yep | |
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novabrkr said: There seems to be a tendency for minority groups to define their interests and favoured forms of expression on a rather narrow scale. At first it may seem that all options are open, but over time it tends to get narrower. American blacks are hardly the only ones in that sense. You can see the same thing happening to the immigrants in Europe these days. I believe there's often some sort of bullying involved when some individuals show interest in things that aren't thought to "belong to them". I wouldn't say difference, more like morphing...like a tributary from a river or a branch from a tree...slow down a Nirvana song(or most rock songs )and you'll be surprised that it sounds bluesy or you can at least hear the connection... Take an Old Motown song and adjust the instrument levels and make the guitar the main instrument instead of the piano and you'll be surprised. Most of Modern music is just branches from a very broad tree that more likely was rooted in the black Deep South . | |
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mtv is only interested in helping black acts that have trouble selling records to white people. mtv did some reseach and found out that rick james has a white fan base that buys his records and go to his concerts. this is why they pass on him. | |
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If that was the case, then that's many of the acts that were on the R&B chart. Zapp, Lakeside, and D-Train didn't have any big pop hits in the early 1980s. Lionel Richie had no problem selling to white people and he got heavy MTV airplay, and Lionel was on Motown just like Rick. Rockwell was on Motown too and his videos were on MTV. MTV didn't show Teena Marie and she was white, but had no problem later showing Whitney Houston all the time. Teena was mainly popular with the black audience and she didn't get any Top 40 airplay until Lovergirl and that was after she left Motown. Hall & Oates and Michael McDonald were popular with both. Rick didn't get much MTV airplay even after Michael Jackson, Billy Ocean, Kool & The Gang, Janet Jackson, Tina Turner, Prince, & others became MTV staples. Maybe Rick's music was too R&B like Evelyn "Champagne" King and Skyy and he didn't fit the format. Or maybe Motown didn't bother promoting Rick to MTV & pop radio because he would complain about the label. Lionel & Stevie Wonder didn't. They were promoted to pop radio and so were DeBarge on the Rythym Of The Night album. Motown was still ran by Berry Gordy, so he couldn't have been racist against Rick. Jody Watley got on MTV but Howard Hewitt didn't. There was a difference in their music. If you notice pretty much all of the black performers on We Are The World were ones that had crossed over and also got MTV airplay. They weren't people that had a hard time selling to the mainstream. That would be many of the acts that later wound up on Video Soul. 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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all of those acts you just mention needed a large white fan base for recoed labels and mtv to care about. the black community outspends the white community on thingd such as records, but yet we are still being marginalized. mtv wants to be the white savior of black culture and black music, rick james calling them a racist network was not a good look. | |
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Is that right? Then how come most of the biggest seling acts are white? Did more black people buy Beatles, Elvis, U2, Pink Floyd, Eagles, & Garth Brooks records than white people? Do a lot black people hunt down Grateful Dead, Pearl Jam, & Bob Dylan bootleg concerts or attend a lot of hair metal concerts? If black people spent more on records, why didn't Brick, The Blackbyrds, The Temptations, or Stephanie Mills go diamond like Vanilla Ice and Journey? How did New Kids On The Block outsell New Edition? NKOTB was so popular they had bedsheets, dolls, lamps, and a cartoon show. New Edition didn't have any of that. Funny that Michael Jackson had bigger audiences after Thriller than when he was with The Jacksons and had a more black audience. Those records did not sell that much. The Gamble & Huff albums are obscure to the mainstream public and even Michael Jackson fans, but many people all over the world know Thriller & Bad. 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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Actually, they do use drum machines, on some of their songs. Not all of them. They might use a percussion over the drum machine parts, but a drum machine is used nonetheless. | |
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I know, right ? | |
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Which songs are u speaking of? The 1st cd? FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent. | |
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All of their albums. They use live drums on some of their songs (with maybe a percussion lay on top of the drum machine). Examples, "Nobody Does It Better Than Me", "Call Me", "You Don't Have To Cry", "Single To Mingle" "Are You Free", etc.... There's others, I don't feel like going into a list right now lol !!!! But, yeah alot of their music (not all of it), on their cd's aren't drum machine free. | |
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Kool. I need 2 pay better attention. I know the 1st cd was probably mostly drum machine. FOOLS multiply when WISE Men & Women are silent. | |
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The first album had like three songs where they used lived drums. The rest was most definitely drum machine. With Mint, I find they use live drums on their big ballad jams. You Don't Have To Cry No More, was an exception. Which is one of the things that always frustrated me with them. I always felt songs like, "Nobody Does It Better" would've sounded so much better with live drums. | |
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barry white as a single act shits on all of them. by the 1977 came around he already sold over 100 million records. boys to men records sale shits on new kids sales records. fats dominio was outselling elvis for four years straight, then sam cooke gave him a run for his money, | |
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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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Blacks and rock didn't get separated.
