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Thread started 02/14/14 10:54am

KCOOLMUZIQ

Tank Weighs in: Robin Thicke and Justin Timberlake ‘Are Doing R&B Better than Us’

Tank*Whether R&B has fallen off nowadays has always been a topic of debate among those who love the music. And Tank is no exception as he offered his two cents on the issue.

Chatting with Black Hollywood Thoughts, the TGT member commented the lack of R&B ballads on the radio as well as his thoughts on blue-eyed soul stirrers Robin Thicke and Justin Timberlake making better R&B than most black artists:

The Lack Of Radio Play For Ballads and Real R&B:
“Name the last time you actually heard an R&B ballad or even mid-tempo played on mainstream radio. You won’t. It’s not exciting enough to them anymore. We’ve moved out of the age of romance and meeting the mom and the father before you take the girl out. Now it’s Twitter and Instagram and everything’s happening so fast that a ballad actually takes too long for the payoff.

“So, people actually really singing is too much to think about. Like, ‘I can’t sing along with that. Where’s the guy with the Auto-Tune? I can do that.’ And people are so far into the state of reality and being able to feel like they’re apart of it that it’s actually them, that if it’s too far above their heads, then they can’t relate.

Getting R&B Back To Its Essence:
“We have to get back to making R&B for everybody. Not just for one place in time. Not just for the bedroom. Not just for the bathroom. If you think about it, “Happy” is an R&B record that Pharrell just made. That’s an old school, throwback R&B record. That’s what R&B used to sound like.

“We have to get back to that. Making that kind of music. “Happy.” So we can sing on the Oscars, along with Pharrell, who’s–him, Robin Thicke, Justin Timberlake who are leading the charge in R&B music. We can’t hate! We can’t hate on what it is! The truth is what it is. And Robin Thicke and Justin Timberlake are doing R&B music better than us. We need to catch up.”

Tank continued expressing himself on the state of R&B after the interview as he gave some food for thought on Twitter also took to Twitter to elaborate on what he was trying to say after the fact:

“When R&B artists start singing about more than just sex and the club we’ll get our life back!.. #truth,” the singer tweeted. “Check my singles and get back to me if u have something to say on the subject!.. #ileadbyexample”

“Don’t pick an artist to direct my statement towards! The R&B community as a whole is in jeopardy! We ALL have work to do!..”

Sounds like this has been inside of Tank for more than a minute. While there are artists who could be viewed as an exception to what he’s saying (i.e. Ledisi, Miguel, Janelle Monae, Frank Ocean), the question is does he have a point?

He's right!!!!!

eye will ALWAYS think of prince like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. eye mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that prince wasn't of this earth, eye would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. prince
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Reply #1 posted 02/14/14 12:28pm

kitbradley

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I love me some Tank, but he uses auto-tune quite a bit. It wish HE would get back to a more traditional R&B.

Last week, Ruben Studdard released, IMO, his greatest album to date. It's very much in a traditional vein. It debuted at #11 on the R&B album chart and something like #46 on the Pop side, which is, at best, a moderate showing on both charts. So, I guess the real question is why is it that labels have decided to stop promoting more traditional sounding R&B records by African-American artists but they are willing to promote the exact same genre if a young, caucasian artist is behind it???hmmm

"It's not nice to fuck with K.B.! All you haters will see!" - Kitbradley
"The only true wisdom is knowing you know nothing." - Socrates
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Reply #2 posted 02/14/14 12:30pm

BlaqueKnight

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Who is this "we" he's referring to? I guess he means TGT.

He needs to pick up that Janelle Monae.

Timberlake and Thicke aren't selling R&B, they are selling R&B flavored pop. Justin is a mediocre singer at best. I guess ol' Tank let those record execs get in his head. Neither Thicke nor Timberlake has ever released a record in the likes of Luther Vandross or Stevie. Neither of them have even released something as R&B as Ginuwine's "Pony" and Timberlake is produced by Timbaland, who produced Pony. All they did was dredge up Static Major's old style and have Justin sing it and then slick up the production. Their material is not bad but it is not the cornerstone of R&B. I post new tracks around here often. There's always some good R&B floating around if you are looking for it.

[Edited 2/14/14 12:38pm]

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Reply #3 posted 02/14/14 12:39pm

Musicslave

Awww, poor Lil Tank wants some attention.

-

I agree with the radio not being too ballad friendly but that about it.

-

"That’s an old school, throwback R&B record. That’s what R&B used to sound like.

