crackerjack
Well-known member
Yeah, it's a sample - or sounds like one - from The Drifters 'Under The Boardwalk' - and he's def referencing all that stuff.
Stand By Me by Ben E King (formerly of The Drifters).
Yeah, it's a sample - or sounds like one - from The Drifters 'Under The Boardwalk' - and he's def referencing all that stuff.
Stand By Me by Ben E King (formerly of The Drifters).
Also I really like T-Pain's 'Buy You a Drank'. Dripping sugar pop summer music for grabassing on the dancefloor. Yes!
I heard that sean kingston in a burger joint yesterday and just assumed it was Akon.
I love the whole doo wop urban radio invasion that Akon has been leading. It's great! And I like this sean kingston tune, just the chorus is great endless repetition of 'suicidal' in the poppiest voice. Doesn't sound like it'll have much staying power, can see myself hating it soon but for now I like it as an alternative to all the bitches and hoes freaky freaky stuff thats around in r+b or whatever you'd compare this to.
Also I really like T-Pain's 'Buy You a Drank'. Dripping sugar pop summer music for grabassing on the dancefloor. Yes!
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70s music, but just reissued and made available. hottest thing i heard all year.
did someone say freestyle? http://freestylebeats.blogspot.com/
did someone say freestyle? http://freestylebeats.blogspot.com/
This is probably another thread, but have you seen all of the panel discussion (most notably, Oprah's) and different initiatives cropping up to clean up hip-hop lyrics and make hip-hop artists responsible to their audience? I can kind of see the industry's pendulum swinging away from gritty lyrics and back to this sort of sugar pop music like Akon and T-Pain, both of whom I love...and remind me of 50s and 60s songcrafted pop, at least in spirit.
Yeah, I kinda hope this happens in RnB myself... I mean, the fact that the "King of RnB" R Kelly comes across as self parody (and as a parody of RnB in general) at this point, has to say something about the state of the genre right now! (Don't get me wrong, I love R Kelly... he's fucking hilarious... )
A return of a kind of oldschool innocence in RnB just might redeem it some tho... (not morally, but from cliche)
Yeah, I kinda hope this happens in RnB myself... I mean, the fact that the "King of RnB" R Kelly comes across as self parody (and as a parody of RnB in general) at this point, has to say something about the state of the genre right now! (Don't get me wrong, I love R Kelly... he's fucking hilarious... )
A return of a kind of oldschool innocence in RnB just might redeem it some tho... (not morally, but from cliche)
i don't know. okay we've all seen trapped in the closet and all agreed it's hilarious, but r kelly is an artist, not a parody. 'i'm a flirt' remix with t-pain and t.i. is a great song. the lyrical content ('r kelly is a playa', to sum it up) might sound cliched, but you could just argue it's a trope of the genre like shanking your enemies is in grime. above all, it's a great song, brilliantly written, brilliantly produced, and brilliantly sung.
i'm wary of this idea of 10million indie kids laughing at r kelly 'parodying' r'n'b in trapped in the closet and enjoying the music in an 'ironic' way. it's good music, okay? you can take your irony back to your hadouken concerts cheers.
Thing is, Akon and T-Pain are the most obvious successors to R. Kelly's smooth-n-explicit style of R&B. I do like most of their songs (good singing and catchy melodies which aren't dragged down by the excessive melismatics of so much female R&B), but they are anything but clean. Conservative pundit Michelle Malkin has a crusade going against Akon right now; I think she's cost him some endorsements.