Duke Of The South – Domani Drops Supreme Diss Track
- DJ Bobby Eupho
- Feb 27
- 2 min read

In The Midst of Social Media Warfare, Southern Lyricism Cuts Through the Noise
Hip-hop don’t sleep — and neither does drama.
After 50 Cent took shots at Tiny online, T.I. answered in the booth with “Right One.” King Harris handled his business on social media. But it was Domani who stepped in with a different approach — calculated, composed, and lyrical.
His record “Ms. Jackson” samples OutKast and opens with a calm Southern tone — lighter flick, slow build, no yelling. Instead of going straight at 50, Domani frames the diss as a conversation with 50’s late mother. That angle alone separated this track from the rest.
Lines like:
“Are you happy with the way he been holding your family name…”
and
“People won’t tell ’em because he pay ’em…”
aren’t random jabs. They question legacy, loyalty, and the circle around a powerful figure. The “emperor’s new clothes” reference suggests Domani sees something others won’t say publicly.
The closing bars — implying he could “reunite” 50 with his mother — were bold without being reckless. It was delivered more like a warning than a threat.
What stands out is the restraint. Domani didn’t chase viral moments. He didn’t troll. He rapped. Structured. Intentional. Focused.

Is it a top 20 diss of all time? That’s too early to call. Longevity decides that. But it absolutely shifted the conversation and showed that Domani can carry weight on his own — not just as T.I.’s son, but as an artist with perspective.
In the middle of chaos, he chose pen over pettiness.
And in hip-hop, that still counts.
Writers Credit
DJ Bobby Eupho
Dallas, TX
Bosstalk 101 Primetime Media





Comments