I always like LL Cool J and Tupac, but that's about it.
I will say Kendrick Lamar has a very different sound and is innovative in the genre.
I will say Kendrick Lamar has a very different sound and is innovative in the genre.
[/B]I do agree with NorthStar that it is a sort of lifestyle for the lowest common denominators of society.
I agree completely. I have never heard a single hip-hop or rap song I have liked.
With Spotify it is easy to audition recent and current popular hits. I have not been able to find one new or recent Top 40 type song I have liked. (Most of the "Top 40" these days is not identifiable to me as rock or pop or adult contemporary as I understand those genres, but, rather, is hip-hop-ish and rap-ish sounding stuff.)
I think maybe the last "new" song I liked on the radio was Human, by Christina Perri, from 2013.
I feel your comment has been made in extremely poor taste.
I had time to refine my response while I wiped the spluttered corn flakes from my screen+1
I was going to say exactly this only much less well written and intelligible
I feel your comment has been made in extremely poor taste.
I lack the standing around here to be as honest as you with senior members
Rhetorical question: Is it the depiction of sexual content, violence and/or consumption of drugs that causes us to reject hip-hop and “despise” it, or is it that we prefer our depictions of sexual content, violence and/or consumption of drugs to be more aligned to our own cultural sensibilities in the form of Hollywood films, television shows like Narcos and Game of Thrones, graphic novels and comics, video games and rock, blues and pop music?
Perhaps it’s less that we find hip-hop offensive for the reasons we say we do, and simply for the fact it’s a form of socially-defined cultural reality that a culture other than the one we primarily identify with chooses to express itself through in musical form.
Be well, gents,
853guy
Jack, when we visited you you played something which I think you said was "deep house," but which I thought was relatively relaxed electronica or maybe chill techno of some kind. Do you remember? What was that that you played for us?
I normally do not like house of any kind, but I sort of liked that track you played for us.
For me this is not music, it's a lifestyle. And the types that are violent in their lyrics and gestures and inciting people to follow those trends, I am all against.
If it's cool like Bob Marley, Reggae music approach, I like it.
Is this the sort of thing you mean?
Trip hop is a collision of dub Reggae and hip hop pioneered by Massive Attack in Bristol, uk.
As the port serving the carribean and americas, Bristol was a hub of the slave trade. One of the leftovers from that time is a vibrant afro Caribbean community and a westward outlook
They began as a group of friends building a sound system to play their favourite tunes on, equal parts Reggae, electro (early hip hop from new york) and punk. This graduated to holding parties, establishing a full on sound system and a record label
(Wild Bunch)
The style is synonymous with big dub bass lines, hip hop rhythms, ethereal melodies and intelligent, twisted lyrics delivered by vocals that flow deftly around and accentuate the intensely musical production. All delivered with ocd-levels levels of attention to detail.
These guys started out as dj's, remember
Next one i was going to play is an incredible collaboration between Kruder and Dorfmeister and Bomb the Bass, with lyrics inspired / derived from the writing of William Burroughs.
However 'bug powder dust' Kruder and Dorfmeister/ bomb the bass has been removed so instead, and coming from the same place of exquisite beauty, here's Mysterion by another product of Bristol, Portishead
Finally something from MothEquals; Wobegone.
This one really gets under your skin
Jack, when we visited you you played something which I think you said was "deep house," but which I thought was relatively relaxed electronica or maybe chill techno of some kind. Do you remember? What was that that you played for us?
I normally do not like house of any kind, but I sort of liked that track you played for us.
Jack, when we visited you you played something which I think you said was "deep house," but which I thought was relatively relaxed electronica or maybe chill techno of some kind. Do you remember? What was that that you played for us?
I normally do not like house of any kind, but I sort of liked that track you played for us.