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{"id":5441,"date":"2016-05-11T08:00:41","date_gmt":"2016-05-11T08:00:41","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/urban-plains.com\/2016\/?p=5441"},"modified":"2017-02-20T19:52:36","modified_gmt":"2017-02-21T01:52:36","slug":"hip-hop-from-ideation-to-creation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/urban-plains.com\/2016\/innovation\/hip-hop-from-ideation-to-creation\/","title":{"rendered":"Hip-Hop: From Ideation to Creation"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"dozzie\"<\/p>\n

The audio clips throughout this piece demonstrate the various elements in producer Jordan Doswell\u2019s beat, \u201cRobin Hood.\u201d Click on each track to hear how they sound on their own and layered with others.<\/i><\/p>\n

From streets to studios to bedrooms, hip-hop\u2019s sonic traditions allow its producers today to let the beat build<\/span><\/h5>\n

Words by Cole Norum<\/em>\u00a0<\/i><\/p>\n

Computers and Comforters<\/h6>\n

The origin story behind every rap song you hear today begins in exactly the same manner you came to be reading this sentence: by logging into a computer and opening an application. <\/span><\/p>\n

But things change quickly from there. The different recording applications, different ideologies, different approaches, different mindsets and sounds sought. Whether or not to use samples. Whether the drums are loud and looped or off-grid. A rap song is a million choices condensed into three minutes. As Jordan Doswell, a 22-year-old producer based in Minneapolis explains, producing is the solo pursuit of a collective experience. <\/span>
\n<\/span>
\n<\/span>“When it comes to the music-making process for me, as far as the beat goes\u2014I almost a hundred percent start off with the main melody or the main sound, whatever that is.\u201d From there, he builds the loop. Often, it\u2019s a combination of 808 drums and snares. Then a kick. \u201cAnd then from there, it’s really just the feeling. I really want it to be one of those things that you just feel. Like it’s\u2014you’re feeling the same feeling I felt when I made it, when you’re listening to it. You know what I mean?\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n

He speaks in a staccato stream-of-consciousness. Begins on one topic, explores it, then cuts short\u2014not deleting, mind you, but adding a new layer with new ideas. It’s the vernacular of a producer: discursive, exploratory. Initially messy. And yet, the end result is something new, significant. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

Doswell\u2019s newest beat, \u201cRobin Hood,\u201d is three-and-a-half minutes of a woozy ARP synthesizer, bobbing and never sinking. It\u2019s an electric piano but grittier, like the cord is being chewed on. Static cheers from a crowd ring throughout. They bump to the <\/span>whooomp<\/span><\/i> of his 808 drums. A pair of rattling snares hit right at nose level. Hi-hats chime open and close; congas rumble somewhere in the distance. He pulled each element from his software, recording their progressions on an electronic keyboard connected to his MacBook. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n[aesop_video align=”center” src=”youtube” id=”9zxLUYVyFU0″ loop=”off” autoplay=”off” controls=”on” viewstart=”on” viewend=”on”]\n

It\u2019s like having an entire studio on his desk in his upstairs bedroom. It\u2019s also not uncommon in today\u2019s hip-hop production culture: small spaces can make huge sounds, in both volume and relevance. The advent of affordable computers has given rise to recording and editing suites, or Digital Audio Workshops (DAW). Programs like Avid Pro Tools, Ableton Live, Apple Logic Pro X – Music Production and FL Studio 12 offer comprehensive instruments that give producers command over their vision with an immediacy and convenience only dreamt of in the days of boom boxes on summer stoops. <\/span><\/p>\n

