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Thread started 02/25/09 8:58am

LondonStyle

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Stax Records Revisit 'Roots Of The Hip-Hop Generation With The Soul Of Hip-Hop, Volume 1'

http://top40-charts.com/n...46494.html
LOS ANGELES, CA. (Top40 Charts/ By Cary Baker/ Conqueroo Music) biggrin

- Every creative act, no matter how edgy and forward thinking, has some precedent. Even the most progressive artist, no matter how groundbreaking, cannot deny a connection to an earlier era of genius. In few places is this link more evident than in hip-hop, an art form built on musical artifacts and hooks from decades past, reconfigured and reinterpreted via contemporary recording and sampling technology.
And judging from the sounds of modern-day hip-hop, artists from Stax Records were prominent figures in those record collections.

Stax, re-launched in 2007 as a division of Concord Music Group, offers a glimpse of hip-hop's roots with the release of The Soul of Hip Hop, Volume I, a collection of classic tracks from the '60s and '70s. The 14 songs featured in this first volume are just a few of the Stax gems that have since become sampling mainstays for some of the most prominent hip-hop artists of the past two decades - all of whom owe an incalculable debt to the label's rich legacy of soul, R&B and funk. The Soul of Hip Hop, Volume I will be available at all digital and retail outlets on March 31, 2009.

The compilation is a testament to the enormous influence of the Stax sound, energy and attitude on the entire hip-hop generation. The Soul of Hip Hop, Volume I features hits from Stax luminaries like Isaac Hayes, Booker T. & The MGs, The Emotions, The Bar-Kays, The Dramatics, Rufus Thomas, William Bell, David Porter and Little Milton. Since the '80s, these artists and their classic recordings featured here have become source material for rap and hip-hop artists and producers like Rakim, DJ HiTek, Cypress Hill, DJ Muggs, LL Cool J, Public Enemy, DJ Quik, Ice Cube, Notorious B.I.G., Wu-Tang Clan, RZA and so many more. biggrin biggrin

Apart from its undeniable influence on the hip-hop generation, Stax Records holds a pivotal place in American music history as one of the most popular soul music record labels of all time - second only to Motown in sales and influence, but first in gritty, raw, Southern-steeped soul music. In its heyday throughout the '60s and early '70s, Stax placed more than 167 hit songs on Billboard's Hot 100 pop charts as well as a staggering 243 hits on the R&B charts.

Stax Records continues to define the sound of beats in the world of hip-hop and popular music. No one could have ever predicted that decades after they closed their doors in Memphis, Stax Records would be opening the consciousness of an entirely new generation. The vintage tracks featured here truly represent The Soul of Hip-Hop.

TRACK LIST:
1. 24-CARAT BLACK - 'Ghetto: Misfortune's Wealth'
2. THE EMOTIONS - 'Blind Alley'
3. BOOKER T. & THE MGs - 'Melting Pot'
4. THE BAR-KAYS - 'Humpin''
5. THE DRAMATICS - 'Get Up and Get Down'
6. ISAAC HAYES - 'Hyperbolicsyllabicsesquedalymistic'
7. ISAAC HAYES - 'Hung Up On My Baby'
8. DAVID PORTER - 'I'm Afraid the Masquerade Is Over'
9. WENDY RENE - 'After the Laughter (Comes Tears)'
10. CHARMELS - 'As Long As I've Got You'
11. THE SWEET INSPIRATIONS - 'Why Marry'
12. RUFUS THOMAS - 'Do the Funky Penguin (Part 1)'
13. LITTLE MILTON - 'Packed Up and Took My Mind'
14. WILLIAM BELL - 'I Forgot To Be Your Lover'
Da, Da, Da....Emancipation....Free..don't think I ain't..! London 21 Nights...Clap your hands...you know the rest..
James Brown & Michael Jackson RIP, your music still lives with us!
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Reply #1 posted 02/25/09 9:24am

missfee

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Sounds good, however, I hope they know that there will be like 40 more volumes to be released. There's been loads of songs that have been sampled over the years.
I will forever love and miss you...my sweet Prince.
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Reply #2 posted 02/25/09 9:26am

Timmy84

^^ Right, and not just Stax material, but Motown, James Brown samples that probably haven't been put on CDs yet, and some other stuff from The Meters, P-Funk and its different incarnations, and whomever... lol
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Reply #3 posted 02/25/09 11:57am

woogiebear

RIGHT THA FUNK ON!!!!!
cool cool cool cool cool
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Reply #4 posted 02/25/09 5:15pm

TonyVanDam

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Timmy84 said:

^^ Right, and not just Stax material, but Motown, James Brown samples that probably haven't been put on CDs yet, and some other stuff from The Meters, P-Funk and its different incarnations, and whomever... lol


And don't forget about The Isley Brothers (3+3 era) and Roger/Zapp.
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Reply #5 posted 02/26/09 1:21am

woogiebear

LondonStyle said:

http://top40-charts.com/news/RnB/Stax-Records-Revisit-Roots-Of-The-Hip-Hop-Generation-With-The-Soul-Of-Hip-Hop-Volume-1/46494.html
LOS ANGELES, CA. (Top40 Charts/ By Cary Baker/ Conqueroo Music) biggrin

- Every creative act, no matter how edgy and forward thinking, has some precedent. Even the most progressive artist, no matter how groundbreaking, cannot deny a connection to an earlier era of genius. In few places is this link more evident than in hip-hop, an art form built on musical artifacts and hooks from decades past, reconfigured and reinterpreted via contemporary recording and sampling technology.
And judging from the sounds of modern-day hip-hop, artists from Stax Records were prominent figures in those record collections.

