Where would Black culture be without Atlanta?

BlackPrint

The Mayor
Joined
Nov 19, 2016
Messages
3,705
Reputation
3,080
Daps
30,262
Reppin
NYC
jay'z asking for bounce as in the feeling that he knows from timberlands work within southern hiphop





boom bap is funky in funky drummer way, not in a bounce way






heavily gogo influenced which leads me back to this thread I made:whew:

Dc GoGo music, a very influential strand of Funk and the deliverer of "Bounce" to modern music




Im talking bounce in the same way aframs use funky and swing. You wouldn't know because you're an outsider to this feel:mjgrin:




more like im 11-0 with you:usure:







I said he used southern hiphop sonics which is obviously drenched with bounce feeling. I said nothing of BOUNCE the genre. Timbo prog the sample to a bounce feel from it's original state:mjgrin:









I didn't make anything up. There is an actual bounce feel in all of those songs. That's why one can identify southern hiphop sonically when they hear it and start "bouncing" to it:sas2:

So basically you have no response to being absolutely bodied for the 100th time so you retreated to “it’s a feeling bro!!” When before
it was a style that he “wasn’t rappin like that when he first started with jaz o”. But then it’s a bandwagon at the same time as a spiritual feeling.Gotchu brobro. That’s 0-12
A lot of them old head nikkas did have a southern twang. Herc sound just like any other nikka up there wit southern roots. Every nikka in the south don't sound like Plies and Juvenile. Y'all young boys so out of y'all element right now.
What?? Lmaooo nikka that shyt sound like Funk music if anything. Yeah you don't know shyt.


Parroting whatever big brother says is cool and all but you still got a tube of sunscreen in your glove compartment
 

IllmaticDelta

Veteran
Joined
Jun 22, 2014
Messages
28,877
Reputation
9,501
Daps
81,276
You know ATCQ had horns in their songs too.:lolbron:

ATCQ had jazz horns

Down Bottom is straight HBCU marching band from the south

Album: Ryde Or Die Vol. 1

Label: Ruff Ryders, Interscope

Swizz Beatz: “We wanted to embrace the South at that time. I was always into collaborating, that’s why on ‘World War III’ I had Scarface and Snoop. We had divisions of bikers in other cities and we needed to do stuff so all of the divisions could represent and show Ruff Ryders wasn’t just some New York shyt. I was making music to fit that.

“When I made ‘Down Bottom’ I was like, ‘Who can we get on here to switch it up?’ At the time, Juvenile and Cash Money was popping. I was like, ‘Yo, get Juvey on this track. That’ll stamp us over there and it’ll stamp them over here.’ I remember being in Sony studios making the beat from the sound module and it was like, ‘This shyt is crazy! Let me flip it.’ The rest is history.


Swizz Beatz Tells All: The Stories Behind His Classic Records (Part 1)Ruff Ryders f/ Drag-On & Juvenile “Down Bottom” (1999)
 

Pit Bull

GATOR
Joined
Oct 27, 2016
Messages
3,847
Reputation
-355
Daps
14,994
Reppin
Crenshaw Mafia
So basically you have no response to being absolutely bodied for the 100th time so you retreated to “it’s a feeling bro!!” When before
it was a style that he “wasn’t rappin like that when he first started with jaz o”. But then it’s a bandwagon at the same time as a spiritual feeling.Gotchu brobro. That’s 0-12




Parroting whatever big brother says is cool and all but you still got a tube of sunscreen in your glove compartment
Naw I'm just not a cultureless vulture like you. If I'm a white boy then I know more about your culture than you. That's gotta be a bad look. I'm the white boy but you the one mad at nikkas for not letting white boys call them a nikka.
 

