Lord Jamar isn't one to mince his words. In the past the Brand Nubian rapper has been critical of Kanye West wearing a skirt, Macklemore pushing a "gay agenda," and white rappers being "guests in the house of hip-hop." He's even got into with some notable rappers and celebrities on Twitter over his controversial comments. Now in an interview with HipHopDX, Lord Jamar is once again bringing up hip-hop fashion. However, this time he's referencing Dr. Dre and his style shift from World Class Wreckin' Cru to the N.W.A.

"When Dre came to Hip Hop, what did he do?" Lord Jamar asks rhetorically during the interview. "He took that bullsh*t off because, he knew that sh*t could never fly. That sh*t could never fly in Hip Hop. That was some R&B-type sh*t they was doing. When he came to Hip Hop, he took that f**king make-up off, that lace sh*t and put some f**king [Los Angeles] Raiders sh*t on, some sneakers and all that, and said, 'Let's go. Let's keep it hard.' You know what I mean? Because Hip Hop is hard. It's not soft. [Laughs]. Hardcore. You never heard of soft-core Hip Hip. The f**k? But now you might. Now you might hear a genre called Hip soft-core 'cause we're getting to that point."

Lord Jamar also brings up t Afrika Bambaataa & the Soul Sonic Force in the discussion, whom he believes also wore questionable attire during their heyday. However, Jamar doesn't feel Bambaataa's outfits were homosexual.

"I would call that sh*t more weird than gay," Lord Jamar says of Afrika Bambaataa & the Soul Sonic Force's outfits. "They weren't trying to be straight feminine with it, like, you know what I mean? They being more extravagant and trying to be entertainers, rather than trying to be some gender-bender."

Source: HipHopDX