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Brian B.;5848127 said:Kwan Dai;5845923 said:I only judge Hip Hop as Nice or Whack. The time period doesn't matter. Is it unfortunate that the most popular MC's of today can't hold a candle to the MC's that came before them? Yes but such is life.
Ok, but what are the factors for determining "nice or wack"
cuz a lot of times yall base it on rapper A not sounding like rapper B (as you did w/ your question)
every human being is different & in turn every artist is (or should be), so one of the problems I see is yall expect artist to sound a certain way instead of accepting how they sound (wether you like it or not)
there are no rules to making music
konceptjones;5849503 said:I look at the shit on a technical level since I was once an aspiring MC, I've DJ'ed, and currently an on-again-off-again producer.
The structure of today's rhymes is about as elementary as it gets without directly quoting Mother Goose. Listen to the shit that was on the radio from '88 to about '97 and compare it to the joints you hear today. I'd go so far as to say that a cat like Vanilla Ice could battle all of these rappers out today and would prolly slaughter 80% of them.
The over reliance on hooks, the simplifying of similes, rhyme patterns that don't change from one artist to the next (we used to think biting a style was wack in my day), to not even trying to find words that rhyme makes todays MC's skills sub-par at best. Punchlines are now a single word at the end of a mostly silent bar 'cause anything more would lose your audience's attention.
The mechanics if it all are just fucked up.
Production-wise, we moved away from sample-heavy joints, but what most tracks nowadays lack is structure and the soul that we had from those old joints. The tracks nowadays take center stage barely giving the MC a chance to breathe on his own. You have to struggle to hear the rapper over the instrumentals! Retarded high hat builds, synths drowning out everything, layered to the point where even they fight for space and the fact that most of these cats use the same presets on their tracks without even tweaking them makes for a bland, dull repetitive sonic sound scape that sorely lacks in creativity.
I know that, at one point, hip hop relied on the same ass samples (funky drummer, impeach the president, skull snaps, Nautilus, etc), but as a whole we moved away from that, or got far more creative in flippin those samples to the point where no two tracks that used the same sample sounded alike. This, sadly, is not the case these days. Most of the club anthems use the same drum patterns with very little variation in anything.
I don't like the current crop of rappers not because I don't understand it, I do... probably a lot better than most would ever admit. I don't like it because it just doesn't sound good. There's a few cats that show promise, I'll admit that, but those MC's are few and far between.
king hassan;5849655 said:konceptjones;5849503 said:I look at the shit on a technical level since I was once an aspiring MC, I've DJ'ed, and currently an on-again-off-again producer.
The structure of today's rhymes is about as elementary as it gets without directly quoting Mother Goose. Listen to the shit that was on the radio from '88 to about '97 and compare it to the joints you hear today. I'd go so far as to say that a cat like Vanilla Ice could battle all of these rappers out today and would prolly slaughter 80% of them.
The over reliance on hooks, the simplifying of similes, rhyme patterns that don't change from one artist to the next (we used to think biting a style was wack in my day), to not even trying to find words that rhyme makes todays MC's skills sub-par at best. Punchlines are now a single word at the end of a mostly silent bar 'cause anything more would lose your audience's attention.
The mechanics if it all are just fucked up.
Production-wise, we moved away from sample-heavy joints, but what most tracks nowadays lack is structure and the soul that we had from those old joints. The tracks nowadays take center stage barely giving the MC a chance to breathe on his own. You have to struggle to hear the rapper over the instrumentals! Retarded high hat builds, synths drowning out everything, layered to the point where even they fight for space and the fact that most of these cats use the same presets on their tracks without even tweaking them makes for a bland, dull repetitive sonic sound scape that sorely lacks in creativity.
I know that, at one point, hip hop relied on the same ass samples (funky drummer, impeach the president, skull snaps, Nautilus, etc), but as a whole we moved away from that, or got far more creative in flippin those samples to the point where no two tracks that used the same sample sounded alike. This, sadly, is not the case these days. Most of the club anthems use the same drum patterns with very little variation in anything.
I don't like the current crop of rappers not because I don't understand it, I do... probably a lot better than most would ever admit. I don't like it because it just doesn't sound good. There's a few cats that show promise, I'll admit that, but those MC's are few and far between.
