T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2856.1 | | HEDRON::DAVEB | anti-EMM! anti-EMM! I hate expanded memory!- Dorothy | Wed Nov 17 1993 05:14 | 8 |
| I haven't heard much rap that attracts me (any?). To my ears it's not really
music. Since I'm getting along in years a part of me says "hey dude, your
parents hated hendrix etc., maybe it's the same thing" ie: lack of cultural
context to appreciate it.
I pass no judgement.
dbii
|
2856.2 | twin 15" woofers, 2000 watts... | NAVY5::SDANDREA | WhereverYouGoThereYouAre | Wed Nov 17 1993 07:11 | 8 |
| The bad news about rap: I can't stomach it....I just can't. I don't
really knock it, but it's not for me.
The good news about rap: If you want a free sample anytime, just stand
in a parking lot of a fast food place on a Friday night, your free sample
will drive by with the bass and drums at deafening decibels....
8)
|
2856.3 | | QRYCHE::STARR | Beauty and Sadness | Wed Nov 17 1993 07:28 | 10 |
| Like all musical genres, the problem with that rap is that for every good
group, there are 19 other knock-offs that really bite (pop-metal had this
same problem - for every Bon Jovi there were 19 bands that were lame
wanna-be's).
Absolutely, there is some good rap. Check out Arrested Development (the Sly
and the Family Stone of the 90's?), Rage Against The Machine, early
Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five, Public Enemy, or Run DMC.
alan
|
2856.4 | Wouldnt buy him a 2nd blues record; 1's all ya need really | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Down on that shreddin' flo' | Wed Nov 17 1993 07:34 | 32 |
| re: .1 DAVEB
Amen!
"Wrote a song about it... like to play it for ya":
When I first moved into my house, my neighbor's husband had just died
and I sorta became a big-brother to his oldest son. He used to take
care of my cats whenever I'd go out of town and as a reward I would
take him to the mall and let him pick out a CD.
One time he picked out a rap record and I said "no way are any of my
hard-earned dollars going to go to any of that crap" and I made him
pick out another record.
We waited in this looonnnng checkout line and that gave me time to
think. And what I thought was "Shit, that's almost exactly what
my father said about the music I liked and I had sworn that I would
be different when I was an adult."
So JUST as the cashier was about to take care of us, I said "Jay, we're
going back and getting that rap record". He actually didn't WANT to
get it because he didn't want to wait in line all over again but I MADE
him get it, obviously not understanding anything about what was going
on.
Interesting thing is that thru his appreciation of Rap I was able to
find some stuff that I liked. For example, I *LOVE* to listen to
Tone Loc. He just has a very cool style of delivery and his lyrics are
often pretty funny/interesting little stories.
db
|
2856.5 | | TECRUS::ROST | Fretting less, enjoying it more | Wed Nov 17 1993 07:51 | 20 |
| I don't listen to a lot of rap, but I'll tune in some on the radio
(when my wife isn't around to complain). Makes good background music
because it's very repetitive, just short one and two bar grooves with
some guy yapping over it.
Rap was no big shock for me to hear after spending years of listening
to Jamaican "toasters" on numerous reggae "dub" recordings. The dub
masters were way ahead of the rappers, back in the 70s they were taking
the master tapes to hit reggae songs, remixing them with lots of use of
echo and dropping instruments in and out of the mix, while some DJ
toasted over the top of it. So when I first started hearing rap it
sounded cool.
The latest fad is sampling from jazz records. I heard one just last
night that sampled the main riff from "Cantaloupe Island", and there's
at least one experiment with having rappers play over *live* jazz
tracks that I've heard about. If this trend continues, maybe the Last
Poets and Gil Scott-Heron will make a comeback 8^) 8^)
Brian
|
2856.6 | thrash gansta rap | NEMAIL::CARROLLJ | aka Dr. Emilio Lazardo | Wed Nov 17 1993 08:13 | 12 |
|
another recent trend - mixing rap and rock ( ok, ok, not so recent,
don't flame me, man :-) )
check out the soundtrack to _Judgement Night_ - lots of big name rap
stars banding together with big name alternative groups.
a trend I would like to see continue, I might add . . .
