Cole." According to Cole, the target of the song is more general. You dissed a 17 year old, lame ass jit." Later that day during a concert in Atlanta, Smokepurrp, along with his fans erupted in a chant of "Fuck J. Lil Pump reacted to the song hours after the album's release via Instagram saying, "Wow, you get so much props. Cole said in a interview that "It's really a 'shoe fits' situation-several people can wear that shoe." The verse concludes as follows: Media outlets and rappers speculated that "1985" is a response to the rapper, while J. Cole" produced by Florida rapper Smokepurpp. In April 2017 Lil Pump teased a song titled "Fuck J.
#INSTRUMENTS IN J COLE IMMORTAL SKIN#
It delivers hip-hop's new generations of artists (by whom Cole is "unimpressed") a wise, warm but firm talking-to that switches from practical advice, warnings about the fleeting nature of fame and the inadvisability of jumping on trends to a stark and impressively incisive suggestion they should think hard about the nature of their appeal: "These white kids love that you don't give a fuck, 'cause that's exactly what's expected when your skin blackā¦ They wanna be black and think your song is how it feels"." Controversy Alexis Petridis of The Guardian said " KOD's best track may be its closer, 1985, which is billed as a taster of his forthcoming project The Fall Off.