OGClarenceBoddicker
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king hassan;5850243 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
My nigga, I lived in the Sip my last few years in high school. All this down south, east and west coast is a bunch of bullshit. IF a nigga can't recognize good music from any region he just a wack ass fuck nigga anyway. And no, that sound was not in all southern records homie, not at all
I know it wasn't, I didn't say that, I said it was a staple, them shits been around for 20+ years, it gotta be det, they just didn't sound the same, but a couple a weeks ago I also said Southern Hip Hop was diverse, which brings me to acknowledge most Houston(or damn near Southern rappers in general) had more of a slowed down West Coast sound until it evolved down into more of a Southern sound of their own (that mostly came from the drums, especially in Memphis, listen to some old DJ Zirk it sound like Dr. Dre G-funk synths over slowed down Lex Luger 808s and hi-hats)
That Texas sound(Cant put nobody above the Geto Boys in discussions like this) they had on that side of the South eventually moved over this way to the Sip and Bama thats why you get countrier slower sounds today from these states like KRIT and KD but still get niggas like Doe B and Eldorado Red(even though that nigga from fuckin HoustAtlantaVegas) that might turn up on a record in relation to the more up-beat sounds of Memphis, Atlanta, and Miami
What years was you down here? Who yall useta fuck wit?