Stax, re-launched in 2007 as a division of Concord Music Group, offers a glimpse of hip-hop's roots with the release of The Soul of Hip Hop, Volume I, a collection of classic tracks from the '60s and '70s. The 14 songs featured in this first volume are just a few of the Stax gems that have since become sampling mainstays for some of the most prominent hip-hop artists of the past two decades - all of whom owe an incalculable debt to the label's rich legacy of soul, R&B and funk. The Soul of Hip Hop, Volume I will be available at all digital and retail outlets on March 31, 2009.

The compilation is a testament to the enormous influence of the Stax sound, energy and attitude on the entire hip-hop generation. The Soul of Hip Hop, Volume I features hits from Stax luminaries like Isaac Hayes, Booker T. & The MGs, The Emotions, The Bar-Kays, The Dramatics, Rufus Thomas, William Bell, David Porter and Little Milton. Since the '80s, these artists and their classic recordings featured here have become source material for rap and hip-hop artists and producers like Rakim, DJ HiTek, Cypress Hill, DJ Muggs, LL Cool J, Public Enemy, DJ Quik, Ice Cube, Notorious B.I.G., Wu-Tang Clan, RZA and so many more. biggrin biggrin

Apart from its undeniable influence on the hip-hop generation, Stax Records holds a pivotal place in American music history as one of the most popular soul music record labels of all time - second only to Motown in sales and influence, but first in gritty, raw, Southern-steeped soul music. In its heyday throughout the '60s and early '70s, Stax placed more than 167 hit songs on Billboard's Hot 100 pop charts as well as a staggering 243 hits on the R&B charts.

Stax Records continues to define the sound of beats in the world of hip-hop and popular music. No one could have ever predicted that decades after they closed their doors in Memphis, Stax Records would be opening the consciousness of an entirely new generation. The vintage tracks featured here truly represent The Soul of Hip-Hop.

TRACK LIST:
1. 24-CARAT BLACK - 'Ghetto: Misfortune's Wealth'
2. THE EMOTIONS - 'Blind Alley'
3. BOOKER T. & THE MGs - 'Melting Pot'
4. THE BAR-KAYS - 'Humpin''
5. THE DRAMATICS - 'Get Up and Get Down'
6. ISAAC HAYES - 'Hyperbolicsyllabicsesquedalymistic'
7. ISAAC HAYES - 'Hung Up On My Baby'
8. DAVID PORTER - 'I'm Afraid the Masquerade Is Over'
9. WENDY RENE - 'After the Laughter (Comes Tears)'
10. CHARMELS - 'As Long As I've Got You'
11. THE SWEET INSPIRATIONS - 'Why Marry'
12. RUFUS THOMAS - 'Do the Funky Penguin (Part 1)'
13. LITTLE MILTON - 'Packed Up and Took My Mind'
14. WILLIAM BELL - 'I Forgot To Be Your Lover'



#15 should be "Our Generation" by Ernie Hines
straighten it out!!!!!
eek eek eek eek eek
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Reply #6 posted 02/26/09 1:33am

Timmy84

TonyVanDam said:

Timmy84 said:

^^ Right, and not just Stax material, but Motown, James Brown samples that probably haven't been put on CDs yet, and some other stuff from The Meters, P-Funk and its different incarnations, and whomever... lol


And don't forget about The Isley Brothers (3+3 era) and Roger/Zapp.


RIGHT! lol
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Reply #7 posted 02/26/09 7:25am

TonyVanDam

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Timmy84 said:

TonyVanDam said:



And don't forget about The Isley Brothers (3+3 era) and Roger/Zapp.


RIGHT! lol


FACT: Too many artists in the USA alone have sampled The Isleys' Between The Sheets.
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Reply #8 posted 02/26/09 10:00am

Cinnie

LondonStyle said:

9. WENDY RENE - 'After the Laughter (Comes Tears)'
10. CHARMELS - 'As Long As I've Got You'

mr.green
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Reply #9 posted 02/27/09 12:53am

woogiebear

Cinnie said:

LondonStyle said:

9. WENDY RENE - 'After the Laughter (Comes Tears)'
10. CHARMELS - 'As Long As I've Got You'

mr.green


i have an import cd called "stax breaks" that has both these jams on it and more
cool cool cool cool cool
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Forums > Music: Non-Prince > Stax Records Revisit 'Roots Of The Hip-Hop Generation With The Soul Of Hip-Hop, Volume 1'