L-Tido Eats Humble Pie As He Admits Nasty C Had The Best Verse On Stogie T’s “Four Horsemen”

The post L-Tido Eats Humble Pie As He Admits Nasty C Had The Best Verse On Stogie T’s “Four Horsemen” appeared first on SA Hip Hop Mag.

L-Tido Eats Humble Pie As He Admits Nasty C Had The Best Verse On Stogie T’s “Four Horsemen.” In a dramatic turn that’s got South African hip-hop in a frenzy, rapper and podcaster L-Tido has publicly flipped his pre-release prediction on Stogie T’s blockbuster posse cut “Four Horsemen,” crowning Nasty C with the best verse after initially backing his close friend Maggz.

L-Tido Eats Humble Pie As He Admits Nasty C Had The Best Verse On Stogie T’s “Four Horsemen”

The track which dropped last week (November 28) as the explosive closer on Stogie T’s critically acclaimed album Anomy, features a dream lineup: the veteran Stogie T himself, alongside Maggz, A-Reece, and Nasty C, who handles the hook and a scorching closing verse. It’s already being hailed as a generational milestone – not least because it marks the long-awaited first collaboration between former rivals Nasty C and A-Reece.

But the real drama unfolded off the mic. During a recent episode of his podcast, L-Tido interviewed Maggz and boldly declared, “I’m telling you guys now, before the song drops, Maggz is gonna have the best verse on that song. I’m saying it. This is L-Tido, I’m speaking for myself.”

Fast-forward to post-release, and the streets (and timelines) erupted. Fans flooded L-Tido’s mentions, demanding his verdict now that the nearly seven-minute boom-bap banger was out. In a candid response on the New Gen Podcast, L-Tido didn’t hold back – but he did switch sides.

“People have been coming out at me crazy on social media because I did predict… that [Maggz] was gonna get the best verse,” he explained. Revealing behind-the-scenes tea, L-Tido shared that Nasty C initially only had the hook, delivering his full verse just days before the drop after Stogie T hyped up the pressure post-podcast.

“To be honest… if I had to be honest with no biasness – Maggz knows he is my nigga – I think everybody came through fire,” L-Tido said. “But I got to keep it 1hunnid, I think Nasty C got the best verse on the song. His performance was impeccable. Just how he sat on the beat. Even when he comes in, you feel his presence.”

Meanwhile, Maggz delivered a mature, heart-on-sleeve bars, A-Reece sliced with precision (complete with a clever Death Note reference), and Stogie T set the tone with intricate wordplay. But in L-Tido’s book, the Ivyson came out on top.

As Anomy continues to dominate streams and conversations, L-Tido’s U-turn is a reminder: in SA hip-hop, predictions are bold, but the bars always speak loudest.

The post L-Tido Eats Humble Pie As He Admits Nasty C Had The Best Verse On Stogie T’s “Four Horsemen” appeared first on SA Hip Hop Mag.

The post L-Tido Eats Humble Pie As He Admits Nasty C Had The Best Verse On Stogie T’s “Four Horsemen” appeared first on SA Hip Hop Mag.
L-Tido Eats Humble Pie As He Admits Nasty C Had The Best Verse On Stogie T’s “Four Horsemen.” In a dramatic turn that’s got South African hip-hop in a frenzy, rapper and podcaster L-Tido has publicly flipped his pre-release prediction on Stogie T’s blockbuster posse cut “Four Horsemen,” crowning Nasty C with the best verse …
The post L-Tido Eats Humble Pie As He Admits Nasty C Had The Best Verse On Stogie T’s “Four Horsemen” appeared first on SA Hip Hop Mag. Read More

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *