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Space age pimpin credits
Space age pimpin credits











space age pimpin credits

space age pimpin credits

The man born to mack knew about more than just running game. He was custom making beats before Melle Melle looked like the Michelin Man. After all, Short Dog is still doing it almost 30 years after Don’t Stop Rapping. I’m pretty sure those studio sessions passed in a haze of women, chronic, and the occasional break to watch Dolemite on Betamax.īut for the purposes of debate, let’s give Short credit where it’s due. And in some way, most of them might be right. I’m sure if you ask Dean Hodges, Ted Bohanon and Todd Shaw who produced what on the early Too Short records you’d get three different answers. His distaste for contracts means he isn’t always credited where he should be, but you can thank him for the drums and “huh!” on “Let The Rhythm Hit ‘Em” and the splice of James Brown and the Honeydrippers on Superlover Cee & Cassanova Rud’s “Do The James.” Paul was murdered right before rap’s most storied decade began and thus doesn’t have the same cult of fandom as a J Dilla, but his legacy lives on in the music of the golden age that was yet to come. He produced Organized Konfusion’s demo and shaped the sound of Ultramagnetic’s Critical Beatdown.

space age pimpin credits

SPACE AGE PIMPIN CREDITS PRO

The man who taught Large Pro was a Jamaica, Queens phenom named Paul C who wouldn’t live to see the breadth of his influence. Large Professor schooled all of New York’s legendary producers in the use of samplers. Paul C is to hip-hop as Leif Ericson is to discovering America. Not only was Organized Noize taking notes, but so was everyone else. Premro Smith and Marlon Goodman’s name are on those records and even if they weren’t the one digging in the crates, they deserve credit for being among the first to link H-Town, Memphis, Western G-funk and their own extraterrestrial bent. T-Mix is listed regularly and Tony Draper has stolen enough credit for ten Sylvia Robinson’s, but he was in Houston and nothing sounds more Memphis than the alluvial slow-rolling funk that rattled out Ball & MJG’s backwoods Beale Street universe. Suave House isn’t exactly known for its meticulous accounting, so it’s unclear who made what on 8Ball & MJG’s first three (classic) records. MP3: Sugarhill Gang – “Apache (Jump On It)”

space age pimpin credits

MP3: Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five – “The Message” However, his style wasn’t limited just to original composition, his co-writing credit on The Sugarhill Gang’s “Apache (Jump On It)” was also pioneering in bringing one of the culture’s most famous drum breaks to the masses. A jazz funk organ player, Jiggs moved the music away from the acoustic and towards the electronic along with Bambaataa and Herbie Hancock his powerful synth stabs on “The Message” are the decisive component of the song’s urban groove. Often left out of the shuffle when considering hip hop’s early production pioneers, Jiggs was enlisted by Sylvia Robinson to be Sugar Hill’s in-house arranger and producer and ultimately create of some of the first rap production to reach a truly expansive audience. The Greatest Producers of All-Time: Honorable Mentions, Part II The Greatest Producers of All-Time: Honorable Mentions, Part I













Space age pimpin credits