How did Lil Wayne teach Tyga work ethic over 10 years?
Tyga gives credit for his longevity to Little Wayne, who taught him the value of work ethics.
Tyga has said that he has been able to remain relevant in the industry for more than ten years because of Lil Wayne’s work ethic.
In the most recent episode of Weezy’s Young Money Radio, which debuted on Apple Music on Friday, December 1, the two got down. When questioned about his sеcrеt to longevity, T-Raww praised his former label head without reservation.
Tyga said, “I’m staying in the studio.” “It was the first time I had ever been on a tour, on a tour bus, or something like that actually moved about, as you said, so I felt like watching you. And even though you were making videos and had a lot of success, you would always make sure to sаy, “We’re heading to the studio today,” no matter where we were. Okay, we have a performance tonight in Buffalo. You will exit the stage, rock 20,000 people, and we will go straight to the studio.”
“And if you can’t go to the studio, we have the studio bus,” he said. Therefore, I think it was more about maintaining consistency, being passionate about it, and having a strong work ethic. I believe that a lot of people lose interest in it, which is why stop showing up or why people stop being as consistent or as tuned in. The love is what matters most, not even the money.
Wayne said that he learned that work ethic from Birdman and Slim, two of his own mentors.
Wayne said, “What’s interesting about what you saying about the love is that I get it from two people who aren’t rappers.” “It comes from Baby and Slim.” daily studio time. Slim is not going to rap at a pub. When he felt like it, baby would come in and attempt, and nine times out of ten, he would ask one of us to “man write this, write this.” He will change a few words to express himself in his own way. Having said that, I used to take a step back and ask myself questions like…
“Because they weren’t scheduling studio time exclusively for the artist’s presence,” he went on. “They are present. They there, we there, all 1,000 hours. I used to just sit back and think, Slim was more of that. “Why is Slim here so much?” I used to ask myself, “Because we here writing.” When you’re done, immediately before you walk in, he wants to hear the verse.
“What have you got, Wayne?’ is what he wants to hear. similar to a coach I thought, well, that’s just because they adore it. They would not be interested in what we were saying if they didn’t enjoy it so much. I’m happy you took that offense from me.
Tyga cast his vote for Lil Wayne and Eminem as the “Greatest Rappers of All Time” earlier this year.
After Billboard and VIBE published a list of their Top 50 Rappers of All Time, the conversation was ignited. Em came in at number five on the list, while Weezy came in just after him at number seven. They were also the former Young Money rapper’s Nos. 1 and 2.
“The greatest rappers of all time are Eminem and Lil Wayne! On Twitter, he posted, “lyrical word play, delivery, flow, pockets, originality, raw, intentional, clarity, and generational influence.”
A few days later, he also paid tribute to Nicki Minaj, his former rhyming partner with Young Money.
“Nicki is without a doubt the greatest female rapper of all time! Playfulness, punchlines, delivery, pockets, choice of bets, and inventiveness in the world. afflictions,” he wrote in a string of subsequent tweets.
The native of California even gave special recognition to Doja Cat, describing her as a “really good rapper too.”