Busta Rhymes Still Has Smoke For T.I. Over Verzuz: 'It Would Be Uncivil, That Ass Beating'
Even if T.I. officially has a Verzuz challenger in fellow Atlanta rapper Jeezy, Busta Rhymes won’t let the self-proclaimed King of the South breathe over dismissing a hypothetical battle between the two.
During an interview with Ebro In The Morning on Hot 97, the Extinction Level Event 2: The Wrath Of God rapper once more referenced his conversation with Fat Joe that eventually led to his squabble with T.I. In fact, he repeated why it would end badly for Tip and insisted he’d “bust his ass.”
“Let’s be clear. You said that you didn’t think me and T.I. would be a good Verzuz,” he told Ebro. “Direct response to that: Neither do I. It would be uncivil, that ass-beating. But what I’m saying is, I never asked to do a Verzuz with T.I. That’s my brother and I love him, but I never asked to do a Verzuz with him.”
Ebro had previously suggested that Busta wasn’t a good matchup for Tip and would have a far better experience if he went up against Missy Elliott or Snoop Dogg. Busta was intrigued by the idea but reiterated he wasn’t playing second to anyone.
“I worked hard throughout these years, man, and I’ve been very consistent throughout these years. And I speak from a place of pride,” he said. “I’m speaking from a place of being very clear of the fact that I’ve earned my right … to be very, very confident. I’m not speaking from a ‘stroking my own ego’ place, but I don’t think anybody can actually have a problem with me actually stroking my own ego if I chose to. Because I’ve earned it—justifiable so.”
ELE 2 had been much-hyped for years and was teased earlier this week with the release of “Look Over Your Shoulder,” a collaboration between Bus-A-Bus and Kendrick Lamar.
During a conversation with Zane Lowe of Apple Music, Busta broke down how the record came to be thanks to a snowstorm and a pack of beats producer Nottz had sent him.
“Finally, we are in a snow storm in New York and they declared it a national emergency and gave everyone a curfew,” he told Lowe. “I refused to accept the curfew so I stayed in the studio. So I stayed in the studio, they shut the Manhattan and the Brooklyn Bridge down, they shut the Midtown Tunnel down, so I couldn’t leave the city anyway once it passed 11 o’clock.”
He continued, “So I was like, ‘Fine. I’m going to stay in the studio tonight.’ I stumbled on the beat. When I looked at the date of when I got the beat from Nottz, I couldn’t believe that I had this sh-t so long the whole time. So I ended up putting a verse on it. I sent it to Kendrick. Kendrick bodied the verse, sent it back.”
Stream ELE 2 in full below.