ronnie56 wrote:@ amadeo that song did have multies shit was fulled with them
the longest ones are these 5 syllable multies
records ain't easy
hectic it's sleazy
Well it's ninety-one and I'm livin kinda swell now
But I hear that you're going through some hell pal
But life makin records ain't easy
It ain't what I expected it's hectic it's sleazy
But I guess that the streets is harder
Trying to survive in the life of a young godfather
My homies is making it elsewhere
Striving, working nine to five with no health care
We both had dreams of being great
But his deferred, and blurred and changed in shaped
It's fate, it wasn't my choice to make
To be great, I'm giving it all it takes
Trying to shake, the krips and fakes and snakes
I gotta take, my place or fall from grace
The boys late, the pace is quick and great
Smiling face, to hide the trace of hate
But my homie would never do me wrong
That's why I wrote this song, if you ever need me it's on
No matter who the foe they must fall
Us against them all I'm down to brawl if my homies call
You're either a troll or a very stupid individual. The first two rhymes you highlighted in the first two lines aren't rhymes. He's actually rhyming "hell pal" with "swell now."
Also, it's blatantly obvious Tupac was trying to rhyme one syllable from "we both had dreams of being great" all the way to "the pace is quick and great." The writing is kind of poor since he has to use "great" three times. The multis you spotted were unintentional. "It's fate" isn't an intentional multi with "it takes," idiot. There's no way he rhymed "quick and great" with "krips and fakes" two bars apart.
Two-syllable rhymes technically constitute multis since multiple means more than one...but when rap fans talk about multis, they usually mean 3+ syllable rhymes. Rappers were rhyming two syllables in the 1980s. They were rhyming "crazy" with "lazy" with "baby" and "homie" with "lonely" with "only." It's lame to consider these rhymes multis.
So, no, most of those rhymes you highlighted aren't multis.