Quote
Jermaine Dupri wants us to give credit where credit is due. On the 25th anniversary of So So Def, Dupri spoke with Rolling Stone about his label?s staple sound and his apparent invention of our beloved trap R&B sub-genre.
?I posted something the other day about the Monica record ?Everytime tha Beat Drop? with Dem Franchize Boyz,? Dupri began. ?None of her records ? like ?Angel of Mine? and ?The Boy is Mine? and all of these songs was in the pattern of this old R&B, what people thought R&B was, but Monica was an artist to me that was dripping with the sauce of Atlanta. And everything she did was hood, shit, go in the hood-club and partying and loving this hood type of music. So I took this chance to try to make her a record that felt like where she would go partying, felt like the things that she actually loved, right?
?And this happened in 2006. I posted two days ago, I asked a question: Who else from Atlanta was making R&B music like this? The sounds of that R&B that you hear now, I mean people don?t give me credit for it, but I was ahead of the curve. I won?t say I created it, but I guess I should, because I did."
Pressed to say whether he was the catalyst behind the modern fusion of rap and R&B that we commonly hear today, Dupri doubled down:
"In terms of fusing R&B with that trap type of mentality we found. What you hear from like, the Weekend and 6lack and PartyNextDoor, those type of records weren?t being created when I created Xscape, when I did the Monica record in 2006. Even in 2006, nobody was making R&B records like that.?
While the party-ready club knock of Monica's "Everytime tha Beat Drop" might sound like a far cry from the moody, alternative sounds with which The Weeknd and 6LACK rose to prominence, Jermaine Dupri is right in that contemporary R&B is heavily influenced by hip-hop and trap music.
Next time you hear Bryson Tiller's "Don't," just remember that Jermaine Dupri expects his credit. Remember, he won't say he created it, but he should, because he did.
Jokes aside, though, we cannot deny Dupri's influence on hip-hop culture. Are he and Monica a part of R&B-rap history? Absolutely. Is he missing a few crucial threads?Drake, for one?to complete his narrative? Also, yes.
v
Everyone is really truly to claim this sound
Really we can back to to Lex Luger in the beginning of the decade
Does Lex Luger even still produce?
Quote from: Lazarus on November 05, 2018, 03:57:18 PM
Does Lex Luger even still produce?
I think he's faded ccccc
But he was pulling that sound with Rick Ross and everyone in like 2011
Yeah I remember him being the go to producer around that time
JD is so cocky
I don?t like him
ACKKKKKK!!!!!
Ackkkkk!!!
Ackkkkk point out the lie
Monica?s damn POWER
Was Mon the first R&B singer to do the snap music trend?
Come through Mo!
Oh wait Nivea did OK in 2004 though
Quote from: 12 Nights of Molesting Flopped on November 05, 2018, 04:40:50 PM
Was Mon the first R&B singer to do the snap music trend?
Come through Mo!
Trap and Snap aren?t the same tho
They need to be in the studio now making Trap&B classics
Quote from: Lazarus on November 05, 2018, 03:53:05 PM
Quote
Jermaine Dupri wants us to give credit where credit is due. On the 25th anniversary of So So Def, Dupri spoke with Rolling Stone about his label?s staple sound and his apparent invention of our beloved trap R&B sub-genre.
?I posted something the other day about the Monica record ?Everytime tha Beat Drop? with Dem Franchize Boyz,? Dupri began. ?None of her records ? like ?Angel of Mine? and ?The Boy is Mine? and all of these songs was in the pattern of this old R&B, what people thought R&B was, but Monica was an artist to me that was dripping with the sauce of Atlanta. And everything she did was hood, shit, go in the hood-club and partying and loving this hood type of music. So I took this chance to try to make her a record that felt like where she would go partying, felt like the things that she actually loved, right?
?And this happened in 2006. I posted two days ago, I asked a question: Who else from Atlanta was making R&B music like this? The sounds of that R&B that you hear now, I mean people don?t give me credit for it, but I was ahead of the curve. I won?t say I created it, but I guess I should, because I did."
Pressed to say whether he was the catalyst behind the modern fusion of rap and R&B that we commonly hear today, Dupri doubled down:
"In terms of fusing R&B with that trap type of mentality we found. What you hear from like, the Weekend and 6lack and PartyNextDoor, those type of records weren?t being created when I created Xscape, when I did the Monica record in 2006. Even in 2006, nobody was making R&B records like that.?
While the party-ready club knock of Monica's "Everytime tha Beat Drop" might sound like a far cry from the moody, alternative sounds with which The Weeknd and 6LACK rose to prominence, Jermaine Dupri is right in that contemporary R&B is heavily influenced by hip-hop and trap music.
