Let's Do Diss Again: Diss-Track Sequels We Want to Hear

These sound clashes deserve a second round.

Don't Sleep! : Sleep Talkers : Ep. 121

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Let's Do Diss Again: Diss-Track Sequels We Want to Hear - The beef that never ends just got some new life. After 50 Cent dissed Game on his new single "My Life," the Compton MC is now claiming he may resurrect an old anti-50 track of his, "300 Bars and Running," to respond. "My freestyle that killed G-Unit, the whole staff, record label and clothes, is '300 Bars.' I might have to go in and double that up and just really say everything I want to say," he said during an interview on L.A.'s Power 106 FM. "There's more to say." We're glad to hear it, 'cause whether your Team 50 or not, the original was a must-listen. But it isn't the only iconic diss track that should get a part two. Click on for a list of other soundclash classics that deserve a sequel. —Alex Gale  (Photo: Jemal Countess/Getty Images)

Common on mentioning women he’s slept with in his music:   - “They don’t really get upset because, usually, I’m saying something good about them.”(Photo: Paul Abell/PictureGroup)

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Common, "The B---h in Yoo" - Youngbloods who remember Common for his butter-soft sartorial sense and goo-goo eyes with Erykah Badu would be shocked by the venom he unleashed on an unsuspecting Ice Cube and Westside Connection on "The B---h in Yoo." If only his lukewarm beef with Drake had inspired a second installment, instead of...whatever it did inspire.  (Photo: Paul Abell/PictureGroup)

Jay-Z on Rita Ora’s swag:   - "When she enters the room it changes. And that presence…you can’t duplicate that, especially at such a young age.”(Photo:   Stuart Wilson/Getty Images)

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Jay-Z, "The Takeover" - Rapper turned Brooklyn Nets mogul Jay-Z should brush off this 2001 classic, pound for pound one of the best diss tracks ever, to aim shots at his new chief rival: the cross-town New York Knicks.  (Photo: Stuart Wilson/Getty Images)

Better Than Good - Legendary Queesnbridge rapper Nas celebrates his new No. 1 album, Life Is Good, at the Roxbury Nightclub in Hollywood.    (Photo: Koi Sojer, PacificCoastNews.com)

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Nas, "Ether" - It probably wouldn't do wonders for him at his next alimony/child support hearing, but we wonder if Nas has another "Ether" in him somewhere—this time, directed at Kelis. Yes, it would be intrusive and kinda sad, but let's be serious: You know you wouldn't be able to resist listening.  (Photo: Koi Sojer, PacificCoastNews.com)

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Eminem, "The Sauce" - Eminem burned down one of hip hop's biggest magazines, The Source, in 2003 with "The Sauce." With that cap in his feather, maybe he could go after even bigger targets: The New York Post or Fox News are good places to start.  (Photo: Christopher Polk/Getty Images)

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50 Cent - During a 50 Cent performance in Angola in 2008, one fan had the audacity to jump on stage and grab Fif's chain off his neck. Wrong move. According to reports, the G-Unit general then jumped into the crowd, causing a chaotic commotion. The results? When 50 flew back to the States, the chain was back on his neck. (Photo: REUTERS/Danny Moloshok)

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50 Cent, "Back Down" - 50 Cent recently called his newest enemy, French Montana, the "new Ja Rule." We wouldn't agree with that comparison, but if it helps Fif unleash a diss track as dope as "Back Down," which dismantled Ja back in 2005, then we won't be mad.  (Photo: REUTERS/Danny Moloshok)

Ice Cube, "No Vaseline" - We miss the Ice Cube of old, who lyrically reamed his old N.W.A. bandmates on this epic 1991 takedown. Maybe he could aim a new, less homophobic, less anti-Semitic version at whoever has him doing those Coors Light commercials. (Photo: Ben Rose/PictureGroup)

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Ice Cube, "No Vaseline" - We miss the Ice Cube of old, who lyrically reamed his old N.W.A. bandmates on this epic 1991 takedown. Maybe he could aim a new, less homophobic, less anti-Semitic version at whoever has him doing those Coors Light commercials. (Photo: Ben Rose/PictureGroup)

"P Is Free," Boogie Down Productions - On this reggae-tinged 1986 rap classic, Boogie Down Productions' KRS-One explored crack's influence on female addicts who used sex to get high.   (Photo: Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images)

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Boogie Down Productions, "South Bronx" - With 50 Cent and French Montana squabbling, KRS One and MC Shan's old Bronx-Queens interborough beef is back on. French could dust off Kris's classic boast for a powerful round-one uppercut.  (Photo by Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images)

Canibus - Born Germaine Williams, this Jamaican rapper already had a successful music career when he was inspired to drop everything and join the Army in 2002. He later told journalists he enlisted because he "wanted to get away from music...and do something different." Canibus was 28 when he enlisted, but discharged two years later after being caught smoking marijuana. (Photo: Hayley Madden/Redferns)

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Can-I-Bus, "Second Round K.O." - It took some serious cojones for a rookie like Can-I-Bus  to go at a battle-tested legend like LL Cool J, but he landed a serious body blow with this 1998 heater. Do any 2012 rookies have the skills and chutzpah to take on, say, Nas or Jay-Z with a new rendition?  (Photo: Redferns)

Photo By Hayley Madden/Redferns

Tupac Shakur in Higher Learning - After earning rave reviews for his performance in Poetic Justice, Shakur was ready to tackle the role of a Black college student on a track scholarship in John Singleton's Higher Learning. Unfortunately, he was sentenced to jail before shooting began and had to be replaced by his Juice co-star Omar Epps.(Photo: Raymond Boyd/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

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Tupac, "Hit 'Em Up" - The best thing about a sequel to this furious 1996 tirade would be that it would mean Tupac was still alive.  (Photo: Raymond Boyd/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)