Sponsored Links

Rewrite and translate this title J. Cole on Men Quoting ‘Can I Hit It’ Lyric to Him: ‘Weird Ass Thing to Say’ to Japanese between 50 and 60 characters. Do not include any introductory or extra text; return only the title in Japanese.

Sponsored Links


Rewrite

On the fifth episode of his limited audio series Inevitable, J. Cole broke down how his first Drake collaboration “In the Morning” came together and how he felt when grown men started quoting it to his face.

At the 29-minute mark of the episode, which focused on his mixtape Friday Night Lights, he spoke about Drake reaching out to him after hearing an early version of “In the Morning.” Drizzy apparently told Cole that he sent all of his producers home after hearing the track because it made him realize he “need[ed] better beats.”

At that point, the song was only available on his release The Warm Up to the Warm Up, which was never officially released online. He said it made it clear to him how tapped in Drake was. “I told just told him on some shooting my shot shit… I was like, ‘Say the word and I’ll take off my third verse and you [can] put a verse on there,'” he said.

He explained that Drake’s verse for the record came in at the “final hour.” When he reached out to Drizzy again to ask where his verse was, the same week Friday Night Lights was due to drop, Drake told them that he lost his voice but would try to finish it in time. “You can hear his voice, you can tell,” he shared. “That shit sound hard, though. That n***a murdered that shit.”

He was on tour at the time the project dropped, and admitted that the first half of the tour was “shaky.” By comparison, after the mixtape dropped, the second half of the tour was completely sold out. He recalled how he started to get noticed in public, recalling an “awkward moment” when a fan recognized him at an airport and quoted “In the Morning” to his face.

“A grown man would be like, ‘Can I hit it in the morning?'” he said around the 1:11:00 point of the episode. “And I’d be like, ‘Uh… I appreciate the love, but it’s a weird ass thing to say. Should’ve picked another song, ‘Who Da’ or something.'” He also reflected on how at this time, he hit a level of fame that made him realize he wasn’t “underground” anymore.

Over a decade removed from the project, J. Cole is bigger than ever. He recently announced a tenth anniversary show to celebrate Forest Hills Drive at Madison Square Garden later this month, which over 140,000 people attempted to get tickets for.

Listen to the full episode of Inevitable here.

in HTML format, including tags, to make it appealing and easy to read for Japanese-speaking readers aged 20 to 40 interested in fashion. Organize the content with appropriate headings and subheadings (h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6), translating all text, including headings, into Japanese. Retain any existing tags from

On the fifth episode of his limited audio series Inevitable, J. Cole broke down how his first Drake collaboration “In the Morning” came together and how he felt when grown men started quoting it to his face.

At the 29-minute mark of the episode, which focused on his mixtape Friday Night Lights, he spoke about Drake reaching out to him after hearing an early version of “In the Morning.” Drizzy apparently told Cole that he sent all of his producers home after hearing the track because it made him realize he “need[ed] better beats.”

At that point, the song was only available on his release The Warm Up to the Warm Up, which was never officially released online. He said it made it clear to him how tapped in Drake was. “I told just told him on some shooting my shot shit… I was like, ‘Say the word and I’ll take off my third verse and you [can] put a verse on there,'” he said.

He explained that Drake’s verse for the record came in at the “final hour.” When he reached out to Drizzy again to ask where his verse was, the same week Friday Night Lights was due to drop, Drake told them that he lost his voice but would try to finish it in time. “You can hear his voice, you can tell,” he shared. “That shit sound hard, though. That n***a murdered that shit.”

He was on tour at the time the project dropped, and admitted that the first half of the tour was “shaky.” By comparison, after the mixtape dropped, the second half of the tour was completely sold out. He recalled how he started to get noticed in public, recalling an “awkward moment” when a fan recognized him at an airport and quoted “In the Morning” to his face.

“A grown man would be like, ‘Can I hit it in the morning?'” he said around the 1:11:00 point of the episode. “And I’d be like, ‘Uh… I appreciate the love, but it’s a weird ass thing to say. Should’ve picked another song, ‘Who Da’ or something.'” He also reflected on how at this time, he hit a level of fame that made him realize he wasn’t “underground” anymore.

Over a decade removed from the project, J. Cole is bigger than ever. He recently announced a tenth anniversary show to celebrate Forest Hills Drive at Madison Square Garden later this month, which over 140,000 people attempted to get tickets for.

Listen to the full episode of Inevitable here.

and integrate them seamlessly into the new content without adding new tags. Ensure the new content is fashion-related, written entirely in Japanese, and approximately 1500 words. Conclude with a “結論” section and a well-formatted “よくある質問” section. Avoid including an introduction or a note explaining the process.

Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links