
VSpaceBoy
..loading
wow 

amethyst_fan said:Rap by any definition cannot be called music. Rap artists rarely if ever come up with the beats or lyrics of their very own songs, and the sole purpose of the genre is to perpetuate and justify the uneducation and immorality of the people who listen and recite it like mindless baboons.
There are of course exceptions, but in general when you encounter people who listen to exclusively this genre, it is reflected in their own life, therefor the reason that the lyrics are as such...because the people listening to it can relate to the siuations presented.
I found the original list humorous just as a joke, but since everyone seems to want to throw their .02 cents in...
Rap and RnB are both very raggae influenced as well. DJ Kool Herc was jamacian and many rappers are either from Jamaica of of Jamaican descent eg. Busta Rhymes, Redman, Notorious B.I.G and Sean Paul.MISTERQCUE said:Not limited to only jazz, RAP can trace it's roots in Country/Western.
Enchilada said:Rap and RnB are both very raggae influenced as well. DJ Kool Herc was jamacian and many rappers are either from Jamaica of of Jamaican descent eg. Busta Rhymes, Redman, Notorious B.I.G and Sean Paul.
Any Bob Marley fans hate rap? I find some rap and reggae/dub to be quite similar in ways. Listen to Half Pint, Tippa Irie or even Sublime who were VERY reggae influenced. Both Rap and Reggae usually have simple vocal melodies and are often semi spoken.
djhead said:What does music have to do with the "morality" of people?
Furthermore, check out some of the amazing work Q-bert and the Bombshelter DJ's (out of Az) have done to really push the turntable as an instrument. There is sheet music for them!!!!
I once saw The BDJ's make a 30 Minute song out of sampling one guy scratching. Amazing.
amethyst_fan said:Well, you certainly do have a point there, but I tend to perceive that there's no other genre other than rap (and maybe death metal) that really do show some true moral insights into the people composing (or performing) the songs. Now perhaps MISTERQCUE has a valid point that what I'm really refering to is gangsta rap...that's probably the case (although I might actually lean towards thinking it spreads out in smaller increments to less hostile forms of the genre), but people actually listening to and enjoying or relating to the music have some kind of connection to the lyrical content. I argue this is even more true when dealing with rap where there is often no melody to catch one's liking to deceive the actual lyrics.
It would help to explain why although rock and pop and other musics based off the original classical form are widely popular in other countries, where as rap is not...particularly asia, it's almost non-existant. There is no personal connection people can establish to relate to this music. Even the little rap that is present in the east is almost always in their own language with lyrics that "rappers" here would probably fall to the floor laughing at, because it is more similar to rock/pop lyrics (dealing with love or humility, and rarely hatred,violence,drugs, or the ever so popular I'm bigger and badder than you.)
Well anyhow, enough of that...now let me introduce an idea that is sure to stir up some debate in relation to your last comment...
I can honestly say that making a 30 minute song out of the sample, as you referenced, is certainly admirable especially in today's standards, but I only could only hope that all pop/rock/metal/rap engineers or musicians could realize that in the not too distant past making a 30 minute song would be considered a grade school exercise to be completed in no time at all. All the music we "create" nowadays can all be catalogued, written out and explained through theory due to the fact that it's all been done before...it is actually not musically possible to make any new music idea, it has all been done before thanks to the likes of Mozart, Beethoven, Chopin etc...
The only difference is a new voice to the same old tune...haha, kind of funny really. That's why if any of you have ever had a classical teacher for guitar or piano or whatever else (and I mean a real classical teacher that only studies classical) they are usually unable to comprehend why anyone would enjoy popular music of any kind.
This is not to discourage people from making or engineering music in any way, as I still like almost all types of music myself as well, but just to point out how funny all music is in general that we're debating or arguing or discussing anyways.
never the less, rap would have to be on the bottom of the totem pole on my book, haha...sorry
killthepixel said:At the end you have your own choices and your own "totem pole" of what the best music for you. Like any other genres, there are good rappers and awfull rappers. .......
killthepixel said:At the end you have your own choices and your own "totem pole" of what the best music for you. Like any other genres, there are good rappers and awfull rappers. .......