I swear I hear this same sound in songs, it's a high hat and it goes, "tttt tttttt"
Kwan Dai;5849586 said:Brian B.;5848127 said:Kwan Dai;5845923 said:I only judge Hip Hop as Nice or Whack. The time period doesn't matter. Is it unfortunate that the most popular MC's of today can't hold a candle to the MC's that came before them? Yes but such is life.
Ok, but what are the factors for determining "nice or wack"
cuz a lot of times yall base it on rapper A not sounding like rapper B (as you did w/ your question)
every human being is different & in turn every artist is (or should be), so one of the problems I see is yall expect artist to sound a certain way instead of accepting how they sound (wether you like it or not)
there are no rules to making music
Quality, consistency, creativity, and originality for starters. Sprinkle in some intelligence, integrity, and awareness then you have something.
That's ridiculous. I didn't mention anything about rapper A sounding like rapper B. Today's MC can't hold a candle to those before them because, they aren't original, don't focus on quality and more then likely are being told what to create.
Melle Mel didn't sound like Spoonie G. Grand Master Caz didn't sound like Moe Dee. Rakim didn't sound like KRS. Kane didn't sound like G-Rap. Nas didn't sound like Big. I could go on and on. But everyone these Pop, Trap rappers sound like the same Ol rehashed ish. The beats sounds the same. The flows sound the same. You even have engineers tweaking voices in the same pitch so, that dudes sound the same. So, I say to you. Stop engaging me because, while I enjoy healthy debate you are just annoying. I don't do well with folks that stand for nothing and think any type of BS should be put in the atmosphere.
There are rules to making music. That's why a person can actually major in Music at a college, university or school for Music.
SwampNigga;5849867 said:king hassan;5849655 said:konceptjones;5849503 said:I look at the shit on a technical level since I was once an aspiring MC, I've DJ'ed, and currently an on-again-off-again producer.
The structure of today's rhymes is about as elementary as it gets without directly quoting Mother Goose. Listen to the shit that was on the radio from '88 to about '97 and compare it to the joints you hear today. I'd go so far as to say that a cat like Vanilla Ice could battle all of these rappers out today and would prolly slaughter 80% of them.
The over reliance on hooks, the simplifying of similes, rhyme patterns that don't change from one artist to the next (we used to think biting a style was wack in my day), to not even trying to find words that rhyme makes todays MC's skills sub-par at best. Punchlines are now a single word at the end of a mostly silent bar 'cause anything more would lose your audience's attention.
The mechanics if it all are just fucked up.
Production-wise, we moved away from sample-heavy joints, but what most tracks nowadays lack is structure and the soul that we had from those old joints. The tracks nowadays take center stage barely giving the MC a chance to breathe on his own. You have to struggle to hear the rapper over the instrumentals! Retarded high hat builds, synths drowning out everything, layered to the point where even they fight for space and the fact that most of these cats use the same presets on their tracks without even tweaking them makes for a bland, dull repetitive sonic sound scape that sorely lacks in creativity.
I know that, at one point, hip hop relied on the same ass samples (funky drummer, impeach the president, skull snaps, Nautilus, etc), but as a whole we moved away from that, or got far more creative in flippin those samples to the point where no two tracks that used the same sample sounded alike. This, sadly, is not the case these days. Most of the club anthems use the same drum patterns with very little variation in anything.
I don't like the current crop of rappers not because I don't understand it, I do... probably a lot better than most would ever admit. I don't like it because it just doesn't sound good. There's a few cats that show promise, I'll admit that, but those MC's are few and far between.
I swear I hear this same sound in songs, it's a high hat and it goes, "tttt tttttt"
You mean the South's Boom Bap
Shit been a Southern staple since the 80s, only difference now is niggas aint got no choice but to recognize or notice it since no other region's sound is relevant
konceptjones;5850038 said:SwampNigga;5849867 said:king hassan;5849655 said:konceptjones;5849503 said:I look at the shit on a technical level since I was once an aspiring MC, I've DJ'ed, and currently an on-again-off-again producer.