“We have to get back to that. Making that kind of music."

-

-

Why does "good R&B music" has to sound old or like a throwback for it to be good? That's just boring and lazy to me. It's fine in doses but I'd rather hear artists try new things while building on the past versus trying to duplicate it.

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Reply #4 posted 02/14/14 12:47pm

CynicKill

If, as the article states, Ledisi, Miguel, Janelle Monae and Frank Ocean are the exception to the rule, then he in fact does NOT have a point.

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Reply #5 posted 02/14/14 2:05pm

Shawy89

avatar

JT's music isn't R&B, and that because he sounds like he's faking it, I know he may not, he loves that genre and he tries as hard as possible to get that R&B sound vocally but he can't because he has limited vocal range hence his voice will never fit R&B that easily.

The best R&B artists of our generation are Frank Ocean and Miguel for males, dunno about females, Janelle's music is regarded as R&B but I think she's more into soul, funk and jazz music in her albums.

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Reply #6 posted 02/14/14 2:05pm

KCOOLMUZIQ

BlaqueKnight said:

Who is this "we" he's referring to? I guess he means TGT.

He needs to pick up that Janelle Monae.

Timberlake and Thicke aren't selling R&B, they are selling R&B flavored pop. Justin is a mediocre singer at best. I guess ol' Tank let those record execs get in his head. Neither Thicke nor Timberlake has ever released a record in the likes of Luther Vandross or Stevie. Neither of them have even released something as R&B as Ginuwine's "Pony" and Timberlake is produced by Timbaland, who produced Pony. All they did was dredge up Static Major's old style and have Justin sing it and then slick up the production. Their material is not bad but it is not the cornerstone of R&B. I post new tracks around here often. There's always some good R&B floating around if you are looking for it.

[Edited 2/14/14 12:38pm]

hmmm

You are exactly right on that! Justin does have sum of the late great Static Major's harmonies(which were brillliant by the way and were intentionally mistaken for Ginuwine's) backing vocals on his records......


eye will ALWAYS think of prince like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. eye mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that prince wasn't of this earth, eye would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. prince
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Reply #7 posted 02/14/14 2:09pm

HuMpThAnG

kitbradley said:

I love me some Tank, but he uses auto-tune quite a bit. It wish HE would get back to a more traditional R&B.

Last week, Ruben Studdard released, IMO, his greatest album to date. It's very much in a traditional vein. It debuted at #11 on the R&B album chart and something like #46 on the Pop side, which is, at best, a moderate showing on both charts. So, I guess the real question is why is it that labels have decided to stop promoting more traditional sounding R&B records by African-American artists but they are willing to promote the exact same genre if a young, caucasian artist is behind it???hmmm

U just answer your own question..

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Reply #8 posted 02/14/14 2:33pm

jojolion

Shawy89 said:

JT's music isn't R&B, and that because he sounds like he's faking it, I know he may not, he loves that genre and he tries as hard as possible to get that R&B sound vocally but he can't because he has limited vocal range hence his voice will never fit R&B that easily.

The best R&B artists of our generation are Frank Ocean and Miguel for males, dunno about females, Janelle's music is regarded as R&B but I think she's more into soul, funk and jazz music in her albums.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think Frank Ocean's vocal range is much better than JT's, if at all.

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Reply #9 posted 02/14/14 2:35pm

CynicKill

Frank Ocean is just BETTER BETTER BETTER! In EVERY way!

>

Justin MIGHT be cuter.

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Reply #10 posted 02/14/14 2:38pm

MidniteMagnet

avatar

There's great R&B out there but it doesn't get played on the radio or TV. I just discover shit online. Who even listens to the radio anymore? The sound quality sucks anyway.

"Keep in mind that I'm an artist...and I'm sensitive about my shit."--E. Badu
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Reply #11 posted 02/14/14 2:45pm

CynicKill

MidniteMagnet said:

There's great R&B out there but it doesn't get played on the radio or TV. I just discover shit online. Who even listens to the radio anymore? The sound quality sucks anyway.

You'd be surprised. Most people still listen to the radio. It's definitely where hits are made, for what it's worth.

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Reply #12 posted 02/14/14 3:15pm

scorp84

It's pretty obvious that elements of JTs 2nd album were Ginuwines leftovers lol.
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Reply #13 posted 02/14/14 3:48pm

Shawy89

avatar

jojolion said:

Shawy89 said:

JT's music isn't R&B, and that because he sounds like he's faking it, I know he may not, he loves that genre and he tries as hard as possible to get that R&B sound vocally but he can't because he has limited vocal range hence his voice will never fit R&B that easily.