Next time you hear Bryson Tiller's "Don't," just remember that Jermaine Dupri expects his credit. Remember, he won't say he created it, but he should, because he did.
Jokes aside, though, we cannot deny Dupri's influence on hip-hop culture. Are he and Monica a part of R&B-rap history? Absolutely. Is he missing a few crucial threads?Drake, for one?to complete his narrative? Also, yes.
Ackkkk
Beatdrop actually transcends the snap movement
It still sounds so fresh and current :plzstop:
Quote from: 12 Nights of Molesting Flopped on November 05, 2018, 04:42:42 PM
Oh wait Nivea did OK in 2004 though
Ok was consider a Crunk&B record since Lil' Jon did it.
I?m gojgn tf awwwyyy
Snap music was more so ie T-Pain's Buy You A Drink.
Bitch!!!
I said ooo!
All the lvys in the club grab a duuuuude
Then you work it ril SLOW you can dew ehhht
(https://i.gifer.com/21VF.gif)
Omffff
(https://i.gifer.com/21VF.gif)
jesus
why did u post this
now hes gonna keep stanning
AheadOfHerTimeIca
:gorlonfire:
She really rode the FUCK outta this knock
:plzstop:
These church coos and riffs
Omg :plzstop:
It?s time for a #BeatDropChallenge
Cherish - Do it , says Hello! Lol
Quote from: Lazarus on November 05, 2018, 04:56:00 PM
Snap music was more so ie T-Pain's Buy You A Drink.
I thought it was like Franchise Boyz White Tee
or Lean Wit It Rock Wit It
Quote from: Mrd0ndada on November 05, 2018, 05:02:08 PM
Cherish - Do it , says Hello! Lol
That?s SNAP R&B fag HELLO
Ain?t nothing TRAP sounding about that mess
Lolz
Zmsmakwk
Ch...
I would give it to Ciara's Oh before Everytime The Beat Drop.
Quote from: 12 Nights of Molesting Flopped on November 05, 2018, 05:03:22 PM
Quote from: Lazarus on November 05, 2018, 04:56:00 PM
Snap music was more so ie T-Pain's Buy You A Drink.
I thought it was like Franchise Boyz White Tee
or Lean Wit It Rock Wit It
Lean Wit It Rock Wit It is consider snap music as well and since Monica's Everytime The Beat Drops samples that song it'll be considered more Snap than Trap, imo.
Quote from: Tonkaman on November 05, 2018, 05:05:28 PM
Zmsmakwk
Ch...
I would give it to Ciara's Oh before Everytime The Beat Drop.
Now that I may give you
I thought of that too :plzstop:
Quote from: Young on November 05, 2018, 05:04:39 PM
Quote from: Mrd0ndada on November 05, 2018, 05:02:08 PM
Cherish - Do it , says Hello! Lol
That?s SNAP R&B fag HELLO
Ain?t nothing TRAP sounding about that mess
Lolz
So was Everytime the beat drops!!! Lol. It?s ok
Bitch!!!
All she need is to do is get on another TRAP record and make it soulful
Make it fun
Make it catchy
And make the lyrics more meaningful
The gorls will live
Quote from: Mrd0ndada on November 05, 2018, 05:07:46 PM
Quote from: Young on November 05, 2018, 05:04:39 PM
Quote from: Mrd0ndada on November 05, 2018, 05:02:08 PM
Cherish - Do it , says Hello! Lol
That?s SNAP R&B fag HELLO
Ain?t nothing TRAP sounding about that mess
Lolz
So was Everytime the beat drops!!! Lol. It?s ok
It came out in the snap era
But this is definitely a Trap record
It started on a Trap mixtape
The records made it come out
But this definitely trensended the snap movement and sound
It?s actually still very current sounding
This is what Wiki says about trap
?It is typified by double or triple-time sub-divided hi-hats,[3] heavy, sub-bass layered kick drums from the Roland TR-808 drum machine, layered synthesizers and an overall dark, ominous or bleak atmosphere and lyrical content.[?
I mean to be fair...he helped
Quote from: L0NZ. on November 05, 2018, 05:14:10 PM
This is what Wiki says about trap
?It is typified by double or triple-time sub-divided hi-hats,[3] heavy, sub-bass layered kick drums from the Roland TR-808 drum machine, layered synthesizers and an overall dark, ominous or bleak atmosphere and lyrical content.[?
Welp
There we go
ETTBD is that
Not Cherish?s record; way more poppy and upbeat
Ciara?s Oh gives this tbh too
Ccccccvvc
I?d give it to Ciara ?Oh? it actually was more of a trap sound, but trap?s been out for years before..
Not sure if I?d wanna take credit for ruining music...