IllmaticDelta

Veteran
Joined
Jun 22, 2014
Messages
28,877
Reputation
9,501
Daps
81,276
So basically you have no response to being absolutely bodied for the 100th time so you retreated to “it’s a feeling bro!!” When before
it was a style that he “wasn’t rappin like that when he first started with jaz o”. But then it’s a bandwagon at the same time as a spiritual feeling.Gotchu brobro. That’s 0-12


bounce is a feeling, that I already explained akin to soul, funky and swing in Afram musical venacular

jays old rappid flow with jayz is clearly different from the jigga what, midwest/southern flow

and


tenor.gif



Parroting whatever big brother says is cool and all but you still got a tube of sunscreen in your glove compartment

giphy.gif
 

Ineedmoney504

SOHH ICEY...WE EATIN
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
44,677
Reputation
3,479
Daps
99,226
Reppin
SOHH ICEY N.O.
New Orleans got to be the goat for black culture

:wow: So much soul and traditions and style we been giving y’all for over 100 years.


Atl nikkaz is our Lil bros(more like our Lil sisters)
 

BlackPrint

The Mayor
Joined
Nov 19, 2016
Messages
3,705
Reputation
3,080
Daps
30,262
Reppin
NYC
bounce is a feeling, that I already explained akin to soul, funky and swing in Afram musical venacular

jays old rappid flow with jayz is clearly different from the jigga what, midwest/southern flow

and


tenor.gif





giphy.gif

Nah. Tell it right,

After changing your position with each burial, you eventually threw your hands up and sad fucit it’s something you feel in your soul!! And then started posting videos from 10 years later with different producers and random 90s Egyptian bellydabcing songs that I told you about in the first place.

My work is done here, but ima dikkhead ass Brooklyn nikka so here’s a funnier pic than the one you posted

]
 

Astroslik

Veteran
Joined
Aug 3, 2013
Messages
28,277
Reputation
2,816
Daps
84,910
Name 3 things yall add to the culture and TBH Chicago probably been the biggest influencer of black culture in recent years. They the reason like 8 out every 10 young brehs you see on the street has dreads
As someone from Chicago,I gotta give Florida brehs credit for the dread wave
 

Sankofa Alwayz

#FBADOS #B1 #D(M)V #KnowThyself #WaveGod
Joined
Feb 22, 2017
Messages
13,288
Reputation
3,595
Daps
34,335
Reppin
Pretty Girl County, MD
In the 90s, Boston was just as influential as NYC. A lot of rappers in NYC took cues from how heads in Boston were dressing, to the point that dudes in Boston and NYC basically dress unlike black people in any other city. Boston was just as much of a hub for that crisp, athletic dope boy swag you saw in NYC. Right now, West Indians and Cape Verdeans are deep in the Bean, but it wasn't always like that. But even those cultures still, as you yourself noted, assimilated and followed the African American swag in the city. Before Run DMC was talking about Adidas, Boston heads were the first ones rocking that. New Balance started up here. There were gang fights between Boston and surrounding areas over Reebok and Adidas. All I'm saying is Boston was definitely a pioneer in fashion in the same way NYC was, and certainly more than Philly or Jersey. :mjgrin:

:heh::heh:
 

Remo

Pro
Joined
Nov 18, 2016
Messages
421
Reputation
260
Daps
1,794
You new york dudes stay with south on yall mind. Cant really say ive seen the obsession going the other way.
 

get these nets

Veteran
Joined
Jul 8, 2017
Messages
53,108
Reputation
14,319
Daps
200,163
Reppin
Above the fray.
New Balance was founded in Boston. Boston brehs were rocking them before they became hip. Why do you think they do so many collaborations with the Cambridge-based streetwear shop Concepts? :patrice:
You have any pictures of Ed. OG...........or Benzino's crew rocking new bals back in the day?

early photos of boston hip hop acts i've seen show them as rundmc clones


almighty rso in 1987
A-290631-1495078900-1088.jpeg.jpg

hqdefault.jpg


tds mob

hqdefault.jpg
 
Last edited:
Joined
Oct 22, 2017
Messages
34,006
Reputation
2,083
Daps
166,204
You have any pictures of Ed. OG...........or Benzino's crew rocking new bals back in the day?

early photos of boston hip hop acts i've seen show them as rundmc clones


almighty rso in 1987
A-290631-1495078900-1088.jpeg.jpg

hqdefault.jpg


tds mob

hqdefault.jpg

Boston and Adidas used to go together like milk and cookies. That started in Boston.
 
Top