Jim "Just another white suburban Body Count fan" Carroll
|
2856.7 | teenage wasteland, part II | RICKS::CALCAGNI | Will work for '59 Les Paul | Wed Nov 17 1993 08:28 | 19 |
| I think the first two replies in here hit it pretty well; to appreciate
rap, you need to have context. The analogy with your parents and
Hendrix is pretty close; it's fairly easy to see how all that 60's
guitar stuff would sound like noise to someone older.
That said, I've personally found it pretty hard to develop the context
for rap music. I played that Arrested Development CD for a long time;
it's okay, I don't really dislike it, but it doesn't excite me much
either. I've heard some Cypress Hill stuff that I liked, mostly
because it had a real edge to it; listening to that stuff seems to
give you a real taste of the madness of life in the inner city. But
again, that's not an experience I find myself craving very often.
Also, as a parent (and getting used to thinking like one), I notice
that kids will find things to embrace that you don't like or can't
understand no matter how open minded you think you are. It's part
of developing their independence.
/rick
|
2856.8 | Hmmm... | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Down on that shreddin' flo' | Wed Nov 17 1993 08:32 | 10 |
| > I think the first two replies in here hit it pretty well; to appreciate
> rap, you need to have context. The analogy with your parents and
> Hendrix is pretty close; it's fairly easy to see how all that 60's
> guitar stuff would sound like noise to someone older.
The same kind of things are also why people with an R&B orientation
see newer kinds of music like rap, Progressive, Shred, etc. as being
less than musical.
db
|
2856.9 | | GOOROO::DCLARK | I'm OK, you're dysfunctional | Wed Nov 17 1993 08:34 | 4 |
| pretty mature viewpoint, Rick :-)
I wonder what it is about white suburban kids that makes them
think living in an urban war zone is so attractive.
|
2856.10 | 8( | NAVY5::SDANDREA | WhereverYouGoThereYouAre | Wed Nov 17 1993 08:43 | 7 |
| >>I wonder what it is about white suburban kids that makes them
>>think living in an urban war zone is so attractive.
They've never been there. When I was young, I thought it would be
really neat to fire an M-16 at an enemy......
|
2856.11 | whoops, there it is! | EZ2GET::STEWART | Life is a contact sport! | Wed Nov 17 1993 08:51 | 13 |
|
Acquiring a couple of teen-age step-daughters brought me into contact
with rap. It grows on you after a while. And yeah, there's a voice in
the back of my head that makes that Hendrix analogy someone posted
earlier. Even if you can't personally relate to the lyrics, you have
to keep in mind that they contain some truth for somebody somewhere --
and since rap is everywhere now, there must be some universality to the
contents. If you want to understand the time/space continuum your
teen-agers live in, you can't just dismiss it...
Plus, it's fun to pipe through the PA!
|
2856.12 | go figure..... | NAVY5::SDANDREA | WhereverYouGoThereYouAre | Wed Nov 17 1993 08:58 | 5 |
| I don't get it...the variety of teenagers' taste. My daughters are 16
and 17 and they love Steve Miller, Bad Company, Zeppelin, Eagles,
Doobies, Lenny Kravitz (sp), Pearl Jam, etc, but no rap......
|
2856.13 | beaming.... | NAVY5::SDANDREA | WhereverYouGoThereYouAre | Wed Nov 17 1993 09:00 | 7 |
| re: -1
Oh yeah, and my oldest (Alan's flame) is a huge SRV/Eric Clapton fan.
It's starting to make sense now; she grew up hearing her dad play all
that stuff and it became her definition of real music......what a girl!
:-}
|
2856.14 | lock em in a closet till they're 18, eh? | RICKS::CALCAGNI | Will work for '59 Les Paul | Wed Nov 17 1993 09:03 | 3 |
| But Steve, that's because you never let them out of the house!
:-)
|
2856.15 | | TAMRC::LAURENT | Hal Laurent @ COP | Wed Nov 17 1993 09:05 | 16 |
| re: .12
> I don't get it...the variety of teenagers' taste. My daughters are 16
> and 17 and they love Steve Miller, Bad Company, Zeppelin, Eagles,
> Doobies, Lenny Kravitz (sp), Pearl Jam, etc, but no rap......