Quote from: Gimmieabeat on November 05, 2018, 05:21:08 PM
I?d give it to Ciara ?Oh? it actually was more of a trap sound, but trap?s been out for years before..
Not sure if I?d wanna take credit for ruining music...
Akakkaskks
He did it when it was a ahead of its time
A trap sound on a soulful R&B record before the ?trap era?
Quote from: Young on November 05, 2018, 05:13:09 PM
Quote from: Mrd0ndada on November 05, 2018, 05:07:46 PM
Quote from: Young on November 05, 2018, 05:04:39 PM
Quote from: Mrd0ndada on November 05, 2018, 05:02:08 PM
Cherish - Do it , says Hello! Lol
That?s SNAP R&B fag HELLO
Ain?t nothing TRAP sounding about that mess
Lolz
So was Everytime the beat drops!!! Lol. It?s ok
It came out in the snap era
But this is definitely a Trap record
It started on a Trap mixtape
The records made it come out
But this definitely trensended the snap movement and sound
It?s actually still very current sounding
We talking abt the same song?
Quote from: Tonkaman on November 05, 2018, 05:05:28 PM
Zmsmakwk
Ch...
I would give it to Ciara's Oh before Everytime The Beat Drop.
wait
That?s true
Quote from: Young on November 05, 2018, 05:22:56 PM
He did it when it was a ahead of its time
A trap sound on a soulful R&B record before the ?trap era?
:omf: :omf: :omf:
JoJo has been working with JD and Bcox
Well start a movement then Mons
Quote from: Mrd0ndada on November 05, 2018, 05:28:32 PM
Quote from: Young on November 05, 2018, 05:13:09 PM
Quote from: Mrd0ndada on November 05, 2018, 05:07:46 PM
Quote from: Young on November 05, 2018, 05:04:39 PM
Quote from: Mrd0ndada on November 05, 2018, 05:02:08 PM
Cherish - Do it , says Hello! Lol
That?s SNAP R&B fag HELLO
Ain?t nothing TRAP sounding about that mess
Lolz
So was Everytime the beat drops!!! Lol. It?s ok
It came out in the snap era
But this is definitely a Trap record
It started on a Trap mixtape
The records made it come out
But this definitely trensended the snap movement and sound
It?s actually still very current sounding
We talking abt the same song?
Yeah bby!
So Monica is a trailblazer of sorts huh
She could really set off the whole lane again tbh
Monica ain?t a trailblazer of shit tbh
Quote from: Young on November 05, 2018, 04:54:55 PM
Quote from: Lazarus on November 05, 2018, 03:53:05 PM
Quote
Jermaine Dupri wants us to give credit where credit is due. On the 25th anniversary of So So Def, Dupri spoke with Rolling Stone about his label?s staple sound and his apparent invention of our beloved trap R&B sub-genre.
?I posted something the other day about the Monica record ?Everytime tha Beat Drop? with Dem Franchize Boyz,? Dupri began. ?None of her records ? like ?Angel of Mine? and ?The Boy is Mine? and all of these songs was in the pattern of this old R&B, what people thought R&B was, but Monica was an artist to me that was dripping with the sauce of Atlanta. And everything she did was hood, shit, go in the hood-club and partying and loving this hood type of music. So I took this chance to try to make her a record that felt like where she would go partying, felt like the things that she actually loved, right?
?And this happened in 2006. I posted two days ago, I asked a question: Who else from Atlanta was making R&B music like this? The sounds of that R&B that you hear now, I mean people don?t give me credit for it, but I was ahead of the curve. I won?t say I created it, but I guess I should, because I did."
Pressed to say whether he was the catalyst behind the modern fusion of rap and R&B that we commonly hear today, Dupri doubled down:
"In terms of fusing R&B with that trap type of mentality we found. What you hear from like, the Weekend and 6lack and PartyNextDoor, those type of records weren?t being created when I created Xscape, when I did the Monica record in 2006. Even in 2006, nobody was making R&B records like that.?
While the party-ready club knock of Monica's "Everytime tha Beat Drop" might sound like a far cry from the moody, alternative sounds with which The Weeknd and 6LACK rose to prominence, Jermaine Dupri is right in that contemporary R&B is heavily influenced by hip-hop and trap music.
Next time you hear Bryson Tiller's "Don't," just remember that Jermaine Dupri expects his credit. Remember, he won't say he created it, but he should, because he did.
Jokes aside, though, we cannot deny Dupri's influence on hip-hop culture. Are he and Monica a part of R&B-rap history? Absolutely. Is he missing a few crucial threads?Drake, for one?to complete his narrative? Also, yes.
Ackkkk
Beatdrop actually transcends the snap movement
It still sounds so fresh and current :plzstop:
:DLIJSFKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKLDMF
Gorl it sounds like somethin straight outta 06/07.
