Barely two weeks after Young Buck and The Game called a truce, the feud has been reignited courtesy of a new diss song by Game.
As previously reported, Buck and Game recently squashed their feud shortly after bumping into one another in Las Vegas. Now, in the wake of G-Unit's Tony Yayo allegedly assaulting Jimmy "Henchmen" Rosemond's 14-year-old son, The Game, Rosemond's client, has released, "Body Bags"- a track dissing Tony Yayo, 50 Cent and the rest of the G-Unit crew.
"What type of bitch ***** put his hands on kids (homo)/pull up that black van on his (no)/we don't do the kid slapping(nah)/we do the kid snatching/eyewitness, there's been a kidnapping/feed him real good, take him to play with Harlem/sit by the phone, just wait, it's your daddy callin'/nah, we don't get down like that/ but 50's momma, we'll put you in the ground like that (Cuurrtissss)/trying to make peace with Dipset/you ain't even address the beef with Jim yet," Game offered at the top of the second verse. [Listen Here]
Chuck Taylor goes further and sticks it to the whole G-Unit crew on the third verse. "Fuck the whole G-Unit," Game declares. "Who lied to Buck?/fuck Spider too, now that's for Big Fase/I know where you counting your sheeps, I'll have some crips wait."
The song ends with Game assuring that the beef won't turn violent. "We ain't gon do shit/I had your crew sick/so play with them like Toy guns and this is just music," Game asserted.
In related news, a rally was held in Manhattan, NY yesterday (April 2) to denounce Yayo for the alleged assault. Reverend Al Sharpton and various community leaders threatened to boycott 50 and Game if they don't iron out their differences.
Yayo (born Marvin Bernard) was arrested two weeks ago for purportedly attacking James Rosemond, the 14 -year-old son of Czar Entertainment honcho Jimmy "Henchman" Rosemond. Yayo and his entourage reportedly approached James on a Manhattan street on March 20 and assaulted him for wearing a shirt with a Czar Entertainment logo.
Czar Entertainment manages The Game (born Jayceon Taylor), who was kicked out of G-Unit in 2005 after a dispute with 50 Cent. Sharpton would help negotiate a truce between the rappers after they began a lyrical warfare, but they would eventually go back to feuding again.
"We put the i-n-g in your bling-bling. All of us have children who listen to your music. Some of us listen ourselves," Sharpton said at the gathering, according to the New York Post. "But we don't want to feel like we're investing in the demise of our community."
"We took you at your word," he added, referring to the truce. "You can go against each other, but you cannot go against those you depend on for your livelihood."
"You have to stop the beef, stop the madness," said City Council member Charles Barron (D-Brooklyn). "It's out of control."
Sharpton was also joined by the assault victim's mother, Cynthia Reed, who later watched as supporters destroyed 50 Cent and Tony Yayo CDs outside the Broadway offices of Universal Records.
Russell Simmons, who was scheduled to appear at the rally with the Hip-Hop Summit Action Network (HSAN), chose not participate because they did not want to appear to be taking sides.
"HSAN is impartial and will not take sides in this dispute," Simmons said in a statamement. "[We] hope the issues between Tony Yayo and Jimmy Henchman and Czar Entertainment will be resolved peacefully and as soon as possible."
Source: sohh.com
As previously reported, Buck and Game recently squashed their feud shortly after bumping into one another in Las Vegas. Now, in the wake of G-Unit's Tony Yayo allegedly assaulting Jimmy "Henchmen" Rosemond's 14-year-old son, The Game, Rosemond's client, has released, "Body Bags"- a track dissing Tony Yayo, 50 Cent and the rest of the G-Unit crew.
"What type of bitch ***** put his hands on kids (homo)/pull up that black van on his (no)/we don't do the kid slapping(nah)/we do the kid snatching/eyewitness, there's been a kidnapping/feed him real good, take him to play with Harlem/sit by the phone, just wait, it's your daddy callin'/nah, we don't get down like that/ but 50's momma, we'll put you in the ground like that (Cuurrtissss)/trying to make peace with Dipset/you ain't even address the beef with Jim yet," Game offered at the top of the second verse. [Listen Here]
Chuck Taylor goes further and sticks it to the whole G-Unit crew on the third verse. "Fuck the whole G-Unit," Game declares. "Who lied to Buck?/fuck Spider too, now that's for Big Fase/I know where you counting your sheeps, I'll have some crips wait."
The song ends with Game assuring that the beef won't turn violent. "We ain't gon do shit/I had your crew sick/so play with them like Toy guns and this is just music," Game asserted.
In related news, a rally was held in Manhattan, NY yesterday (April 2) to denounce Yayo for the alleged assault. Reverend Al Sharpton and various community leaders threatened to boycott 50 and Game if they don't iron out their differences.
Yayo (born Marvin Bernard) was arrested two weeks ago for purportedly attacking James Rosemond, the 14 -year-old son of Czar Entertainment honcho Jimmy "Henchman" Rosemond. Yayo and his entourage reportedly approached James on a Manhattan street on March 20 and assaulted him for wearing a shirt with a Czar Entertainment logo.
Czar Entertainment manages The Game (born Jayceon Taylor), who was kicked out of G-Unit in 2005 after a dispute with 50 Cent. Sharpton would help negotiate a truce between the rappers after they began a lyrical warfare, but they would eventually go back to feuding again.
"We put the i-n-g in your bling-bling. All of us have children who listen to your music. Some of us listen ourselves," Sharpton said at the gathering, according to the New York Post. "But we don't want to feel like we're investing in the demise of our community."
"We took you at your word," he added, referring to the truce. "You can go against each other, but you cannot go against those you depend on for your livelihood."
"You have to stop the beef, stop the madness," said City Council member Charles Barron (D-Brooklyn). "It's out of control."
Sharpton was also joined by the assault victim's mother, Cynthia Reed, who later watched as supporters destroyed 50 Cent and Tony Yayo CDs outside the Broadway offices of Universal Records.
Russell Simmons, who was scheduled to appear at the rally with the Hip-Hop Summit Action Network (HSAN), chose not participate because they did not want to appear to be taking sides.
"HSAN is impartial and will not take sides in this dispute," Simmons said in a statamement. "[We] hope the issues between Tony Yayo and Jimmy Henchman and Czar Entertainment will be resolved peacefully and as soon as possible."
Source: sohh.com