MISTERQCUE said:There it all is in a nutshell!
djhead said:BTW, trying to keep up who is "beefing" with whom is worse than skipping WWE for 6 months and then watching it again.
PhilGood said:I just had a revelation! Pardon me if it seems stupid, but I got to thinking about rap and it's origins and realized that rapping basics are spoken word to whatever music background you have, and that's it's in time with a beat and generally without melody.
Does anyone here remember C. W. McCall?? There was a big hit in the 70's called "Convoy". It was about truckers and was quite a novelty. The chorus was sung, but the rest was spoken word in time with the music! It was by all standards what we would classify as rap today!
The Sugar Hill Gang's "Rappers Delight" is credited with being the first rap single in 1979, but "Convoy" came out in 1976. It was a RAP! It was country music, and a big hit, but it was rap none the less. If you haven't heard it, look it up or listen to it!
"Was the dark of the moon, on the sixth of June
In a Kenworth, pullin' logs
Cabover Pete with a reefer on
And a Jimmy haulin' hogs
We 'as headin' fer bear on I-One-Oh
'Bout a mile outta Shaky-Town
I sez Pig-Pen, this here's the Rubber Duck
An' I'm about to put the hammer on down"
Wouldn't it be completely ironic if one of the first rap tunes actually had it's root in Country and not Rock or R&B???
Let's bring the world back together!
Something to think about...
djhead said:Music is art. Art conveys and portrays but is never direcly linked to the human condition. It is only a perception of it. That being said how can anyone's creation of sonic input have anything to do with morality? Even if they found a way to make tangible things (sound) and intangible things (morals) collide, it would still only be a perception of said collision.
How about "It depends how good the mic sounds when I RAP it across yo mouthsweetpeee said:#10 Whatever picks up misogynistic sentiment and profanity the best...#9 The one that looks most phallic-like to turn on the bitches...#8 The one you can hide a blunt or two in...#7 The one that doesn't cause interference with all that dental work...#6 If it's bullet proof, buy it...#5 Whatever has the best ballence to offset the Crunk juice in your other hand...#4 If you see one in the shop that looks like the one in the video, buy it...
#3 If the words "check..." and "Yo!" and "whaaa??" sound good, it's a good mic...#2 If singing sounds awful in it, it's probably a good rap mic...#1 Do a search....
homestudioguy said:How about "It depends how good the mic sounds when I RAP it across yo mouth"
OR "It depends on how good you sound when I RAP the included mic cable round yo neck"
OR "It depends on how well the aluminum case holds up when I RAP it around yo head"
HSG
PS Dont forget that it also depends on how you sound when I Hip Hop across yo face![]()
How could you miss WWE for even 2 Weeks????djhead said:BTW, trying to keep up who is "beefing" with whom is worse than skipping WWE for 6 months and then watching it again.
So what I said, basically? I never said it doesnt influence, merely said music cannot be held accountable for theactions of its listeners as it is merely an observation.fraserhutch said:I disagree.
Music and art, all through the ages have serve as an oral or visual history, directly reflecting "the human condition", and having mnore than just a subtle influence on it.
I wouldn't even if I thought It did not. All music influences. All art influences. but ther can and should be no accountability or lack of credibility for a genre based on the actions of its disciples. It should be judged as music, and as art. Music is defined as:On the one hand, almost every rapper I have heard defend his/her genre against the critics proposes the argument "this is what we live and experience".
And don't tell me for a minute that rap doesn't influence people.
Whoops, got on my soapbox a bit early. It seems we aggree. Dont ever scare me like that again!I would say it both reflects mnorality and has a HUGE influence on propogating that morality. That is not to say that evertyone will buy into it, but the influence is there nonetheless.