\u201cJust A Snare and a 808\u201d<\/h6>\n

When Lil’ Wayne dropped his cataclysmic Tha Carter III <\/span><\/i>in 2008, my gum-stick iPod burned with syrupy drawls of the self-anointed \u201cbest rapper alive.\u201d The album opened with orchestral strings on “3 Peat.” Those gave way to the nose-punch snares of “A Milli.” Then came the sung-moaned euphemisms of “Lollipop.” Somewhere in all of that, Wayne “Let The Beat Build.” It sounds how it reads: a quirky lyrical interaction with a looping beat. <\/span><\/p>\n[soundcloud url=”https:\/\/api.soundcloud.com\/tracks\/260528363″ params=”color=ff5500&inverse=false&auto_play=false&show_user=true” width=”100%” height=”20″ iframe=”true” \/]\n[soundcloud url=”https:\/\/api.soundcloud.com\/tracks\/260528640″ params=”color=ff5500&inverse=false&auto_play=false&show_user=true” width=”100%” height=”20″ iframe=”true” \/]\n[soundcloud url=”https:\/\/api.soundcloud.com\/tracks\/260528694″ params=”color=ff5500&inverse=false&auto_play=false&show_user=true” width=”100%” height=”20″ iframe=”true” \/]\n[soundcloud url=”https:\/\/api.soundcloud.com\/tracks\/260528809″ params=”color=ff5500&inverse=false&auto_play=false&show_user=true” width=”100%” height=”20″ iframe=”true” \/]\n[soundcloud url=”https:\/\/api.soundcloud.com\/tracks\/260528861″ params=”color=ff5500&inverse=false&auto_play=false&show_user=true” width=”100%” height=”20″ iframe=”true” \/]\nWayne dedicated an entire song on his magnum opus album (which sold a million copies in its first week) to a meta reference of the beat over which he raps about the beat under him. Pause. So when I set out to explore the culture of production, of unearthing hip-hop’s sonic skeleton, I figured the song about a beat was the perfect piece to build with. <\/span>\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

But maybe it isn\u2019t. “When I first heard about the song and saw the title, I thought there would be more to it. I just thought it would be layers and layers and layers and layers,” says Andrew Atwood, an Austin-based producer whose website and YouTube series Beat Breakdown offer in-depth production tutorials and critiques to aspiring and established producers alike. “I just had this grandiose idea of what this song would be. And then I finally heard it and, like, I like the beat a lot. But it really is pretty straightforward.” <\/span>
\n<\/span>
\n<\/span>The Kanye West and Deezle co-production samples the composition and vocal recording of Eddie Kendricks\u2019 1972 track, “Day by Day.” West duplicated the vocals and offset them, creating an echo that repeats ad infinitum over punchy piano chords. Hi-hats and snares arrive incrementally. Then the drums. <\/span>
\n<\/span>
\n<\/span>The result is a progression from harmonious piano and catchy vocals to a speaker-rattling piece that plays host to Wayne playfully engaging the sounds themselves, “And the beat goes: Bom Bi-Bom Bi-Bom \/ Bom Bi-Boom Bi-Boom \u2026 Huh, c’mon, just a snare and a 808 \/ Weezy Baby on the mic, D.O.A. \/ Ok, I’d like to thank Kanye.” And it carries on like this for three more minutes. A beat, building. And building. <\/span><\/p>\n

But after countless replays, the song reveals a rather ho-hum structure with about as many thrills as sounds. “It’s kind of a good example of what you can do with a little,” Atwood says. “But at the same time, it’s not the best example of an intricate beat.” <\/span><\/p>\n

Perhaps it\u2019s best suited as an introduction. Or maybe a cautionary tale of what happens when a beat doesn\u2019t yet bump and risks causing hypnosis when it carries on for minutes with the same sounds it introduces early on. Either way, to further understand hip-hop\u2019s simultaneous capacities for organic melodies and sample-based productions, we need to look back. And look ahead.<\/span><\/p>\n

How We Got Here<\/h6>\n

But first, a few words about the art of sampling and T.S. Eliot. Sampling is the digital recording and manipulation of sound. It originally developed as a means of efficiency for deejays. It became an art form. Joseph G. Schloss writes in his 2004 book \u201cMaking Beats: The Art of Sample-Based Hip-Hop\u201d that sampling was born in the late 70s or early 80s to deejays who sought increased control over their turntables while reducing their workload. In 1986, an early sampler, called the SP-12, allowed them to record and store their own live drum sounds in order to use them in their performances. This offered a preferable alternative to the pre-recorded, synthesized drums they were used to. \u00a0<\/span>
\n<\/span>
\n<\/span>Soon enough, deejays found they could record the sounds of their favorite drummers. Then they learned they could sample entire melodies of other artists. But the real revolution: digital sampling allowed early producers to utilize drum patterns <\/span>and<\/span><\/i> other melodies simultaneously. Not just one or the other. Suddenly, they could sequence entire sections of a performance from other artists\u2019 work. What began as a method of developing fuller drum sounds led to a pillar of modern rap: incorporating past artists\u2019 music in current projects for future listens. Basically, it was musical time travel.<\/span>
\n<\/span><\/p>\n[soundcloud url=”https:\/\/api.soundcloud.com\/tracks\/260528922″ params=”color=ff5500&inverse=false&auto_play=false&show_user=true” width=”100%” height=”20″ iframe=”true” \/]\n[soundcloud url=”https:\/\/api.soundcloud.com\/tracks\/260528971″ params=”color=ff5500&inverse=false&auto_play=false&show_user=true” width=”100%” height=”20″ iframe=”true” \/]\n[soundcloud url=”https:\/\/api.soundcloud.com\/tracks\/260529021″ params=”color=ff5500&inverse=false&auto_play=false&show_user=true” width=”100%” height=”20″ iframe=”true” \/]\nIf good artists borrow, and great artists steal, then hip-hop producers are somewhere in between. They aggregate. Sort. Rummage through physical and virtual crates of records for a creative spark which, until that moment, had existed unbeknownst to them. \u201cI take a lot of my inspiration from the sample, because there\u2019s so much out there and so much stuff you\u2019ve never heard and so many textures and sounds,\u201d Atwood says. \u201cFrom a creative energy point of view, when you find the right sample it just gets things happening and all of a sudden, you know exactly where you’re going.”<\/p>\n