The best R&B artists of our generation are Frank Ocean and Miguel for males, dunno about females, Janelle's music is regarded as R&B but I think she's more into soul, funk and jazz music in her albums.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think Frank Ocean's vocal range is much better than JT's, if at all.

At least his deep range makes up for it, he isn't a strong belter, but he's good with falsettos & deep notes, and a deep tone is necessary for R&B music. JT's normal voice is very whiny and childish, it never grew up you know.

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Reply #14 posted 02/15/14 8:54am

lastdecember

avatar

I think his WE is pretty much every RB male that is out there right now. 99% sing the same way, same themes, partys girls vip bullshit bullshit bullshit. Cats like Trey Songz and nonsense like that needs to be put down.


"We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F
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Reply #15 posted 02/15/14 9:48am

mjscarousal

The industry does not want African Americans singing traditional R&B. African Americans can not cross over singing traditional R&B. They have to make dance music if they want to cross over or have some type of mainstream success. There are plenty of African Americans that make good quality R&B but will the industry promote them? That is just like how there are a ton of better artists besides the ones constantly shoved down our faces and ears but is the industry promoting them? The industry has more control over who gets marketed and promoted more than what people think.

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Reply #16 posted 02/15/14 2:36pm

KCOOLMUZIQ

mjscarousal said:

The industry does not want African Americans singing traditional R&B. African Americans can not cross over singing traditional R&B. They have to make dance music if they want to cross over or have some type of mainstream success. There are plenty of African Americans that make good quality R&B but will the industry promote them? That is just like how there are a ton of better artists besides the ones constantly shoved down our faces and ears but is the industry promoting them? The industry has more control over who gets marketed and promoted more than what people think.

nod

That is why Ne-yo stop releasing traditional rnb singles and went techno. He is making a fortune doing that to. Way more than he made doing rnb. He has been invited often now too perform at all the top rated shows like DWTS....... Usher has also went techno....Plus Prince's new future mega hit, from his most watched after superbowl appearance in "New Girl" called "

Don't U wanna fall n heart " has a techno beat to it......

[Edited 2/15/14 15:34pm]

eye will ALWAYS think of prince like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. eye mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that prince wasn't of this earth, eye would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. prince
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Reply #17 posted 02/15/14 3:16pm

Frederick96

avatar

AND NO ONE can be compared to Luther Vandross. No one is making music like that.

Damn, I miss Luther.

But Robin Thicke has been holding it down for a while for R&B. That's his bread and butter right there. I would consider JT R&B. But Ruben Studdard did just release an awesome cd..check it out. Babyface and Toni Braxton as well. If it doesn't cross over that should be ok. Not all country artists cross over and are successful, but with R&B it's mandatory or labeled a failure.

Strange, but that's the business.

Love God and I shall 4ever Love u
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Reply #18 posted 02/15/14 8:04pm

Zannaloaf

Shawy89 said:

JT's music isn't R&B, and that because he sounds like he's faking it, I know he may not, he loves that genre and he tries as hard as possible to get that R&B sound vocally but he can't because he has limited vocal range hence his voice will never fit R&B that easily.

The best R&B artists of our generation are Frank Ocean and Miguel for males, dunno about females, Janelle's music is regarded as R&B but I think she's more into soul, funk and jazz music in her albums.

thats sad if Frank Ocean and Miguel are the best. I'd rather hear Pharell and he's not all that.

But Miguel is good in this

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oxls2xX0Clg

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Reply #19 posted 02/15/14 8:59pm

Cinny

avatar

scorp84 said:

It's pretty obvious that elements of JTs 2nd album were Ginuwines leftovers lol.


Lol that is what I hear too
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Reply #20 posted 02/16/14 8:46am

thesoulbrother

avatar

I'm so sick and tired of this argument. What difference does it make? Stop worrying about the next person and just make your music!

