|
Rap production
|
View this Thread in Original format
| Looney4Clooney |
| Why is it so bad ? I don't want to say it is a race thing because I know it probably has more to do with poverty and these people not having access to the tools. Just weird how the black community was for decades the leaders in new music but where the hell did all that talent go. There must be some reason like the creating of projects and the lack of 2 parent families. I love watching those youtube videos. Here is ma beat!!! |
|
|
| Beatflux |
They have crappy synth taste. I turn on the radio and I hear the JP-80 whatever. They are behind the trance genre, what does that tell you?
Plus, all of the good samples have been taken. So yeah. |
|
|
| J.L. |
To be fair, there are quite a lot of bad EDM producers.
But, lack of access to tools and lack of education is probably why. |
|
|
| DJ Robby Rox |
Bigot lol.
The worst is when I gotta go on youtube to find an FL tut and theres 50,000 ty ones made by 50,000 rap artists who think they're the second coming to biggies smalls.
They can't even get straight to the tut either. Its always about giving a shot out to their "beat co-manager", freestyle/intro their tut, then AS they're actually giving the tut turn up rap music louder than the person speaking.
I don't think the problem is money honestly I think its something else but I'll keep my mouth shut as its not my thread. |
|
|
| DJ Robby Rox |
| quote: | Originally posted by J.L.
To be fair, there are quite a lot of bad EDM producers.
But, lack of access to tools and lack of education is probably why. |
What "tools". If they're making music they have a computer and can just steal the tools like most people do. They can also learn to produce the same way, on their computer using google/youtube like most people. |
|
|
| sako487 |
| People pay decent money for beats, one guy I knew gets at least 70-100 per track |
|
|
| kevin shawn |
I watched a hip hop prod video of a guy going over some studio equipment and he pointed at a synth on a rack and said, "Man, I don't know what this is but it's got mad bass yo!" The guy was really good on the keys though and good with an MPC.
Another quote from that video that I still use today....If the drums ain't tight..... ain't right okay my nigga? |
|
|
| Looney4Clooney |
| so any ideas ? The stuff I heard had great production. non of this 808 909 synthetic quantized bull . The synths were really current ie stuff you would hear in noisia. I know it was underground stuff which makes me wonder if it is from france. Really cool stuff. |
|
|
| 112268 |
| the problem was cracks and weed during 80s and 90s ing up their kids. |
|
|
| Looney4Clooney |
| must be something along those lines. Kinda sad. Well at least they have sports still. |
|
|
| kitphillips |
Could just be because there hasn't been a lot of social change in america since the 1970s or so. I mean, there were still race riots and going on in the 90s, still a lot of disenfranchisement, still a lot of overtly ed up to fight about if you were young.
These days, there's less social change and more ingrained poverty. But at the same time, the poverty isn't there because there's an overt government policy banning blacks from law schools, its just a low lying constant discrimination.
I see it as less of a black issue and more of an American issue tbh, but obviously I don't live in america so meh. |
|
|
| 112268 |
| its crack. simple. give it a generation or two and they will rule our white rhythmless asses again. |
|
|
|
|