
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.

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