Writing in his seminal 1921 essay \u201cTradition and the Individual Talent,\u201d T.S. Eliot believed an artist\u2019s creativity should not be relegated to his novelty and uniqueness. Rather, he should be considered by how he works to obtain the traditions before him. He can do so in part through what Eliot described as the \u201chistorical sense,\u201d an awareness of prior creators; \u201ca perception, not only of the pastness of the past, but of its presence.\u201d In simpler words, a producer understands not only what his samples existed as in their initial state, but also how their past sounds will work in a future piece.<\/p>\n

\u201cYou\u2019re just wondering how in the world they hear this stuff in the first place. And it\u2019s funny because a lot of the times, if you go and listen to the initial sample, you\u2019ll be like, \u2018This is weird,\u2019\u201d Atwood says of sampling\u2019s transformative nature. \u201cAnd then all of a sudden, you\u2019ll hear the moment [the producer] heard and be like, \u2018Ohhh! But how they got there in the first place, and how they turn it into what they did? Yeah, I\u2019m still in awe.\u201d<\/p>\n

Back To The Future<\/h6>\n

Well-before cementing himself as a multifaceted business man, Andre Romelle Young produced songs on the West Coast. A lot of songs. For a lot of people. You\u2019ve heard them\u2014\u201cFuck Tha Police,\u201d \u201cNuthin\u2019 but a \u2018G\u2019 Thang,\u201d \u201cCalifornia Love.\u201d You\u2019ve seen his headphones with the lowercase \u201cb.\u201d So you probably know him by his other name\u2014Dr. Dre. <\/span>
\n<\/span>
\n<\/span>In 1999, he released <\/span>2001<\/span><\/i>. It was his first studio album in seven years, a return to the attention of fans and media that he felt had been doubting his abilities, both as a rapper and producer. Heralded for its production, it\u2019s a work of technical proficiency and studio mastery, which saw Dre eschew a sample-heavy approach and instead seek to capture the artistry of in-studio musicians. <\/span><\/p>\n

\u201c<\/span>2001<\/span><\/i> was one of the first albums I really listened to for production,\u201d Atwood says, who is 24. \u201cIt’s one of the more technically precise and complicated albums, with how many people Dre had in the studio and how many musicians he had laying down parts and people singing.\u201d <\/span><\/p>\n

It was a level of command over an entire album\u2019s development. From abstraction to mastering, Dr. Dre had demonstrated precise, meticulous and complex production was not only possible for hip-hop, but accepted. That studio work was sexy. Moreover, it became the foundation for today\u2019s producers being held in the same artistic regard as rappers. \u201cFor 1999, when it came out, [2001<\/em>] was the crown jewel of being intricate and doing things perfectly,\u201d Atwood says. \u201cAnd then fast forward ten years, \u2018Power\u2019 is up there with that precision.”<\/span>
\n<\/span>
\n<\/span>Actually, it\u2019s 11 years. <\/span><\/p>\n

