It's May 24, 2024, 08:32:32 AM
and i don't doubt it, but what exactly did he do for them? i'm sure it must be some ghost production or something, cause as far as i can gather he mixed a record for whitney (fine) which is prod. raphael saadiq? maybe produced more by quik in reality, or both of them. janet though, there's a remix of 'all for you' and that's it? just a remix for a single, no new vocals. not something you'd normally be in the studio for. i always thought 'go deep' sounded like a heavily quik influenced track, but there must be something else he did.anyone got any credits or insight into this?
Quote from: Matty on May 31, 2013, 12:51:59 PMand i don't doubt it, but what exactly did he do for them? i'm sure it must be some ghost production or something, cause as far as i can gather he mixed a record for whitney (fine) which is prod. raphael saadiq? maybe produced more by quik in reality, or both of them. janet though, there's a remix of 'all for you' and that's it? just a remix for a single, no new vocals. not something you'd normally be in the studio for. i always thought 'go deep' sounded like a heavily quik influenced track, but there must be something else he did.anyone got any credits or insight into this?why are you digging deep? if quik says he produced it then so be it. did you know quik produced In Da Club and mixed by Dre. who got all the credit?
But of an earlier studio session which Dre was in attendance that did yield a hit record, Quik reveals, “I had all these drums sounds that I knew were hot but wasn’t nobody checking for me at the time. I gave [Dre] those sounds. It’s not even the sounds, it’s about hot you use them and Dr Dre just had a crazy technique that day when he did that In Da Club” sh!t” [3:50] And of his unaccredited production work on the 50 Cent hit record which launched the now diamond selling status album Get Rich or Die Trying, Quik laughs, “I think my unaccredited production has furthered hip hop more so than my credited production.” [39:15]The untold additive DJ Quik influence for numerous records extends well beyond just the In Da Club record. “Sometimes I’m humble to a fault to where I like to give other people credit for things that I did,” offers Quik while realizing, “I’ve always been a team player but the reality is that I have to accept that I took a lot of roads that nobody else took and blazed some trails that made a lot of sense. In looking at it that way, I think that my voice actually was heard and did make a difference.”
QuoteBut of an earlier studio session which Dre was in attendance that did yield a hit record, Quik reveals, “I had all these drums sounds that I knew were hot but wasn’t nobody checking for me at the time. I gave [Dre] those sounds. It’s not even the sounds, it’s about hot you use them and Dr Dre just had a crazy technique that day when he did that In Da Club” sh!t” [3:50] And of his unaccredited production work on the 50 Cent hit record which launched the now diamond selling status album Get Rich or Die Trying, Quik laughs, “I think my unaccredited production has furthered hip hop more so than my credited production.” [39:15]The untold additive DJ Quik influence for numerous records extends well beyond just the In Da Club record. “Sometimes I’m humble to a fault to where I like to give other people credit for things that I did,” offers Quik while realizing, “I’ve always been a team player but the reality is that I have to accept that I took a lot of roads that nobody else took and blazed some trails that made a lot of sense. In looking at it that way, I think that my voice actually was heard and did make a difference.” http://www.fastlifeshow.com/2012/02/quiks-breaks-down-the-responsibility-in-music-production/
niggas is gettin their jimmies rustled in this thread.