Hip Hop is on your computer ( you are reading this post on a Hip hop board ).landtuna said:Not allowed in my house or cars. Under any circumstances.
I hate to say it, because I am a Janet Jackson fan, but Janet Jackson music career is in the dumpster right now. What is wrong with a music artist ( Chris Brown,Rhianna and so on ) whom want to increase there fan base ? If I was a music artist and I had the talent to do different form of music, I be stupid if I didn't try it. To many today's music artist, are put in a box. Tina Turner is R&B star and Pop and Rock star .FMSteve said:This is the question of today, for sure. What is the state of Hip-Hop? There are indications that this genre is losing it's appeal. Why is it that many major artists right now ie. Rhianna, Janet Jackson, Chris Brown, etc.... are going to some sort of techno pop? Why are there soooo many beats per minute? Why is the new music drifting to a more Pop/Techno sound? I don't get it.
What has happened to the Urban Rythmic format?
Could somebody enlighten me?
rapking said:Hip Hop is on your computer ( you are reading this post on a Hip hop board ).landtuna said:Not allowed in my house or cars. Under any circumstances.
Mid West Clubber said:I happen to favor the Dance-Pop stuff more than the ghetto Dirty south crap weve dealt with for the last decade. I can finally stand to listen to Rhythmic Radio again, when only a year ago I couldnt tell the difference between an Urban and a Rhythmic station... Rhythmic stations right now are sounding like what they were intended to sound like,, Rhythmic CHR was never intended to be an Urban Clone.
Mid West Clubber said:I happen to favor the Dance-Pop stuff more than the ghetto Dirty south crap weve dealt with for the last decade. I can finally stand to listen to Rhythmic Radio again, when only a year ago I couldnt tell the difference between an Urban and a Rhythmic station... Rhythmic stations right now are sounding like what they were intended to sound like,, Rhythmic CHR was never intended to be an Urban Clone.
FMSteve said:Mid West Clubber said:I happen to favor the Dance-Pop stuff more than the ghetto Dirty south crap weve dealt with for the last decade. I can finally stand to listen to Rhythmic Radio again, when only a year ago I couldnt tell the difference between an Urban and a Rhythmic station... Rhythmic stations right now are sounding like what they were intended to sound like,, Rhythmic CHR was never intended to be an Urban Clone.
So you're saying that the Rhythmic/CHR is finally coming around to what the format was meant to deliver........and that the Hip-Hop-Thug-in-the-club-like-a-scrub Ghetto music was a brief path we went down, nothing more, nothing less. Like a dead-end street?
That's very interesting. I am not so sure about that. I see Hip-Hop and Rap as evolving into a more friendly place, slowing down a bit in tempo and anger, but still having that urban sound and rhythms. But I certainly wonder if there's enough legs in the format to move forward......as the recording artists and A & R guys cave in to a more Pop/techno sound, and that will define the new Rhythmic Contemporary format.
Right or wrong?
ShawtyBlack_ATL said:![]()
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-Syndication (ex. KDAY-Los Angeles)
-None/Few Mix Shows
-No Variety
-Too Many ReCurrents
-Slow To Add New Music
-No Old School Hip-Hop Spins
-So Called Hip-Hop Stations That Play Pop/Dance
;D ;D ;D
-Local Music Spins
-Mix Shows
-Local Personalities 24/7
-Real Hip-Hop (ex. KXHT-Memphis)
-Street Prescene
-of course Any Hot Ass Pat Garrett Voiceover
sdh483 said:FMSteve said:Mid West Clubber said:I happen to favor the Dance-Pop stuff more than the ghetto Dirty south crap weve dealt with for the last decade. I can finally stand to listen to Rhythmic Radio again, when only a year ago I couldnt tell the difference between an Urban and a Rhythmic station... Rhythmic stations right now are sounding like what they were intended to sound like,, Rhythmic CHR was never intended to be an Urban Clone.
So you're saying that the Rhythmic/CHR is finally coming around to what the format was meant to deliver........and that the Hip-Hop-Thug-in-the-club-like-a-scrub Ghetto music was a brief path we went down, nothing more, nothing less. Like a dead-end street?
That's very interesting. I am not so sure about that. I see Hip-Hop and Rap as evolving into a more friendly place, slowing down a bit in tempo and anger, but still having that urban sound and rhythms. But I certainly wonder if there's enough legs in the format to move forward......as the recording artists and A & R guys cave in to a more Pop/techno sound, and that will define the new Rhythmic Contemporary format.
Right or wrong?
I would say wrong. Rap music has de-volved from a friendly place since the 1980s when hip hop WAS a friendly genre with acts like Run-Dmc, Kurtis Blow, ect. before Death Row came to play in the early 90s and brought violence, drug references and explicit sexual refrences. When this form came to the airwaves, the songs were edited so much you'd think there were only 5 words in the entire song. Rap music today might not be as violent as i was 10 years ago but the drugs and demeaning of females is still there. I'll give them my propers for using "coded" words for drug references like the rock acts did back in the 60s and 70s so they don't have to go on the chopping block of radio edit. The problem is now that we've heard the same tired out beats for the past decade (I can't tell the difference from Lil Wayne to Lil Troy, both from different decades). What I am seeing is a slow transition back to more melodic R&B with a dance beat in the background, latin flavored rhythmic, pop and rock making a comeback. There will still be rhythmic CHRs and hip hop stations but there will eventually be a phase out of hip hop in top 40 and a return of a "poppier" sound. The "dirty south" sound is still alive but not for long.
IMHO I prefer my music to have more melody, harmony, some chord changes, and a bass line this isn't monotonic. That and proper english, not a bunch of made up words. Some of these rap acts remind me of that movie CB4, where the "violent" rap group was pure act. They were really from the suburbs.