Yo moet I'm really happy for you, Imma let you finish, but DJ Premier is the best hip hop producer of all time.
AL_GREEN
Â
Hes good but the problem with him is that everyone of his beats sound the exact same. He never grew as a producer.Â
[QUOTE="AL_GREEN"]Yo moet I'm really happy for you, Imma let you finish, but DJ Premier is the best hip hop producer of all time.
MoetWitMedusa
Â
Hes good but the problem with him is that everyone of his beats sound the exact same. He never grew as a producer.Â
Ehh his beats are so good though i'd say he's exempt from that
[QUOTE="AL_GREEN"]Yo moet I'm really happy for you, Imma let you finish, but DJ Premier is the best hip hop producer of all time.
MoetWitMedusa
Â
Hes good but the problem with him is that everyone of his beats sound the exact same. He never grew as a producer.Â
Does it matter when your beats are perfection?Mannie Fresh is so underated that its sickening. Mannie > Kanye,RZA,Dre. If you dont agree put your favoirte prudced hip hop beat and I'll show you a Mannie beat that is better. MoetWitMedusalmao manny isn't even close to being on kanye, dre and rza's level
The best producer out of the south was DJ Screw. Scratch that, DJ Screw was one of the best things going for the south period.
Â
 DJ Screw on the boards
[QUOTE="Toriko42"]Kno would like to say hello:lol:Mannie is the best southern producer along with Organized Noize
Not sure about overall though
mems_1224
...wait, you're being serious? :lol:Â
Swizz is the greatest of all time. Dont care what no one says, ask Kanye who he thinks is the greatest. He'll tell you swizz, even tweeted about it.
Worked with so many artist, and been doing it for 10+ plus years and made so many hits!. Dre is soooooo overrated.
swizz's beats are so annoying. seriously i hate him.rubbersouI
correct.
Â
i mean dude has a couple of bangers. but still. his sound got old years ago. the song he produced for good firdays was dope though
[QUOTE="rubbersouI"]swizz's beats are so annoying. seriously i hate him.TheAbstrakt
correct.
Â
i mean dude has a couple of bangers. but still. his sound got old years ago. the song he produced for good firdays was dope though
Yeah.. ok bequite.. Cant hate and praise same time. He has plenty of dope beats out right now, the man is on EVERYTHING[QUOTE="mems_1224"][QUOTE="Toriko42"]Kno would like to say hello:lol:Mannie is the best southern producer along with Organized Noize
Not sure about overall though
Colt45fool
...wait, you're being serious? :lol:Â
kno>>>any of the beats from the garabage you listen to now a daysLol When people think of the iconic southern sound it's probably somehow related to Mannie Fresh...
Ha
Go DJ: Arguably one of the best beats ever made
Bling Bling
We On Fire
Tha Block Is Hot
BM Jr
Front Back
I mean seriously these man defined both the New Orleans Hip Hop uprising in the 90's and cornerstones of his production style continue to form the basis of Southern production to this day. You can hear his influence in almost every damn beat to come out of there lol.Â
Some of my fave Fresh beats
Baller BlockinProject *****Â
in addition to stuff like Get Your Roll On, #1 Stunna, Block is Hot, It's In Me
Lol When people think of the iconic southern sound it's probably somehow related to Mannie Fresh...
Ha
Go DJ: Arguably one of the best beats ever made
Bling Bling
We On Fire
Tha Block Is Hot
BM Jr
Front Back
I mean seriously these man defined both the New Orleans Hip Hop uprising in the 90's and cornerstones of his production style continue to form the basis of Southern production to this day. You can hear his influence in almost every damn beat to come out of there lol.
Toriko42
lol, I like your passion for Mannie Fresh's music, but there is a lot wrong with your post.
First off, the Southern sound people think of really has very little to do with Mannie Fresh. The New Orleans sound really is perhaps the most localized sound of any regional styIe in rap history. Really no state outside of New Orleans - maybe Mississippi or ocassionally Texas has ever really taken on that sound. The prototypical Southern sound has it's roots in Atlanta, Memphis, and Houston waaaaaaaaaaay before it ever takes root in New Orleans.
You might point to the popularity of synth brass and stock 808's after Mannie Fresh, but that probably has a lot more to do with Swizz Beats making stock keyboard sounds a pliable formula for success than anything else.
Even to say he defined the New Orleans rap sound in the 90's isn't correct. Despite being present in the New Orleans scene for practically the entire decade (UNLV anybody?), the bounce sound was already a part of New Orleans rap music, and it was through Master P moving from the bay and taking the mobb music sound to New Orleans that producers like KLC brought the New Orleans sound to the attention of the rest of the nation.
[QUOTE="Toriko42"]Lol When people think of the iconic southern sound it's probably somehow related to Mannie Fresh...
Ha
Go DJ: Arguably one of the best beats ever made
Bling Bling
We On Fire
Tha Block Is Hot
BM Jr
Front Back
I mean seriously these man defined both the New Orleans Hip Hop uprising in the 90's and cornerstones of his production style continue to form the basis of Southern production to this day. You can hear his influence in almost every damn beat to come out of there lol.
IsThisIt_basic
lol, I like your passion for Mannie Fresh's music, but there is a lot wrong with your post.
First off, the Southern sound people think of really has very little to do with Mannie Fresh. The New Orleans sound really is perhaps the most localized sound of any regional styIe in rap history. Really no state outside of New Orleans - maybe Mississippi or ocassionally Texas has ever really taken on that sound. The prototypical Southern sound has it's roots in Atlanta, Memphis, and Houston waaaaaaaaaaay before it ever takes root in New Orleans.
You might point to the popularity of synth brass and stock 808's after Mannie Fresh, but that probably has a lot more to do with Swizz Beats making stock keyboard sounds a pliable formula for success than anything else.
Even to say he defined the New Orleans rap sound in the 90's isn't correct. Despite being present in the New Orleans scene for practically the entire decade (UNLV anybody?), the bounce sound was already a part of New Orleans rap music, and it was through Master P moving from the bay and taking the mobb music sound to New Orleans that producers like KLC brought the New Orleans sound to the attention of the rest of the nation.
Ha I'm glad I learned this before I said it anywhere else.I do love Mannie Fresh though
[QUOTE="BLBxLakers24"]New Orleans Hip Hop.. lolToriko42SMH give it a shot and keep an open mind! Lol Im kidding.. Im From Orlando Florida.. Cash Money, Hot Boyz, that ish ran the south for a minute.. BG, Wayne, Birdman, Turk, Mannie, and really JUVE! I miss those days
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