Da hell is wrong wit kanye

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Cats get slept on just for being in the southern genre.

Drumma got heat too.
 
Shawty Redd the most underrated honestly. He definitely created the trap sound people recognize.
 
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4 or 5 of those years he was piggybacking off the Drum Squad sound tho.
Same drums same synths even copied their signature string creshendo.

I think he also benefited from dropping some hot tracks on Gucci's mixtapes. he had some hood anthems.
Like I said, Im not saying he is not awesome. Just not top 5 to me because of that.
 
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Yep no slight to Zay but it took awhile for me to like his beats

Also no Southside, Metro, Shawty Redd or Lex Luger mentions either :stoneface:

And only 1 Madlib mention in here...

Came in her to mention lex.

Nobody is ****** with him.
 
Came in her to mention lex.

Nobody is ****** with him.

You know what i really liked bout Lex is that he created the sound alot of trap & after ppl ran off with that he made different sounding beats

Also Cardo, Clams Casino & Cool N Dre are among some of my favs too
 
While we're speaking on underrated Southern producers, trap music would've never been made without Mannie Fresh. He fathered that style. This was 1996.


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I would credit 3 6 mafia and other underground memphis producers tbh

Low key three six mafia producers mainly dj Paul were djs. Most of their tracks were movie samples and mash ups making mix tapes. (Which were different back then and three six tapes were different).

I say Shawty Redd because his approach to hip hop defined an era in music.

He was a Lil John understudy who I would say defined what we know as krunk music.

The shawty redd sound is the basis for a lot of modern trap.

Three six was dark horror core rap. I think the sounds are different.

A lot of what asap does sounds like it's in 3 6 legacy.
 
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Nah bruh. Dj Paul and Juicy were DJs but they were also producers.
They had samples but also alot of original stuff because they would use their lyrics from old songs and make new beats with them.
But I credit them more with helping create and mold the "Memphis" sound. Basically music you can buck to.
And we have to credit them with the whole getting rowdy in the club thing too.

But even then sampling isnt a dis qualifier in production. if that' s the case we can eliminate Kanye right?
 
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Nah bruh. Dj Paul and Juicy were DJs but they were also producers.
They had samples but also alot of original stuff because they would use their lyrics from old songs and make new beats with them.
But I credit them more with helping create and mold the "Memphis" sound. Basically music you can buck to.
And we have to credit them with the whole getting rowdy in the club thing too.

But even then sampling isnt a dis qualifier in production. if that' s the case we can eliminate Kanye right?
If sampling disqualifies then a lot of the greatest hiphop producers are disqualified
 
Yeah thats true. Thats why you cant disqualify samplers. It's a part of hip hop.
Clyde Stubblefield should really be a billionare
 
Zay the type of producer to crank out 10 beats in 2 hours while checking his email and talking on the phone.

Kanye need a month to listen to a track and tweak the drums.

i'd be satisfied with Ye doing what he's done for his past few projects and just taking Zaytoven stems and mixing them with an unfinished song from 4 years ago and adding some obscure soul sample
 
While we're speaking on underrated Southern producers, trap music would've never been made without Mannie Fresh. He fathered that style. This was 1996.


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i remember one day i was randomly listening to 400 degree the song high as hell astonished that there were rolling hi hats in that ***
 
Keep the BG flowing steady, loving the turn this thread has taken. 
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