That's *this* month, of course! :-)
It's interesting watching them change. My SO's 15 year old daughter
has recently outgrown 98-Rock and now listens to WHFS (the local
alternative station). She seems to be slowly losing her taste for metal.
Oh, and like Steve's daughters, she seems to like a wide variety of
stuff. She knows some of the old stuff better than people my age (40),
but she likes new stuff, too. No rap, though (at least not yet).
-Hal
|
2856.16 | what would *you* do? | NAVY5::SDANDREA | WhereverYouGoThereYouAre | Wed Nov 17 1993 09:07 | 5 |
| >>But Steve, that's because you never let them out of the house!
with Aqualung lurking about, it was best for them.....
:)
|
2856.17 | | HEDRON::DAVEB | anti-EMM! anti-EMM! I hate expanded memory!- Dorothy | Wed Nov 17 1993 09:33 | 17 |
| re: .9
I can imagine my father thinking "I wonder what it is about never taking a
bath, getting stoned on illicit substances, and hanging out in parks, not
getting haircuts, all that 'free sex' etc.that is so attractive to these
white suburban kids"
What it is is different, we (my generation) were in full rebellion against
the 40's and 50's and the hippee movement was born. Kids today are in full
rebellion against the 60's 70's and 80's and rap is one method of cultural
expression that they've embraced.
what I said in .1 can be applied to any form of music.
there is no explaining people's tastes
dbii
|
2856.18 | rap = crap | FRETZ::HEISER | dweller on the threshold | Wed Nov 17 1993 09:44 | 1 |
|
|
2856.19 | | TECRUS::ROST | Fretting less, enjoying it more | Wed Nov 17 1993 10:22 | 9 |
| >The same kind of things are also why people with an R&B orientation
>see newer kinds of music like rap, Progressive, Shred, etc. as being
>less than musical.
Aw, give it a break, will you? Just because the ELP reunion was more
like "Love Beach, Vol. 2" is no reason to keep bringing this up in
every note!
Bennie Bouncer
|
2856.20 | | GOES11::HOUSE | You sick little monkey! | Wed Nov 17 1993 10:33 | 33 |
| Since we're on the topic. I agree with Alan, there is rap that I like,
and rap that I don't like. As a general statement, I find most rap to
be kind of irritating and choose not to listen to it much. In the real
early days of rap ('82-'83), I actually liked some of the stuff by
people like the Fat Boys, Run DMC. I like some of LL Cool J's stuff,
some of Tone Loc's stuff, some of Arrested Development's stuff.
If it's got a cool groove, I can probably get into it, but a lot of the
words many rap artists use are offensive to me. There seems to be an
extreme level of profanity, arrogance, sexism, and racism in a lot of
the rap that's out there today and I don't like any of those things.
Yeah, I know that the black people in these groups have a valid reason
for feeling the way they do about whites, discrimination is a very real
and ugly thing, but I don't think it helps the (already bad) situation
to write inflamatory songs about it.
Plus some of the samples currently used get on my nerves 'cause they
toss the sample in too much (like that analog synth thing Cypress Hill
uses on that popular song of theirs, strikes me like a dentist's
drill).
Bottom line: I prefer other stuff.
re: Steve-dawg
> with Aqualung lurking about, it was best for them.....
You mean Alanlung...
;^)
gh
|
2856.21 | | NEST::TGRILLO | I Don't Brake For Cats...SPLAT!! | Wed Nov 17 1993 10:42 | 1 |
| To me RAP is not music. Its poetry with an annoying drum machine.
|
2856.22 | | RICKS::CALCAGNI | Will work for '59 Les Paul | Wed Nov 17 1993 10:50 | 2 |
| Hey TGrillo, I respect your view on this (even though I don't
necessarily agree).
|
2856.23 | | GOES11::HOUSE | You sick little monkey! | Wed Nov 17 1993 10:53 | 3 |
| re: .22
Group hug!
|
2856.24 | I'm your son, pop! | NEMAIL::CARROLLJ | aka Dr. Emilio Lazardo | Wed Nov 17 1993 11:02 | 20 |
|
Right. That's it. Stop that singing *right* *now*. There'll be no
singing in *my* castle!
People said I was daft to build a castle on a swamp, but I built
one anyways!
