Down here in the south we grew up on "bootyshake" there was no other
music at parties when we were coming up, except if the deejay was
playing "old school" stuff. And I mean planet rock, clear, 2live crew,
poison clan, more Miami bass than Detroit booty, but sonically from the
same heart I guess. And even the current hip hop minimal stuff I class
as the same music, because it's all made for the strip club. That's the
common thread that lends itself to such minimal and futuristic esthetics
with heavy bass and bounce. Holla at some of the artists sometime,
they'll tell you. Straight up made for the strip clubs. Remember,
Atlanta once had more strip clubs per square mile than vegas, and still
has more than most states. And most southern artists will dedicate at
least one song per album to coaching some imaginary siren through the
motions he'd imagined he just paid for, from classics like "throw that
p" to newer tune's like "drop it like it's hot" (not snoops song) it's
all for the bootylicious. And that's the dirty south 101 for today.

KKS

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, September 26, 2005 4:27 PM
To: 313
Subject: RE: (313) Carl Craig Fabric Live 25

I'm always floored when I hear this track out at a commercial hiphop
party or 
in boomboxes around the city because it's so minimal. It doesn't even
sound 
like it was mastered for radio play with its ultra low bass and spacious

sound. It sounds to me like the hot southern rap artists are highly
influenced 
by detroit booty. Another one I like is David Banner's "Run Girl", very
techy. 
And another pop song seemingly influenced by ghettotech/booty/chant
based 
music is Gwen Stefani's "holler back girl" With Disco D producing a
track on 
50 cent's new album, I wouldnt be surprised to see more crossover
between 
detroit bass music and pop in the near future. I'm kind of surprised to
see 
Carl Craig put this on a mix cd, if only because I imagine the licensing
fees 
are huge and you can already hear every day on commercial radio.

surprisQuoting "Odeluga, Ken" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

> That was so weird. I just now spontaneously remembered (as you do
> sometimes) a line from that Yin Yang Twins track: 'It depends of the
> swing of the baseball bat,' then I opened this message and there it
> is...
> 
> If you don't know that track by the way, you might like it. It's the
> most minimal hip-hop track I've heard for years. I've been meaning to
> use it myself for months.
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: robin [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Sent: 26 September 2005 00:31
> To: 313
> Subject: (313) Carl Craig Fabric Live 25
> 
> 
> did someone post the tracklisting of this?
> 
> if not see below, looks very nice:
> 
> 01 Yang Yang Twins / Wait [The Whisper Song] / TVT Records
> 02 Carl Craig / Angel (Caya Dub) / Planet E
> 03 Trickski / Sweat / Sonar Kollektiv
> 04 Kerri Chandler / Bar A Thym / Nite Grooves / King Street Sounds
> 05 Just One / Love2Love [Phlash Edit] / Neroli Productions
> 06 Megablast / Jupita [Stereotyp Remix] / Luv Lite Recordings
> 07 Scott Grooves / The Journey / From The Studio Of Scott Grooves
> 08 Africanism / Imbalaye / Yellow Productions
> 09 Blaze Presents UDA Ft. Barbara Tucker / Most Precious Love [DF 
> Future 3000 Instrumental] / Nite Grooves/King Street Sounds
> 10 Rayon / The Panther [Rubber Re-Edit] / Crosstown Rebel
Music/Rebelone
> 11 Soundstream / 3rd Movement / Soundstream
> 12 Dark Comedy / Good God / Art Of Dance Records
> 13 D'Malicious / Alive / Wave Music
> 14 Pasta Boys / Limit / Disco Inn
> 15 DJ Yoav B. / Energize / Wabi Sabi / Nomorewords
> 16 Nick Petty & Shamus Coghlan / Crushing / Missing Unit
> 17 Carl Craig / Darkness / Planet E
> 18 Tokyo Black Star / Blade Dancer [Dixon Edit] / Sonar Kollektiv
> 
> released: Oct 
> 
> 
> 


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