In 2010, Kanye West rocketed from the depths of a self-inflicted exile with \u201cPower,\u201d an acid-rock-charged single from his own magnum opus, <\/span>My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy<\/span><\/i>. In tune with the vast majority of each of his eight studio albums, West had a steady and constant presence during the song\u2019s production\u2014he once claimed he spent 5,000 hours composing the song, a testament to his, say, \u201cconfidence\u201d and whatever else you want to call it. <\/span>
\n<\/span>
\n<\/span>\u201cPower\u201d is just that, and far from pure. A driving bass and stampeding drums course around African tribal chants, all of which cease before King Crimson\u2019s sleep-deprived howl, \u201c21<\/span>st<\/span> century schizoid man.\u201d The song is objectively exhausting. Exhilarating. It is four manic minutes and 52 seconds of airtime for West\u2019s snarl, a nasally huff that dispenses lamentations and celebrations over the at-times cacophonic beat. It is bold. It is unrelenting. It is a god-damned master class in hip-hop production. Eleven years prior, Dr. Dre redefined his sound away from samples. Kanye reintroduced himself to us by doing the opposite.<\/span><\/p>\n

Its two most aurally apparent samples are \u201cAfromerica\u201d by Continent Number 6 and the aforementioned 1969 King Crimson single, \u201c21<\/span>st<\/span> Century Schizoid Man.\u201d West sampled multiple elements from both songs and utilized the drum pattern from Cold Grits\u2019 1969 soul-disco instrumental, \u201cIt\u2019s Your Thing.\u201d His \u201cPower\u201d is, by about every measure, the antithesis to \u201cLet The Beat Build.\u201d It rarely plays out the same progression over multiple lines. Many parts are barely audible but not wasted, an exercise in precise sensory bombardment, as composed as it is anarchic. A paradox befitting of the Grammy-grabber publicly concerned with music\u2019s integrity.<\/span><\/p>\n

\u201cPower\u201d is a paragon of production for Atwood, himself a producer who works with samples. He estimates the song contains a bare minimum of 50 or 60 elements. \u201cThat\u2019s kind of my go-to when I think about starting with one thing because it starts one way, with just a sample,\u201d he says. \u201cAnd then throughout the whole track there is stuff you\u2019ve never heard.\u201d <\/span><\/p>\n

Though a pioneer in sample-based production, West is not the only one. Nor is he infallible. West\u2019s partial use of the 2001 song \u201cAvril 14<\/span>th<\/span>\u201d by electronic artist Aphex Twin (the artistic pseudonym of Richard D. James) for his 2010 piece \u201cBlame Game\u201d came under scrutiny four years later, when James told Pitchfork about the issues surrounding West\u2019s sampling efforts. \u201cIs it a sample? I know that he tried to fucking rip me off and claim that he\u2019d written it, and they tried to get away with not paying. They\u2019d sampled it really badly and time-stretched it and there was loads of artifacts.<\/span> And they totally didn’t even say \u2018hello\u2019 or \u2018thanks,\u2019 they just replied with, \u2018It’s not yours, it’s ours, and we’re not even asking you any more.\u2019\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n

Legal pitfalls surrounding sampling abound beyond West. From Vanilla Ice\u2019s egregiously un-nuanced use of Queen\u2019s \u201cUnder Pressure\u201d for his escalator to relevance \u201cIce Ice Baby,\u201d to the lyrically-and-sonically controversial \u201cBlurred Lines,\u201d over which the family of Marvin Gaye\u2019s brought a lawsuit against the song\u2019s producers and performers Pharrell Williams and Robin Thicke. The family claimed the pair ripped off Gaye\u2019s \u201cGot To Give It Up.\u201d In March of 2015, a jury ruled in favor of the family, awarding them both damages and a portion of the song\u2019s profits for a total of $7.3 million.<\/span><\/p>\n[soundcloud url=”https:\/\/api.soundcloud.com\/tracks\/260529058″ params=”color=ff5500&inverse=false&auto_play=false&show_user=true” width=”100%” height=”20″ iframe=”true” \/]\n

A Different Kind of Instrument<\/h6>\n

Producers\u2019 sounds are stored behind the screens on which their progressions are pitched up or down; pulled left or right; cut, looped, compressed, stretched, distorted and reverberated. It\u2019s a staggered, synthetic symphony. All accomplished with a click of a button. Today\u2019s rap songs are by and large made on computers. From equalizers to reverberators and all the multiband dynamics in between, Digital Audio Workshops allow producers a wealth of precision that borders on omnipotent.<\/p>\n

Hit-churning producers, like Atlanta\u2019s Mike Will Made It and MetroBoomin\u2019, are products of self-instruction in this era\u2019s age of access. A keyboard-clad takeover has been underway for some time, fueled by the possibility of a beat born from a bedroom making its way onto a studio album. Younger guys are hearing different sounds more often, and with their easier access to computers and software, are making new songs with greater ease and frequency. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

