woops
is not like other people
ie by sticking a record on?Bob Power might also be worth a shout. Fun fact: Shadow is a big influence on how I play drums
ie by sticking a record on?Bob Power might also be worth a shout. Fun fact: Shadow is a big influence on how I play drums
ur-eminem (everything that's good and shit about him in the same tune, all of it in exaggerated form), peak white rap canon
lotta the jungle guys, of all races, having originally been b-boys, ofc, i.e. DJ Hype
this describes every single element of American culturewhich is a thing that has a whole load of baggage basically coz of how race works in the US
good callAutechre too.
i think looking back on it now its pretty much all bad with eminem. don't like the tunes. but there's something about the mean, nasty, defensive, thing that he used to have that resonated with a tonne of people including me back in the day. the earnest and motivational thing sounds like the flipside of that to me. like he's asking for forgiveness, lots of guilt and regret. the love the way you lie one is full of clunkers and there's something fucked up about a tune like this being on the radio and popular. but at the same time you can hear that moral conflict and struggle that he's having with himself in it which is his strength i think. find him way outside the norm for both the rap and pop worlds that he's a part of in that respect.I've always thought the silly Slim Shady stuff was better than the Eminem / Marshall Mathers stuff where he's trying to be all earnest and motivational.
ie by sticking a record on?
Does your kit sound like an sp1200?
I've always thought the silly Slim Shady stuff was better than the Eminem / Marshall Mathers stuff where he's trying to be all earnest and motivational.
i think looking back on it now its pretty much all bad with eminem. don't like the tunes. but there's something about the mean, nasty, defensive, thing that he used to have that resonated with a tonne of people including me back in the day. the earnest and motivational thing sounds like the flipside of that to me. like he's asking for forgiveness, lots of guilt and regret. the love the way you lie one is full of clunkers and there's something fucked up about a tune like this being on the radio and popular. but at the same time you can hear that moral conflict and struggle that he's having with himself in it which is his strength i think. find him way outside the norm for both the rap and pop worlds that he's a part of in that respect.
grating is the world sonically. his voice is hard to get along with and the beats are exactly the right age to sound properly dated. to me i find it absolutely obvious that the reason (ok there are many factors but a major one) he became properly massive is the animosity he expressed.He came along at the right time when there just wasn't much competition at that level of hype. Cut back to 96 and before and he wouldn't have stood out at all. It was just good timing. And yeah, some of it was catchy, but looking back it's all grating