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Reply #21 posted 02/16/14 9:05am

Shawy89

avatar

KCOOLMUZIQ said:

mjscarousal said:

The industry does not want African Americans singing traditional R&B. African Americans can not cross over singing traditional R&B. They have to make dance music if they want to cross over or have some type of mainstream success. There are plenty of African Americans that make good quality R&B but will the industry promote them? That is just like how there are a ton of better artists besides the ones constantly shoved down our faces and ears but is the industry promoting them? The industry has more control over who gets marketed and promoted more than what people think.

nod

That is why Ne-yo stop releasing traditional rnb singles and went techno. He is making a fortune doing that to. Way more than he made doing rnb. He has been invited often now too perform at all the top rated shows like DWTS....... Usher has also went techno....Plus Prince's new future mega hit, from his most watched after superbowl appearance in "New Girl" called "

Don't U wanna fall n heart " has a techno beat to it......

[Edited 2/15/14 15:34pm]

Not really, Happy, Treasure and Get Lucky for example are disco & funk songs with basslines and real instruments, yes, mostly everyone goes techno to have success, but real artists won't go that way.

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Reply #22 posted 02/16/14 9:29am

lastdecember

avatar

mjscarousal said:

The industry does not want African Americans singing traditional R&B. African Americans can not cross over singing traditional R&B. They have to make dance music if they want to cross over or have some type of mainstream success. There are plenty of African Americans that make good quality R&B but will the industry promote them? That is just like how there are a ton of better artists besides the ones constantly shoved down our faces and ears but is the industry promoting them? The industry has more control over who gets marketed and promoted more than what people think.

The funny thing is that artists like TANK were a HUGE part of RB's demise, the 90's destroyed traditionally RB, right now name ONE RB band that isnt Mint Condition who are everyones "name on RB Band", U cant because there are none, everyone downgraded music and how it was made, they fool themselves with that ZOMBIE SHEEP saying "there's good music if you look for it" which is stupid because the internet is full of more crap artists than labels are. Problem is and has been for almost 30 years now, you have lawyers running the game, people who graduated in business and law running MUSIC, the music industry stopped being MUSIC when mtv was born, it all became one big corporation. But this happens with all forms of music, RB is not exclusive to this, as soon as something sells people jump in to sell it sell it sell it, till you have people in music that shouldnt even be allowed to listen to it.

RB needs to take a HINT from a show like "that metal show" try to embrace and rebuild, all of a sudden this low budget show, is getting a genre back its respect and giving LIGHT to the older artists who still function WHICH RB does NOT.


"We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F
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Reply #23 posted 02/16/14 10:53am

Gunsnhalen

JT wouldn't be where he's at without The Neptunes & Timbaland. Like I Love You & Rock Your Body are KILLER beats. Without those JT would have been meh.

Same with Futuresex, the production on it is great. The album is good to listen to for the production alone.

Ginuwine did some real r&b in his prime. So did Tank.... i guess lol was never really a fan.

Pistols sounded like "Fuck off," wheras The Clash sounded like "Fuck Off, but here's why.."- Thedigitialgardener

All music is shit music and no music is real- gunsnhalen

Datdonkeydick- Asherfierce

Gary Hunts Album Isn't That Good- Soulalive
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Reply #24 posted 02/16/14 1:51pm

Scorp

lastdecember said:

mjscarousal said:

The industry does not want African Americans singing traditional R&B. African Americans can not cross over singing traditional R&B. They have to make dance music if they want to cross over or have some type of mainstream success. There are plenty of African Americans that make good quality R&B but will the industry promote them? That is just like how there are a ton of better artists besides the ones constantly shoved down our faces and ears but is the industry promoting them? The industry has more control over who gets marketed and promoted more than what people think.

The funny thing is that artists like TANK were a HUGE part of RB's demise, the 90's destroyed traditionally RB, right now name ONE RB band that isnt Mint Condition who are everyones "name on RB Band", U cant because there are none, everyone downgraded music and how it was made, they fool themselves with that ZOMBIE SHEEP saying "there's good music if you look for it" which is stupid because the internet is full of more crap artists than labels are. Problem is and has been for almost 30 years now, you have lawyers running the game, people who graduated in business and law running MUSIC, the music industry stopped being MUSIC when mtv was born, it all became one big corporation. But this happens with all forms of music, RB is not exclusive to this, as soon as something sells people jump in to sell it sell it sell it, till you have people in music that shouldnt even be allowed to listen to it.

