It's May 21, 2024, 08:58:19 AM
i think good too.. but he like took the EXACT beat.. like he did no work at all.. but he rhymes nice over it
dude im baning you mother over here in eu. but im not a white,brown,black,yellow etc. im your nightmare
anything thats sped up now...shit gets on my nerves..everytime.. i think of alvin's bitch brittany...and how they went to a human school and stayed in a tree everybody else had houses..but these 3 chipmunk hoes had to stay in a tree..u know damn well they was fonky...kuz how in the fuck u gone put a shower in a tree? u cant run no pipes up a tree..let alone put a bath tub in that hoe...so them hoes was walkin around cootabrown like a hoe...3 nasty ass bitches...
Quote from: white boy on November 09, 2004, 03:16:06 PMi think good too.. but he like took the EXACT beat.. like he did no work at all.. but he rhymes nice over ityeah, i mean theres no way you can say every track that just simply loops a sample up and adds some new drums etc is good or bad...there are exceptions to the rule...sometimes they work and sometimes they dont...
Quote from: smartass on November 09, 2004, 09:17:46 AMtight:when the sample is flipped, and it sounds nothing like the original.example:shook ones 2weak:when its a straight jackexample:most of the chronic(in no way am i implying that the beats suck, so theres no reason to catch feelins)^ This dude knows nothing. A sample is when one is using (sampling) the actual song. In Dre's case, he was doing renditions, having musicans playing shit over, a big difference.
tight:when the sample is flipped, and it sounds nothing like the original.example:shook ones 2weak:when its a straight jackexample:most of the chronic(in no way am i implying that the beats suck, so theres no reason to catch feelins)
Quote from: SickmyDuck on November 12, 2004, 12:36:03 AMQuote from: smartass on November 09, 2004, 09:17:46 AMtight:when the sample is flipped, and it sounds nothing like the original.example:shook ones 2weak:when its a straight jackexample:most of the chronic(in no way am i implying that the beats suck, so theres no reason to catch feelins)^ This dude knows nothing. A sample is when one is using (sampling) the actual song. In Dre's case, he was doing renditions, having musicans playing shit over, a big difference.id make you look like an idiot right now, if dres lawyers didnt have that soundclick page shut down. dont speak on something YOU know nothing about.
Quote from: smartass on November 12, 2004, 10:22:33 AMQuote from: SickmyDuck on November 12, 2004, 12:36:03 AMQuote from: smartass on November 09, 2004, 09:17:46 AMtight:when the sample is flipped, and it sounds nothing like the original.example:shook ones 2weak:when its a straight jackexample:most of the chronic(in no way am i implying that the beats suck, so theres no reason to catch feelins)^ This dude knows nothing. A sample is when one is using (sampling) the actual song. In Dre's case, he was doing renditions, having musicans playing shit over, a big difference.id make you look like an idiot right now, if dres lawyers didnt have that soundclick page shut down. dont speak on something YOU know nothing about.Actually Smartass he's right. Dre wouldn't sample so to speak. He'd have musicians working for him that would replay other songs. It's not much different than sampling except you save some money playing performance rights. If I sampled the guitar riff in Satisfaction by the Rolling stones, I'd have to pay Keith Richards and Mick Jagger for taking a part of the song they wrote, AND I'd have to pay Keith for looping a peice of music he played. If I had my own guitarist then I'd only have to pay for the publishing. It saves money. Dre still wasn't "original" in the Chronic, but not many rap producers are.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^I won't say you're wrong but according to interviews by Dre he said he didn't havew the smapling technology in the NWA and Chronic days, so he had to get musicians to replay them. There were musicians credited in the NWA albums.
Quote from: Shallow on November 12, 2004, 12:10:19 PM^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^I won't say you're wrong but according to interviews by Dre he said he didn't havew the smapling technology in the NWA and Chronic days, so he had to get musicians to replay them. There were musicians credited in the NWA albums.I am sure I read in an interview somewhere that Dre and Eazy were working somewhere where the dude paid them by giving them old records, which Dre then used (sampled) for Straight Outta Compton.
ummmmm its not a SAMPLE if the ORIGINAL MUSICIAN wasn't given CREDIT. that would be a JACK.*looks in chronic booklet*i win.