There's diversity among all people. So, the same way some whites like jazz over country (or vice versa), some blacks like rap over rock.
Elements of rock turn up in r&b and rap to this day. I've seen rock elements in the sets of rap artists' SNL appearances on numerous occasions, for example. And, I rarely watch SNL or pay attention to rappers. So, there must be a significant number of rappers still using rock on occasion.
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@MickeyDolenz is giving White music execs, promoters and radio/media execs a little too much credit and I think White supremacy (not zieg heil Hitler...but just the notion of White is always best) has much to do with why you could hear Lynard Skynard and ZZ Top on those precious AOR stations in the 1970s and 1980s but not Mother's Finest who played in the same vien. Ego. "We are inherently better than you"....simply put. Funkadelic (not Parliament) could have been played alongside Zappa and the Grateful Dead or the Tubes or any number of bands. But "Ego....We are the alpha and omega of Rock." got in the way, not record sales or failure of Blacks to support the music.
Living Colour's latest three albums are better than their first three excellent albums.....but nobody knows about that....but we know all about Rage vs. the Machine even though they broke up many years ago. 24-7 Spyz was years ahead of Limp Bizquit....but those guys made huge cash blending rap with rock....This whole notion of "Our music.....is superior to your music.....Black people don't make rock music....etc." Its bigger than simple economics, its about philosophy, outlook and who has the right to express themselves in the rock artform. Rock = Americana and the contemporary view of Americana and music only includes Blacks as "rappers", not even creators and sustainers of true hip hop but "rappers" only. I think what has happened to hip hop can answer the question of what happened to Blacks in rock, blues, and jazz.
Prince and Lenny made brief appearances on "white oriented" rock stations in the 1980s and 1990s respectively, but you would be hard pressed to find KROQ in L.A. playing the same Prince tracks they played in the 1980s.....and KLOS in LA playing the Lenny tracks they played in the 1990s even though they play the same Beastie Boys, U2, Def Leppard and other bands they played in the 1990s and 1980s. | |
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Preach on mrgone777! You are on point. I've always told people that the early Funkadelic records (like "Free Your Mind") is right up there with Sabbath's "Paranoid" and Jimi's "Are You Experienced". And Mother's Finest back in the day has opened for bands like Van Halen to Molly Hatchet. But in the 70's and 80's it's always been the thing of "too black, too strong". Living Colour received some airplay on r&b radio with "What's Your Favorite Color" , but it was edited to keep the JB style funk in and the aggressive rock guitar part out. | |
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Absolutely agree! And isn't this always how it goes anyway? In 30 years Black people will probably no longer be associated with Hip-hop/Rap and Soul music and those genres will be performed by mainly White artists. | |
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You ain't lyin. Last rap concert I went to I could probably count on one hand all the Black people there. Including me. By the way, they were moshing. Who does that at a rap show? | |
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spyzfan1 love your handle cuz i love 24-7 Spyz....i've been down with them and Living Colour from the jump in 1988 and 1989! i just came across a great piece posted from a BRC member on this topic and the power to define. when you think about it....Blacks never really separated from rock...the definition of what rock is moved on us! So when I hear PE especially their first two joints I hear rock....hip hop yeah...but rock...harder than Run DMC or the Beasties which were also rock. When I hear EWF I hear what white folks call "prog rock" and a little jazz-rock fusion kinda like Return to Forever or Lenny White. We listened to the Isleys (Go For Your Guns is a rock classic if you ask me) and we bumped Funkadelic (acid, hard funky rock and a little metal). its all about the power to label and define which is form of privilege that comes from dominance.....if I can find the link to the BRC article I will post it! | |
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Oh yes! If you do find that link please post it. "Go For Your Guns" was the first Isley's joint I ever heard and owned. Even though it was funky and sexy, it still hit hard like something Jimi or Zep would have thrown at you. You don't hear guitar solos like that anymore in mainstream R&B today. | |
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Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016
Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder | |
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