell off)
Votes

Marathon Man 0
Jermaine Dupri dis 1





After ingratiating himself with the cool kids, Dre, Snoop and Eminem, following his blazing verse from Bitch Please, Xzibit dropped the Alkaholiks and his underground roots like a bad habit.

Problem is he dropped it in favor of a harder, gangsta-fied image that saw the Albuquerque native c-walking and tricking out whips on MTV. Bad albums followed, but Xzibit definitely fell off when he participated in repeatedly dissing Jermaine Dupri on his album Man vs. Machine ("My Name") for no other reason than to score points with Dr. Dre, who eventually pushed Xzibit aside like Knocturnal in favor of new prospects 50 Cent and The Game.

There was no excuse for Xzibit to dis JD for relatively benign comments about Dre in an interview when Death Row bad guy and CEO Suge Knight was repeatedly lobbing more potent verbal bombs at Dre. Xzibit played himself, fell off. What a way to go out, out like a sucka. — JC - L.A.