And yet the hip-hop catalogue grows one song at a time, born of one producer at a time. He proceeds at his own pace, making mistakes on his own accord. It is a sort of luxury, underscored by the very fact that projects can be scrapped and re-started, over and over again without affecting anyone else. \u201cThe thing that I think draws a lot of people to producing hip-hop and making beats is that it\u2019s one hundred percent in your control,\u201d Atwood says. \u201cYou don\u2019t have to deal with anyone else, wait for anything. You just do it.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n

Just Crazy Shit You Have to Sit There and Vibe to<\/h6>\n[soundcloud url=”https:\/\/api.soundcloud.com\/tracks\/260532915″ params=”color=ff5500&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false” width=”100%” height=”166″ iframe=”true” \/]\n\u201cOne effect of [production\u2019s shift from live to studio recording] is hip-hop\u2019s celebration, almost unique in African American music, of the solitary genius. Hip-hop producers hold an image of themselves that recalls nothing so much as European art composers: the isolated artist working to develop his or her music.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cNo poet, no artist of any art, has his complete meaning alone. His significance, his appreciation is the appreciation of his relation to the dead poets and artists.\u201d<\/p>\n

Forward-thinking, weird, out-there-stuff. It\u2019s just this crazy shit you have to sit there and vibe to.\u201d <\/span>
\n<\/span><\/p>\n

-Parting words from Schloss, Eliot and Atwood<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n

Ending here, I\u2019m once more reminded of my middle-school mp3s. It was 2008, the zenith of Lil Wayne\u2019s rat-a-tat braggadocio. Beats that pulsed with 808s. It was two years after James Dewitt Yancey died at 32 from the blood disease thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. <\/span><\/p>\n

Before Kanye <\/span>loved<\/span><\/i> Kanye, before Metro boomed or Mike Will made anything, J. Dilla made <\/span>Donuts<\/span><\/i>. Recorded in a home studio and in his hospital bed, Dilla\u2019s <\/span>Donuts<\/span><\/i> was released just three days before his death. The 31-track album only furthered the legacy of the Detroit producer, who has posthumously gained an immense and unwavering following. He worked with The Roots and Common; with Busta Rhymes and De La Soul; with The Pharcyde and A Tribe Called Quest. <\/span><\/p>\n

Dilla is the dead poet. The man in the studio with those producers who figure themselves to be alone. His final studio album\u2019s 31 tracks are something to behold. They come from many places\u201490 samples in all. They are brisk\u2014only one song on <\/span>Donuts<\/span><\/i> cracks two minutes in length. They have innocuous names like \u201cStop,\u201d \u201cHi.\u201d and \u201cBye.\u201d Others with names like \u201cGobstopper,\u201d \u201cAnti-American Graffiti\u201d and \u201cTime: The Donut of the Heart.\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

They sample The Isley Brothers, The Jackson 5 and Frank Zappa. One track, \u201cThe Diff\u2019rence,\u201d samples two songs by Kool & the Gang. Nas, Lupe Fiasco, Joey Bada$$ and Mac Miller have all sampled Dilla\u2019s <\/span>Donuts.<\/span><\/i><\/p>\n

These songs are glimpses into the mind of a man who himself glimpsed and glimpsed. They breathe with a life that didn\u2019t stop at 32. A life that understood those before it and hoped for those after it. Dilla was a solitary man in a transient studio, the products of which are tracks that transcend time. They are not all immediately accessible. Some sounds are not tremendously catchy. Strings of seconds are off-kilter; skewed, slanted and skittish. But others, man. Others are calm and gentle and doughy-warm.<\/p>\n

I still don\u2019t know much about him. More than I used to, not as much as I will. But I know <\/span>Donuts<\/span><\/i> is 36 seconds shy of 44 minutes. I know it begins with a departure, \u201cDonuts(Outro)\u201d and ends with a greeting, \u201cDonuts(Intro).\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n

For <\/span>Donuts<\/span><\/i> finale, Dilla sampled Motherlode\u2019s 1969 \u201cWhen I Die,\u201d pulling the vocals from the line \u201cWhen I die I hope to be a better man than you\u2019d thought I\u2019d be.\u201d All that you can really make out, what with the plodding drums and vinyl scratches, is a meandering \u201cBeeeeeeee.\u201d A loop of existence. Of and between different eras.<\/span><\/p>\n

So, find some headphones and some free time. Trust in its eternity. Let it build, and vibe to that crazy shit. <\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

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