Ja Rule Returns, Disses G-Unit
05/02/2006
Ja Rule has returned, and in turn has revived his beef with 50 Cent and G-Unit. On the track titled 21 Gunz Salute, Ja Rule, Young Merc, and Cadillac Tah all spit verses. Ja goes hard at G-Unit by repeatedly calling them homosexuals. Before anyone becomes annoyed at Ja's diss track, do not forget that 50 dissed him in his Window Shopper track from the Get Rich Or Die Tryin movie soundtrack. If 50 can revisit an old beef, then so can Ja Rule. Rumors maintain that Ja Rule will make a comeback later this year, under the alias of Loki.
You've gotta love this Ja Rule guy. He's a funny character and he just refuses to go away no matter how irrelevant he might be in the game these days. Which is why it doesn't surprise me that he would release a dis track to the same person who snatched his spot and all but ended his career, two years after the fact. As far as disses go, this really isn't half bad, and its the kind of thing Ja fans will probably eat up. If he would've dropped this back when there was actually still beef to settle, he may have had a chance.
Ok, who am I kidding, he never had a chance. And to be honest, this isn't really that great of a dis.
The name of the song is 21 Gunz and it starts off with Irv Gotti, sounding like he walked straight out of court after his trial and into the studio, yelling "Not Guilty, ya'll got to feel me!" Ja then launches into a verse where he accuses the whole G-Unit of being homosexual and manages to quote both Pac and Big before passing the mic off to Inc. (Or is it Murder again this week? Who can keep track) associates Young Merc and Cadillac Tah.
Ja then closes the track out with a second verse complete with physical threats, more accusations of gayness, and the mandatory reference to 50's dead mother. The most interesting thing about this whole song though, is when Irv comes back on at the end and starts talking trash and yelling "The Supreme Team coming soon!" The Supreme Team of course, was the infamous crack crew from the 80's that was run by Kenneth "Supreme" Mcgriff, the same guy who Irv almost had as a co-defendent in his money laundering trial last year.
I don't know what exactly Irv was referring to, but having his trial separated from McGriff's pending murder case, is a big reason why he's a free man today. I understand that you're loyal to homey and everything, but you might want to let the ink dry on your acquittal before you start resurrecting the name of a notorious drug gang.