RB needs to take a HINT from a show like "that metal show" try to embrace and rebuild, all of a sudden this low budget show, is getting a genre back its respect and giving LIGHT to the older artists who still function WHICH RB does NOT.

excellent points....it's over....

real R&B and authentic black expression died by the end of the 80s.....it was over then

it had already been stamped out

even BET network was declining then incrementally......

when I was 15 years old back in 1987, particularly that summer after my sophomore year in high school....I never ever in a million years thought we would be witnessing what we are today

but the reality is that we are and allot of damage has been done

what really started the decline is that when this Pop Ascension kicked in, those who blood, sweat, and teared to make the very level of music the industry would come to expolit, appropriate, and sample from, those artists never got their credit

and when u don't give respect and acknowledge the luminaries, the ancestors, during the time that it really matters, then failure is sure to follow

at this point, I'm just gonna tell the full truth no matter what......

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Reply #25 posted 02/16/14 2:40pm

lastdecember

avatar

Scorp said:

lastdecember said:

The funny thing is that artists like TANK were a HUGE part of RB's demise, the 90's destroyed traditionally RB, right now name ONE RB band that isnt Mint Condition who are everyones "name on RB Band", U cant because there are none, everyone downgraded music and how it was made, they fool themselves with that ZOMBIE SHEEP saying "there's good music if you look for it" which is stupid because the internet is full of more crap artists than labels are. Problem is and has been for almost 30 years now, you have lawyers running the game, people who graduated in business and law running MUSIC, the music industry stopped being MUSIC when mtv was born, it all became one big corporation. But this happens with all forms of music, RB is not exclusive to this, as soon as something sells people jump in to sell it sell it sell it, till you have people in music that shouldnt even be allowed to listen to it.

RB needs to take a HINT from a show like "that metal show" try to embrace and rebuild, all of a sudden this low budget show, is getting a genre back its respect and giving LIGHT to the older artists who still function WHICH RB does NOT.

excellent points....it's over....

real R&B and authentic black expression died by the end of the 80s.....it was over then

it had already been stamped out

even BET network was declining then incrementally......

when I was 15 years old back in 1987, particularly that summer after my sophomore year in high school....I never ever in a million years thought we would be witnessing what we are today

but the reality is that we are and allot of damage has been done

what really started the decline is that when this Pop Ascension kicked in, those who blood, sweat, and teared to make the very level of music the industry would come to expolit, appropriate, and sample from, those artists never got their credit

and when u don't give respect and acknowledge the luminaries, the ancestors, during the time that it really matters, then failure is sure to follow

at this point, I'm just gonna tell the full truth no matter what......

Exactly and if you bring up any older decade people will say "oh your old afraid of change", which is another overused term just like "there is good music you just have to look for it" thats total BS cause even when i respected the artistry more i was "looking" for it, people act like "back then" we were handed great new music, NO, but at least the powers that be like RADIO had the choice of making a choice on what they wanna play. Back in the 60's the beatles were having bigger hits with B sides than A sides because DJ's could do that, flip it, today and this is NO LIE. They put people in a room (record people) and play 7 seconds of a song, and then get opinions and then hand it over to radio which is allowed a 10-15 song list that they MUST PLAY, which is selected from that 7 second sample, this is all truth, this is also how the AWARDS shows VOTE, the grammy committee is handed tons of "potientials" but the labels dictate what they want them to vote on. Everything is tied together.

As for RB it was 100% the later 80's and all the 90's that killed it, and people dont like to hear that the 90's killed something but guess what it did, just like Nirvana and Pearl Jam killed of bands like Warrant and Slaughter, and that "hair age" RB suffered at the hands of people who sold it off as soon as Hip Hop became "commercial" and then you can blame everyone from Puffy to Mary J to Wu Tang to Jay Z who formed this "remix" age, where the likes of Mariah Carey lived for awhile, that merger may have been good for the BANK, but the culture suffered, plain and simple.

Sorry to say i dont see an age of "instruments" coming back, not when you can record a hit record on some BS software on your laptop, i mean a kid today sees that and says, why do i need to do any work, and guess what, they are RIGHT, and they learned from the generation before.


"We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F
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Reply #26 posted 02/16/14 3:52pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

lastdecember said:

They put people in a room (record people) and play 7 seconds of a song, and then get opinions

Not really new. In the 1960's and early 1970s, Berry Gordy had his staff judge songs to be released as singles or not, but Berry had the final say. In some cases he vetoed songs like I Heard It Through The Grapevine by Marvin Gaye (because he didn't like it), which was recorded before the other versions (Miracles, Gladys Knight & The Pips), but released later. Then there was the "Rate-A-Record" on American Bandstand and some radio stations had the similar "Rush It or Flush It" (or under other names) in which listeners called in to vote on whether a song would get played or not. In many cases songs that later became nationwide hits were voted down on the individual stations and they wound up playing it anyway.

