ORIGINAL: Daddy?!
I know this will offend someone, but this is how I saw rap "music" a few years ago. I thought it was just some weird novelty thing that would quickly go away. I just knew that no one would take it seriously since it was just programmed rhythms and didn't involve any real musical talent or the ability to carry a tune. Man, was I wrong..
Stratcat,
Please tell me that you have not entered the 'other side'...that being that you are a 'rap music fan' now. Please say it ain't so - I don't want my image of you and your fine posts over the years tarnished for me. I'm quite sure all the Jay-Z's of the world couldn't sit around a campfire and make good 'music' that actually had chords and harmony and get this...a modulation to a new key, etc.
I believe that hip-hop/rap's prevalence in music today does NOTHING to encourage our young people to pick up a legitimate instrument and learn how to create on it. If this trend continues, in 30-50 years (possibly less), there will be no 'songs' to sing, just 'dope beats' to 'bump' to.
Aside from the mega cash that rap generates, I honestly believe that if these 'rap artists' had real legitimate 'musical talent', they'd earn their initial money off of the rap and then quickly move onto something more challenging and musically stimulating - I've yet to see this. A lot of the decent rock guys seemed to get tired of the basic major/minor scales and needed more stimulation, thus moving towards jazz, etc. Those guys seem to be in it for the right reasons: music and the stimulation generated by creating it, not the Benjamins generated by selling it to the sheep.
Rant off!
Hope I didn't offend anyone - I just think it's important that we try to create good songs and not rely on samples and programming too much. I believe our songs should largely transfer decently around a campfire.
You definately read something into my post that was not intended!! I hate rap "music". And before anyone calls me names, I dont hate the "artists", I just do not consider it music. I do think there is some skill involved in the creation of these sounds, but that is what they are - sounds. They are rhythms, and some of the rhythms aren't half bad, but it's usually because it's been ripped off from a talented artist!! I use samples to create music, but it's samples of single notes that I then manipulate into music (drums samples, piano samples, etc) not performances of another musician playing.
From the view of a real musician, no, I do not care for it and do not consider it music.
What is really sad to me is watching my 12 year old daughter. She took piano lessons for a few years and was quite good. But now she has no interested at all. She listens to rap and some new rock (Panic at the Disco, etc). She had a breif interest in Maroon 5 when that cd was big and I thought there was hope, but now they are old news to her... It's funny, to her anything 6 months old is "old"!!! I guess I feel a little disappointed that I am probably in the best band I have ever been in right now and my daughter has zero appreciation for it. This is what the media has done to the next generation...
But I do think there is hope. We play mostly classic rock and it amazes me that some places we play college kids show up and love what we are doing. It's kind of like back in the 70's when "oldies" from the 50's were cool.
Regarding Auto-Tune, this post has made me re-think some things. I need to develope a better ear for hearing the apprent over-use of it! Then again, maybe I don't want to know!?!? Someone mentioned Carrie Underwood's abuse of it, and I actually thought she was a very talented singer - now I'm wondering...
BUT, I have to go back to something I said before. There is more to a great vocal track than just perfect pitch. You've got to be able to project, have good tone, good phrasing, dynamics, etc to pull it off..........right?