The structure of today's rhymes is about as elementary as it gets without directly quoting Mother Goose. Listen to the shit that was on the radio from '88 to about '97 and compare it to the joints you hear today. I'd go so far as to say that a cat like Vanilla Ice could battle all of these rappers out today and would prolly slaughter 80% of them.
The over reliance on hooks, the simplifying of similes, rhyme patterns that don't change from one artist to the next (we used to think biting a style was wack in my day), to not even trying to find words that rhyme makes todays MC's skills sub-par at best. Punchlines are now a single word at the end of a mostly silent bar 'cause anything more would lose your audience's attention.
The mechanics if it all are just fucked up.
Production-wise, we moved away from sample-heavy joints, but what most tracks nowadays lack is structure and the soul that we had from those old joints. The tracks nowadays take center stage barely giving the MC a chance to breathe on his own. You have to struggle to hear the rapper over the instrumentals! Retarded high hat builds, synths drowning out everything, layered to the point where even they fight for space and the fact that most of these cats use the same presets on their tracks without even tweaking them makes for a bland, dull repetitive sonic sound scape that sorely lacks in creativity.
I know that, at one point, hip hop relied on the same ass samples (funky drummer, impeach the president, skull snaps, Nautilus, etc), but as a whole we moved away from that, or got far more creative in flippin those samples to the point where no two tracks that used the same sample sounded alike. This, sadly, is not the case these days. Most of the club anthems use the same drum patterns with very little variation in anything.
I don't like the current crop of rappers not because I don't understand it, I do... probably a lot better than most would ever admit. I don't like it because it just doesn't sound good. There's a few cats that show promise, I'll admit that, but those MC's are few and far between.
I swear I hear this same sound in songs, it's a high hat and it goes, "tttt tttttt"
You mean the South's Boom Bap
Shit been a Southern staple since the 80s, only difference now is niggas aint got no choice but to recognize or notice it since no other region's sound is relevant
Naw bruh, just naw... That shit didn't appear out the south until the mid to late 90's. We listened to the shit from the south back in the late 80's and early 90's. Closest I can remember having anything like that was Lil Elt "Get The Gat", maybe Tim Smooth's shit but even then it wasn't too different from any other 808 driven shit from Beastie Boys, Run DMC, or especially Too $hort.
SwampNigga;5849867 said:king hassan;5849655 said:konceptjones;5849503 said:I look at the shit on a technical level since I was once an aspiring MC, I've DJ'ed, and currently an on-again-off-again producer.
The structure of today's rhymes is about as elementary as it gets without directly quoting Mother Goose. Listen to the shit that was on the radio from '88 to about '97 and compare it to the joints you hear today. I'd go so far as to say that a cat like Vanilla Ice could battle all of these rappers out today and would prolly slaughter 80% of them.
The over reliance on hooks, the simplifying of similes, rhyme patterns that don't change from one artist to the next (we used to think biting a style was wack in my day), to not even trying to find words that rhyme makes todays MC's skills sub-par at best. Punchlines are now a single word at the end of a mostly silent bar 'cause anything more would lose your audience's attention.
The mechanics if it all are just fucked up.
Production-wise, we moved away from sample-heavy joints, but what most tracks nowadays lack is structure and the soul that we had from those old joints. The tracks nowadays take center stage barely giving the MC a chance to breathe on his own. You have to struggle to hear the rapper over the instrumentals! Retarded high hat builds, synths drowning out everything, layered to the point where even they fight for space and the fact that most of these cats use the same presets on their tracks without even tweaking them makes for a bland, dull repetitive sonic sound scape that sorely lacks in creativity.
I know that, at one point, hip hop relied on the same ass samples (funky drummer, impeach the president, skull snaps, Nautilus, etc), but as a whole we moved away from that, or got far more creative in flippin those samples to the point where no two tracks that used the same sample sounded alike. This, sadly, is not the case these days. Most of the club anthems use the same drum patterns with very little variation in anything.
I don't like the current crop of rappers not because I don't understand it, I do... probably a lot better than most would ever admit. I don't like it because it just doesn't sound good. There's a few cats that show promise, I'll admit that, but those MC's are few and far between.