.

As far as the earlier DJ's choosing songs, they also generally had pre-written playlists, or at least the hit based ones did. But they did sometimes play records they liked that would fit the Top 40 format. They couldn't just play anything. It was not Top 40 that first popularized R&B/rock 'n roll, but the low watt underground stations that could only be heard at certain times of the day that were mainly geared to a Black audience. The DJs did not always choose what they played because they liked the songs, but because label A&R people would pay them money or give them gifts like drugs, girls, booze, clothes, cars, etc. Payola wasn't just invented, it's always been there. The main reason they had the payola hearings in the late 1950s is because they were trying to shut down rock 'n roll (aka race music), which was supposedly corrupting the {white) youth. They didn't have a problem with it before when crooner pop and showtunes was popular.

.

It was FM radio in the late 1960s that started to have more of a choice in their playlists, instead of the earlier AM, which is where most of the hit stations were located. FM took advantage of the then new stereo records and would play longer songs or even an entire album. FM also was a factor in popularizing psychedelic rock, prog rock, hard rock, & metal with the AOR format. AM couldn't broadcast stereo, which is why it started to die off in the 1970s and a lot of it became talk radio/sports and FM became what AM used to be.

you can blame everyone from Puffy to Mary J to Wu Tang to Jay Z who formed this "remix" age, where the likes of Mariah Carey lived for awhile

Remixes came popular around the disco era in the mid 1970s with the creation of the maxi single and by people like Tom Moulton, which is over a decade before these acts.


You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #27 posted 02/16/14 5:12pm

Scorp

lastdecember said:

Scorp said:

excellent points....it's over....

real R&B and authentic black expression died by the end of the 80s.....it was over then

it had already been stamped out

even BET network was declining then incrementally......

when I was 15 years old back in 1987, particularly that summer after my sophomore year in high school....I never ever in a million years thought we would be witnessing what we are today

but the reality is that we are and allot of damage has been done

what really started the decline is that when this Pop Ascension kicked in, those who blood, sweat, and teared to make the very level of music the industry would come to expolit, appropriate, and sample from, those artists never got their credit

and when u don't give respect and acknowledge the luminaries, the ancestors, during the time that it really matters, then failure is sure to follow

at this point, I'm just gonna tell the full truth no matter what......

Exactly and if you bring up any older decade people will say "oh your old afraid of change", which is another overused term just like "there is good music you just have to look for it" thats total BS cause even when i respected the artistry more i was "looking" for it, people act like "back then" we were handed great new music, NO, but at least the powers that be like RADIO had the choice of making a choice on what they wanna play. Back in the 60's the beatles were having bigger hits with B sides than A sides because DJ's could do that, flip it, today and this is NO LIE. They put people in a room (record people) and play 7 seconds of a song, and then get opinions and then hand it over to radio which is allowed a 10-15 song list that they MUST PLAY, which is selected from that 7 second sample, this is all truth, this is also how the AWARDS shows VOTE, the grammy committee is handed tons of "potientials" but the labels dictate what they want them to vote on. Everything is tied together.

As for RB it was 100% the later 80's and all the 90's that killed it, and people dont like to hear that the 90's killed something but guess what it did, just like Nirvana and Pearl Jam killed of bands like Warrant and Slaughter, and that "hair age" RB suffered at the hands of people who sold it off as soon as Hip Hop became "commercial" and then you can blame everyone from Puffy to Mary J to Wu Tang to Jay Z who formed this "remix" age, where the likes of Mariah Carey lived for awhile, that merger may have been good for the BANK, but the culture suffered, plain and simple.

Sorry to say i dont see an age of "instruments" coming back, not when you can record a hit record on some BS software on your laptop, i mean a kid today sees that and says, why do i need to do any work, and guess what, they are RIGHT, and they learned from the generation before.

so beautifully put on all aspects

our culture has been obliteterated, and allot of people in our own culture used it up to cash at the bank, they did not appreciate all the hard work behind that great music at all....

other cultures have been used up too

it's all been used up now and there's nothing of substance there.....I dont' see anything

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Reply #28 posted 02/17/14 9:35am

Cinny

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lastdecember, why would you say that about Wu Tang??

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Reply #29 posted 02/17/14 10:15am

3rdeyedude

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anyone can make rap music

anyone can make R&B music

isn't it funny that when a black artist crosses over they get praise

but when a white artist does it people want to hate

give it a rest........it's 2014 already

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