A lean wit it,rock wit it and Pop Lock & Drop it mess.
Nice song but lets not get craz' hun
Quote from: Kaeli. on November 05, 2018, 08:06:25 PM
Quote from: Young on November 05, 2018, 04:54:55 PM
Quote from: Lazarus on November 05, 2018, 03:53:05 PM
Quote
Jermaine Dupri wants us to give credit where credit is due. On the 25th anniversary of So So Def, Dupri spoke with Rolling Stone about his label?s staple sound and his apparent invention of our beloved trap R&B sub-genre.
?I posted something the other day about the Monica record ?Everytime tha Beat Drop? with Dem Franchize Boyz,? Dupri began. ?None of her records ? like ?Angel of Mine? and ?The Boy is Mine? and all of these songs was in the pattern of this old R&B, what people thought R&B was, but Monica was an artist to me that was dripping with the sauce of Atlanta. And everything she did was hood, shit, go in the hood-club and partying and loving this hood type of music. So I took this chance to try to make her a record that felt like where she would go partying, felt like the things that she actually loved, right?
?And this happened in 2006. I posted two days ago, I asked a question: Who else from Atlanta was making R&B music like this? The sounds of that R&B that you hear now, I mean people don?t give me credit for it, but I was ahead of the curve. I won?t say I created it, but I guess I should, because I did."
Pressed to say whether he was the catalyst behind the modern fusion of rap and R&B that we commonly hear today, Dupri doubled down:
"In terms of fusing R&B with that trap type of mentality we found. What you hear from like, the Weekend and 6lack and PartyNextDoor, those type of records weren?t being created when I created Xscape, when I did the Monica record in 2006. Even in 2006, nobody was making R&B records like that.?
While the party-ready club knock of Monica's "Everytime tha Beat Drop" might sound like a far cry from the moody, alternative sounds with which The Weeknd and 6LACK rose to prominence, Jermaine Dupri is right in that contemporary R&B is heavily influenced by hip-hop and trap music.
Next time you hear Bryson Tiller's "Don't," just remember that Jermaine Dupri expects his credit. Remember, he won't say he created it, but he should, because he did.
Jokes aside, though, we cannot deny Dupri's influence on hip-hop culture. Are he and Monica a part of R&B-rap history? Absolutely. Is he missing a few crucial threads?Drake, for one?to complete his narrative? Also, yes.
Ackkkk
Beatdrop actually transcends the snap movement
It still sounds so fresh and current :plzstop:
:DLIJSFKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKKLDMF
Gorl it sounds like somethin straight outta 06/07.
A lean wit it,rock wit it and Pop Lock & Drop it mess.
Nice song but lets not get craz' hun
This is a timeless BOP OWT my luv !
Someone get him
Bask in the glory, Young :woohoo:
Hjnnn young is so out of touch
Love him so much
Quote from: Young on November 05, 2018, 05:00:44 PM
AheadOfHerTimeIca
:gorlonfire:
:plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop:
I mean the girls kinda KNOW who?s the creator of Trap&B but mess girls.
Quote from: BARD? on November 06, 2018, 01:31:40 AM
I mean the girls kinda KNOW who?s the creator of Trap&B but mess girls.
I wouldn't say creator. But yeah one of the 1st girls. Because I remember T.I. making the whole ATL trap thing, a thing. And it has elvoved from him, to Jeezy, Gucci, Waka, Future's, Migos etc.
Quote from: Tonkaman on November 06, 2018, 01:34:35 AM
Quote from: BARD? on November 06, 2018, 01:31:40 AM
I mean the girls kinda KNOW who?s the creator of Trap&B but mess girls.
I wouldn't say creator.
i would lolz
Quote from: BARD? on November 06, 2018, 01:35:29 AM
Quote from: Tonkaman on November 06, 2018, 01:34:35 AM
Quote from: BARD? on November 06, 2018, 01:31:40 AM
I mean the girls kinda KNOW who?s the creator of Trap&B but mess girls.
I wouldn't say creator.
i would lolz
You right.
Akaksks
Where is that Kerry Washington point sticky?
Oh is a masterpiece
Quote from: Lazarus on November 05, 2018, 03:53:05 PM
Quote
?And this happened in 2006. I posted two days ago, I asked a question: Who else from Atlanta was making R&B music like this?
Hum... Nivea? with her song "Okay" in 2005 ...
Quote from: Tonkaman on November 05, 2018, 05:22:27 PM
Quote from: Gimmieabeat on November 05, 2018, 05:21:08 PM
I?d give it to Ciara ?Oh? it actually was more of a trap sound, but trap?s been out for years before..
Not sure if I?d wanna take credit for ruining music...
Akakkaskks
:plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop: