By now Lord Jamar of Brand Nubian fame needs no introduction on VladTV. Vlad has conducted numerous interviews with the outspoken emcee and each one has received a bevy of controversy. Whether he's railing against Kanye West for wearing a skirt, or Seattle rapper Macklemore "pushing a gay agenda" in hip-hop one thing is certain, and that's Lord Jamar isn't biting his tongue for no one.

And now in an interview with HipHopDX, Lord Jamar continues sharing his opinion on white people in hip-hop, who he believes to be "guests." "As a White person, who is a guest to the house of Hip Hop, you don't have the right, okay, to come in and try to decide where this sh*t should go," Lord Jamar says during an interview with HipHopDX. "Make a Rock song saying that. Make some EDM sh*t promoting that. Like don't try to use our vehicle, our vehicle that we created, to promote some sh*t that you know we don't f**k with. That's all I'm saying."

Lord Jamar clarifies his stance once more, saying he isn't against white people making hip-hop. "I'm not saying White people can't make Hip Hop," Lord Jamar continues. "I'm not saying you can't talk about pretty much what you want to talk about, but then again, there are boundaries to everything. If I'm making wine, I can't just put f**king beer in there and call it wine. It's no longer wine. It's something else. Don't try to tell me that, 'Oh, Hip Hop is self expression.' Yeah Hip Hop is self-expression. It is all those things. You're right. But, everything has its parameters, and to say that Black people don't own this music is ridiculous. All cultures want to highlight their accomplishments and there's nothing wrong with that."

One particular issue Lord Jamar does have with white people is that they've reappropriated genres and styles of music created by black people. "They [White people] don't create anything," Lord Jamar says. "Look at all the remakes they did. Look at all the remakes they did with movies. They're not creative. We've come up with how many different genres of music as long as we've been here, in America? And they've stolen damn-near every one, to the point now it seems odd for a Black man to do Rock n Roll or Country music, when the banjo is an African instrument. They just added a few more strings. Like, knock it off."

Lord Jamar would continue, describing the various styles of music that were created by black people. "And that's where Country music comes from, and then Blues and all that type of sh*t. Rock N Roll was a slang for f**kin' that we came up with. Okay? And so now it seems odd, and so how many years in the future will it seem odd for a black man to do Hip Hop, the way it's going? You see what I'm saying? But what will we do? What we always do. We'll come up with some other f**king sh*t that'll intrigue you. Some whole next kind of music that'll have you like, 'Oh my God. How did you do that?' And you'll try to shit on it at first the way you did with Hip Hop and then when you see that it's relentless, then you'll try to co-opt it."

What do you think about Lord Jamar's take on the issue of race relations in music? Do you agree with what he had to say about white people not being creative and stealing music genres from black people? Sound off below!

Source: HipHopDX