Jump to content

Snap music: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Changed link to reference
No edit summary
Line 15: Line 15:
| other_topics =
| other_topics =
}}
}}
'''Snap music''' is a subgenre of [[hip hop music]] that emerged from [[Atlanta, Georgia]]. The genre of music soon became popular and artists from other southern states began to emerge. Tracks commonly consist of only a [[hi-hat]], [[bass (instrument)|bass]], [[Wiktionary:Transwiki:Snap (fingers)|snapping]], a main [[groove (music)|groove]], and a vocal track. Invented for use at [[nightclub]]s, it is unusually languid for normal dance music, with a slow tempo. There is some debate over the true origin of Snap, with rap outfits [[Dem Franchize Boyz]] and [[D4L]], as well as [[Record producer|producer]] [[Mr. Collipark]], claiming to be the creators.
'''Snap music''' is a subgenre of [[hip hop music]] that emerged from [[Atlanta, Georgia]]. The genre of music soon became popular and artists from other southern states began to emerge. Tracks commonly consist of only a [[hi-hat]], [[bass (instrument)|bass]], [[Wiktionary:Transwiki:Snap (fingers)|snapping]], a main [[groove (music)|groove]], and a vocal track. Invented for use at [[nightclub]]s, [it is unusually languid for normal dance music, with a slow tempo. There is some debate over the true origin of Snap, with rap outfits [[Dem Franchize Boyz]] and [[D4L]], as well as [[Record producer|producer]] [[Mr. Collipark]], claiming to be the creators.


==Criticism==
==Criticism==
Line 31: Line 31:


==See also==
==See also==
[http://www.crankdat.com Best Snap Dance Videos]
*[[Snap dance]]
*[[Snap dance]]



Revision as of 16:25, 11 September 2007

Snap music is a subgenre of hip hop music that emerged from Atlanta, Georgia. The genre of music soon became popular and artists from other southern states began to emerge. Tracks commonly consist of only a hi-hat, bass, snapping, a main groove, and a vocal track. Invented for use at nightclubs, [it is unusually languid for normal dance music, with a slow tempo. There is some debate over the true origin of Snap, with rap outfits Dem Franchize Boyz and D4L, as well as producer Mr. Collipark, claiming to be the creators.

Criticism

Snap music has been targeted by the "Hip Hop is Dead" movement. Ghostface Killah used D4L's song "Laffy Taffy" as symbolic of inauthentic, cheap hip-hop in his song "The Champ," (from his album Fishscale) in which he raps, "Y'all stuck on Laffy Taffy/Wonderin': how'd y'all niggas get past me?" Nas suspects it killed hip hop in his song "Hip Hop Is Dead" (from his album of the same name), where he raps "'Oh I think they like me, in my white tee'/You can't ice me, we here for life, B". Even rapper Smoke of southern group Field Mob said, when asked if he thought hip hop was dead, "Hell yeah, hip-hop is dead...I'mma tell you who killed hip-hop... D4L and Dem Franchize Boyz...Hip-hop is wordplay, saying something, metaphors. I love Hip-Hop. I fell in love with Mobb Deep [and] Nas -- these are the people that influenced me." He then went on to praise UGK as well as 8Ball & MJG and then closed by saying, "The old south is Hip-Hop, the new south...naaahh!" [1]

While D4L stated they would not reply to these disses, Dem Franchize Boyz made a song called "We Fuckin Up Hip Hop," dissing Nas, Field Mob, and the "hip hop is dead" movement.


Notable Snap artists

See also

Best Snap Dance Videos

References