Reply #60 posted 03/18/15 9:10am
Scorp |
Cinny said:
vainandy said:
The flip side of that will probably be though, more songs with no samples at all and be totally stripped down to nothing but a slow cheap sounding beat.
That is exactly the current sound. You have a new crop of young beatmakers that can't even find any good samples, and they sure as hell can't afford to license them anymore.
samples are running out |
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Reply #61 posted 03/18/15 9:18am
Cinny |
Scorp said:
Cinny said:
That is exactly the current sound. You have a new crop of young beatmakers that can't even find any good samples, and they sure as hell can't afford to license them anymore.
samples are running out
Everyone may have already sampled every family reunion barbeque hit, but there is always a way to flip something a new way, or world music that went untouched.
I truly believe there is a new young crop of people who just don't know their hits, or the break-beats that are the basis of hip hop. (The ones that do still work in the underground).
I also believe the headache of licensing and giving away one's royalties (even the rapper who wrote entire new lyrics) has made labels change how they feel about releasing albums in this style. |
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Reply #62 posted 03/18/15 9:20am
Cinny |
There are hip hop artists that went on to create new funk without sampling:
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Reply #63 posted 03/18/15 9:35am
SoulAlive |
Chancellor said:
SoulAlive said: Nona is so full of shit.She apparently wants enough drug money to last her for a lifetime.
She admitted to using drugs? [Edited 3/18/15 2:53am] :nod: she talked about it in a Essence magazine interview. |
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Reply #64 posted 03/18/15 9:55am
Scorp |
Cinny said:
Scorp said:
samples are running out
Everyone may have already sampled every family reunion barbeque hit, but there is always a way to flip something a new way, or world music that went untouched.
I truly believe there is a new young crop of people who just don't know their hits, or the break-beats that are the basis of hip hop. (The ones that do still work in the underground).
I also believe the headache of licensing and giving away one's royalties (even the rapper who wrote entire new lyrics) has made labels change how they feel about releasing albums in this style.
good points |
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