I swear I hear this same sound in songs, it's a high hat and it goes, "tttt tttttt"
You mean the South's Boom Bap
Shit been a Southern staple since the 80s, only difference now is niggas aint got no choice but to recognize or notice it since no other region's sound is relevant
lamontbdc;5850222 said:in terms of high hat yall talking bout this right? just making sure i'm not confused b/c this shit ain't no staple of southern hip hop in the 80s, and this isn't no boom bap
SwampNigga;5850225 said:konceptjones;5850038 said:SwampNigga;5849867 said:king hassan;5849655 said:konceptjones;5849503 said:I look at the shit on a technical level since I was once an aspiring MC, I've DJ'ed, and currently an on-again-off-again producer.
The structure of today's rhymes is about as elementary as it gets without directly quoting Mother Goose. Listen to the shit that was on the radio from '88 to about '97 and compare it to the joints you hear today. I'd go so far as to say that a cat like Vanilla Ice could battle all of these rappers out today and would prolly slaughter 80% of them.
The over reliance on hooks, the simplifying of similes, rhyme patterns that don't change from one artist to the next (we used to think biting a style was wack in my day), to not even trying to find words that rhyme makes todays MC's skills sub-par at best. Punchlines are now a single word at the end of a mostly silent bar 'cause anything more would lose your audience's attention.
The mechanics if it all are just fucked up.
Production-wise, we moved away from sample-heavy joints, but what most tracks nowadays lack is structure and the soul that we had from those old joints. The tracks nowadays take center stage barely giving the MC a chance to breathe on his own. You have to struggle to hear the rapper over the instrumentals! Retarded high hat builds, synths drowning out everything, layered to the point where even they fight for space and the fact that most of these cats use the same presets on their tracks without even tweaking them makes for a bland, dull repetitive sonic sound scape that sorely lacks in creativity.
I know that, at one point, hip hop relied on the same ass samples (funky drummer, impeach the president, skull snaps, Nautilus, etc), but as a whole we moved away from that, or got far more creative in flippin those samples to the point where no two tracks that used the same sample sounded alike. This, sadly, is not the case these days. Most of the club anthems use the same drum patterns with very little variation in anything.
I don't like the current crop of rappers not because I don't understand it, I do... probably a lot better than most would ever admit. I don't like it because it just doesn't sound good. There's a few cats that show promise, I'll admit that, but those MC's are few and far between.
I swear I hear this same sound in songs, it's a high hat and it goes, "tttt tttttt"
You mean the South's Boom Bap
Shit been a Southern staple since the 80s, only difference now is niggas aint got no choice but to recognize or notice it since no other region's sound is relevant
Naw bruh, just naw... That shit didn't appear out the south until the mid to late 90's. We listened to the shit from the south back in the late 80's and early 90's. Closest I can remember having anything like that was Lil Elt "Get The Gat", maybe Tim Smooth's shit but even then it wasn't too different from any other 808 driven shit from Beastie Boys, Run DMC, or especially Too $hort.
Dead at late 90s you disqualified yoself and im playin myself for even replyin but I will
DJ Spanish Fly, DJ Magic Mike, 2 Live Crew just to name a few from the late 80s. The shit been in Memphis, Miami, and New Orleans foreva, of course it wuddnt no swag, flex, finesse type attitude to run wit it like it is today but the tweets was still there.
The talk of "808's" these past couple of years since Lex Luger took off don confused me. I always interpreted "808's" to be basslines, not treble, most of you niggas refer to tweets and hi-hats as "808" I dont understand, so i'm lost right there.
Tweets and hi-hats, that doubled up sound. The shit come from Miami Bass, New Orleans Bounce, and Memphis Buck(ALL DUE RESPECT TO AFRIKA BAMBATTA/SHOW BOYZ DRAG RAP/RODNEY O AND JOE COOLEY, NIGGAS LAID THE BLUEPRINT)
You can hear the sound from just about any Southern rapper from any decade, it just aint all crazy sped up and definitely not sped the fuck up like it is today, even though Triple 6 had summa they shit crazy sped up like today since about 93-94
And Too Short dem my niggas but they aint have that bass waingin and wammin like Miami Bass artists
and beastie boys, mc shan, run dmc(sucker mcs is hand claps a sum shit) and them niggas sho aint have them tweets like Miami Bass