Omillio Sparks Reveals Jay-Z’s Wild Reaction When Nas Dropped ‘Ether’ – NYC Club Erupted — DJ Refused to Cut the Track

 

“The Night Hip-Hop Stood Still”: Omillio Sparks and Rass Kass Recall Jay-Z’s Reaction to Nas’ “Ether” Bombshell

NEW YORK CITY — More than two decades later, hip-hop heads still remember where they were the day Nas dropped “Ether.” The 2001 track didn’t just shake the rap game — it redefined what a diss record could do. And now, artists who witnessed the moment firsthand are sharing what it was like to see Jay-Z’s reaction when the scathing anthem first hit the streets.

During a recent episode of the Mass Podcast, rapper Omillio Sparks of the Roc-A-Fella crew, along with Ras Kass, gave fans a raw and vivid account of one of hip-hop’s most explosive nights — the night “Ether” took over New York.

A Legendary Beef Ignites

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The feud between Jay-Z and Nas had been simmering since the late 1990s. Both were dominant forces in East Coast rap, trading subtle — and not-so-subtle — shots in interviews and on records. By 2001, the tension had reached a boiling point. Jay’s “Takeover,” released earlier that year on The Blueprint, called out Nas for his inconsistent output and accused him of being past his prime.

But Nas wasn’t done. On December 4, 2001, he released “Ether” — a five-minute lyrical inferno aimed squarely at Hov’s throne. Over menacing production by Ron Browz, Nas dismantled Jay-Z line by line, delivering what many fans still call the most devastating diss track in rap history.

“It Was Clinically Written Deadly”

In his interview, veteran rapper Ras Kass recalled being in the studio with Nas on the very day “Ether” dropped. The energy, he said, was electric.

“It had to be 10 a.m., 11 a.m. when Nas bops in,” Ras remembered. “He’s usually very chill. Every time I’ve encountered him, he’s humble and nice. Not to say he wasn’t humble then, but he walked in, boppin’. I remember for like an hour, me, him, and [DJ] Premier talking — kind of an overview of the record.”

At the time, Jay-Z was unstoppable. The Blueprint had just been hailed as a masterpiece, and Roc-A-Fella was dominating charts and clubs across America. But “Ether” changed everything.

“I knew some of the things Nas was saying,” Ras Kass continued. “I lived with JAY-Z for a summer, so I knew it was clinically written deadly. It was a deadly, personal record.”

The Club Goes Wild

Omillio Sparks Still On It

If the daytime belonged to Nas, the night belonged to the streets — and that’s where Jay-Z first faced “Ether” in public. According to both Ras Kass and Omillio Sparks, Jay and Damon Dash hit a popular New York City club that night, just as the song began to dominate mixtapes and airwaves.

“The ironic part is I saw Nas during the day at the studio, then at night, I went out to the club,” Ras said. “We went out and saw Jay and Dame at the club… They played ‘Ether’ in the club and Jay was heated.”

The crowd, however, was ecstatic. As the now-iconic hook — “F— Jay-Z” — echoed through the speakers, the entire club reportedly erupted.

“Jay was not having it,” Ras said. “I remember him saying, ‘Dame, tell that n—- to turn that s— off.’ But the DJ refused.”

A Battle for the Ages

That moment has since become the stuff of legend — a symbolic “changing of the guard” in New York hip-hop. “Ether” gave Nas his long-awaited comeback and restored his reputation after critics questioned whether he could still compete with Jay-Z’s commercial dominance.

Meanwhile, Jay fired back days later with “Supa Ugly,” a brutal diss that went too far for some fans — and even for Jay’s own family. The track’s personal references to Nas’ ex-girlfriend were so intense that Jay’s mother reportedly called him, urging him to apologize. He did, live on Hot 97.

The Aftermath and Respect

The beef simmered for several more years, until 2005, when Jay-Z and Nas publicly reconciled during Jay’s “I Declare War” concert — a moment that symbolized peace and maturity between two of rap’s greatest lyricists.

Still, the story of that night in 2001 — when “Ether” took over the club and froze the room — remains a legendary snapshot of hip-hop history.

“When that song dropped, it was like the air got sucked out of New York,” said Omillio Sparks. “You could feel the tension. Even if you loved Jay, you had to respect what Nas did.”

Mass Podcast Keeps It Real

The Mass Podcast, known for its raw, unfiltered conversations with hip-hop veterans, continues to shine a light on the behind-the-scenes moments that shaped the culture. “We talk about what fans really want to hear — the stories from the people who were there,” Sparks said.

From the Roc-A-Fella dynasty to the lyrical wars that defined an era, their latest episode offered fans a front-row seat to one of the most unforgettable chapters in rap history.

As Ras Kass summed it up: “That day, it wasn’t just about a song. It was about power, pride, and the passion that makes hip-hop what it is.”

 

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