moyo;8875669 said:
5 Grand;8875656 said:
moyo;8875638 said:
Fuck outta here wit that hick town shit, them wack ass do wop and Funk flex hogan mixtapes that y'all ass was buyin wit ya Dutchess from the bodega don't mean shjt in the grand scheme of things. Pac still killed Mobb deep and Drop a gem on em was still overrated.
Mobb Deep pulled Drop A Gem On Em from the radio because 2Pac got murdered.
@Moyo, where are you from? What were you doing in 1996?
Mississippi and I was listening to the music and forming an opinion and gettin pussy as a high school freshman. Lol
Don't take this as a diss, but consider this; In Mississippi you and your friends were listening to your local Top 40/R&B station, reading The Source once a month, watching MTV and BET every afternoon. Thats how you were exposed to music. If you saw a video you liked and The Source gave the album a 4 mic (or better) rating chances are, you copped.
In New York, the DJs had connections to the record labels and the artists. They had personal friendships with the artists. In the mid 90s, the New York Djs had a pretty decent position on the totem pole. You could compare a New York mixtape DJ in the 90s to a webmaster or a blogger in the 2000s who has his own website and a connection to some industry insiders. In other words, the mixtape DJs in New York had access to music that didn't get reviewed by The Source, didn't have a video on MTV or BET and never got officially released so the Top 40 and R&B/Hip Hop stations wouldn't play it. There was music circulating on mix tapes that was never officially released.
The best example of the mid 90s mixtape phenomenon is the Intro on Doo Wop's 95 Live mixtape. There were 22 minutes of freestyles before the tape started. That had never been done before. 95 Live Part 2 was just as dope.
Other examples of mid 90s mix tape phenomenons are;
4,5,6 - DJ Clue. This was the first New York mixtape to consist of entirely music that was unreleased. It was all exclusive material by well known artists.
The Best Of Biggie - Mr Cee. This was the first artist mixtape. A lot of people think that 50 Cent's G Unit is the Future is the first artist mixtape but Mr Cee and Biggie's mixtape preceded it by 6 years. This tape contains all songs that weren't on Ready to Die or Life After Death.
Somethin For That A$$ - DJ S&S. I had this in the fall of 1993. It had Who Am I by Snoop months before it was officially released. It also had Come Clean by Jeru The Damaja.
Here's an interview where Doo Wop discusses how he got started in mix tapes, his relationship with certain artists and the feedback he got from certain West Coast artists;
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Action Pac -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/dj-action-pac/
DJ Boo The Barber -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/dj-boo-tha-barber/
DJ Buckwild -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/dj-buckwild/
DJ Brucie B -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/dj-brucie-b/
DJ Capone -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/dj-capone/
DJ Chubby Chubb -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/dj-chubby-chub/
DJ Clue -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/dj-clue/
DJ Cutmaster C -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/dj-cutmaster-c/
Doo Wop -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/dj-doo-wop/
Ron G -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/dj-ron-g/
DJ S&S -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/dj-ss/
Tony Touch -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/dj-tony-touch/
DJ Whoo Kid -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/dj-whoo-kid/
Funkmaster Flex -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/funkmaster-flex/
J Love -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/j-love/
Mister Cee -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/mister-cee/
Starchild -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/starchild/
Stretch Armstrong -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/stretch-armstrong/
The X- Executioners -
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/the-x-ecutioners/
^^^ Those are the mixtape DJs that I'm familiar with, but here's the homepage to that website. They have an entire 90s mixtape database. They have mixtape DJs that I've never heard of;
http://www.f-yourmixtape.com/mixtape-database/