And it sank into the swamp. So I built another one!
And *it* sank into the swamp. So I built *another* one.
And it caught fire, fell over and sank into the swamp.
But the *fourth* *one* *stayed* *up*! And that's what you'll
inherit, daughter!
No more group hugs - you all hate each other, remember???? This *is*
the 90's, after all . . .
King Jim
|
2856.25 | "What, the curtains?" | SSDEVO::LAMBERT | I made life easy just by laughing | Wed Nov 17 1993 14:05 | 0 |
2856.26 | Young Farts at Play, Perhaps... | NWD002::TUTAK_PE | Rickenbackerhacker | Wed Nov 17 1993 16:39 | 16 |
|
Rap to me is not music, but as someone said already, more like poetry.
It actually reminds me of these stereotypical beatnik scenes you'd see
in movies where some bespectacled dude who looks like Ed 'Big Daddy' Roth
is up there under a 5-watt bulb reading Allen Ginsberg while someone
sucking on the short end of a Camel pounds away on a pair of bongos.
Although I don't heard any rap I like, I'm not going to knock it.
I can't get around it, either, even though I've tried. But when I think
about someone like Captain Beefheart (who I like a lot), who
just wrote poetry and slung it on top of some pretty manic stuff by the
Magic Band, well, maybe there ain't much difference after all.
Peter
|
2856.27 | Rap, rhythm, and rhyme <> music | MSBCS::ASHFORTH | | Wed Nov 17 1993 19:49 | 18 |
| Like, deja vu all over again, man...
We had a discussion one or two years back on rap, and I also made the
strong point that it is far more akin to poetry than to music. The
elements of rhythm and intricate internal rhyming are emphasized to an
*excruciating* degree, but rhythm alone does not music make. Where's
the melodic line and chord structure? (Even the typically simple
progressions usually found in "da blooz" <g>)
Still and all, I have heard rap stuff that I like. I find that it's
difficult to separate attitudes toward the *style* from attitudes
toward the typical *subjects* addressed in rap. (The latter were really
the main topic of the last notes go-round on rap that I know of.)
Sorry- was I supposed to be bashing? If so, my apologies, I'll try to
think of something to bash later to make up for it...
Bob
|
2856.28 | | USPMLO::DESROCHERS | | Mon Nov 22 1993 07:48 | 12 |
|
Just got back from Cozumel - an island in Mexico. Lots of rap
in Spanish. It was kinda funny to hear that inner-city bravado
attitude in Spanish.
Prince has some decent rap in his newer music. When he raps,
he puts a melody to it too. Stevie Wonder's another who has
added just a bit of rap. He can't help but be melodic, even
rapping.
Tom
|
2856.29 | | SOLVIT::SNORAT::OLOUGHLIN | The fun begins at 80! | Thu Dec 02 1993 09:55 | 12 |
|
Stereotyped on purpose.
White suburban guy: "Rap music? I don't get it."
Black urban guy: "You're not suppose to!"
[Light bulb clicks on over head.] Ooooooooh, okay! Later.
Rick. _Works_for_me_
|
2856.30 | | BLASTA::PELKEY | | Thu Dec 02 1993 13:33 | 4 |
|
well rick, that about sums it up!
It's not fair!
|
2856.31 | new & improved! | FRETZ::HEISER | no I'm really very, very shy | Fri Dec 03 1993 09:43 | 144 |
| /* rap.c - random rap lyrics generator */
#include <stdio.h>
#include <time.h>
#include <ctype.h>
/* The phrase arrays must be the same size */
static char *phrase1[] =
{
"Move it",
"Get up",
"Pump it up",
"Get down",
"Shake it",
"Pump the jam",
"In the city streets",
"You'll be humpin'",
"'Til the night is over",
"Shake your meat",
"I'm bustin loose",
"With disco heat"
};
static char *phrase2[] =
{
" to triple beat ",
" get body heat ",
" feel the beat ",
" get around ",
" the joint is jumpin' ",
" feet are stompin' ",
" in the city streets ",
" you'll be humpin' ",
" 'til the night is over ",
" shake your meat ",
" I'm bustin loose ",
" with disco heat "
};
int nphrases = sizeof( phrase1 ) / sizeof( phrase1[0] );
/* The auth arrays must be the same size */
static char *auth1[] =
{
"Bad",
"Bad",
"Bad",
"Bad",
"Bad",
"Bad",
"Bad",
};
static char *auth2[] =
{
"Ice",
"Vanilla",
"Chocolate",
"Prince",
"News",
"Boy",
"Mother",
};
static char *auth3[] =
{
"Starr",
"Blickstein",
"Rost",
"Stewart",
"House",
"Desrochers",
"Buckley",
};
int nauthors = sizeof( auth1 ) / sizeof( auth1[0] );
int authors[3],chor[2][2];
static char auth_string[80];
char *title(),*author();
void verse();
main()
{
int i,j,k,getpid();
time_t now;
/* Generate random seed */
now = time(&now) / rand();
srand(getpid() + (int)((now >> 16) + now + time(&now)));
/* Print out song */
for( k = 0; k < 5; ++k )
{
/* Load chor with random numbers */
for (i = 0; i < 2; i++)
{
for (j = 0; j < 2; j++)
chor[i][j] = rand() % nphrases;
if( chor[i][0] == chor[i][1] )
chor[i][1] = (chor[i][1] + 1) % nphrases;
}
if( chor[0][0] == chor[1][0] )
chor[1][0] = (chor[1][0] + 1) % nphrases;
if( chor[0][1] == chor[1][1] )
chor[1][1] = (chor[1][1] + 1) % nphrases;
/* Get title and author */
if( k == 0 )
{
for (i = 0; i < 3; i++)
authors[i] = rand() % nauthors;
(void) printf("\n\"%s\", by %s\n",title(),author());
}
/* Print a verse */
verse();
}
(void) printf("\n-----\n");
}
char *title()
{
return( phrase1[chor[0][0]] );
}
char *author()
{
char s[80];
sprintf( auth_string, "%s %s %s",
auth1[authors[0]],
auth2[authors[1]],
auth3[authors[2]] );
return( auth_string );
}
void verse()
{
printf("\n%s, %s\n",phrase1[chor[0][0]],phrase2[chor[0][1]]);
printf( "%s, %s\n",phrase1[chor[0][0]],phrase2[chor[0][1]]);
printf( "%s, %s\n",phrase1[chor[1][0]],phrase2[chor[1][1]]);
}
|
2856.32 | besides, shouldn't rap have 4 lines/verse without repeats? | GOES11::HOUSE | You sick little monkey! | Fri Dec 03 1993 10:17 | 3 |
| I'm not so sure that's an "improvement"... How'd we rate anyway?
Bad Prince House (from one of the first things it generated for me)
|
2856.33 | Rap Nostalgia Already? | TECRUS::ROST | Fuzzbox Voodoo | Tue Jan 18 1994 07:42 | 17 |
| You guys are gonna love this...
I was listening to WZBC out of Boston College the other night and they
were playing a "classic rap" show hosted by two white kids. They stuck
almost exclusively to stuff that was from 1985 or earlier! Even
apologized for playing a 1989 track by saying it was in the "old"
style. Sheesh, I forgot how much scratching used to go on before
everybody got the $$ for samplers. 8^) 8^)
Anyway, I noticed that the old tracks were real simplistic productions.
A lot like early rock and roll where the recordings were really raw.
It's quite evident that there has been a lot of growth, both in the
content and in the (recorded) presentation of rap over the years.
Like any style, there is garbage and there is good stuff.
MC Crapper
|
2856.34 | re: .33 | RANGER::WEBER | | Tue Jan 18 1994 10:09 | 12 |
| I agree that rap has gotten more sophisticated. Of the 18 or so tunes I
recognized on Billboard's top 100, my favorite was "Rebirth of Slick"
by Digable Planets. I even liked "Gangsta B***h." This is not just because
I've gotten used to the stuff, since old rap tunes still make me ill.
I have even found myself liking some country tunes (my band did
"Passionate Kisses" and "He Thinks he'll keep her" last year.) Musical
styles keep evolving, sometimes for the worse and sometimes for the
better. I always like to tune in every once in awhile to forms I'm
convinced I hate, just to see if I'm missing anything
Danny W.
|