Southern hip hop
Southern hip hop | |
---|---|
Stylistic origins | Hip hop - Bounce Music - Country |
Cultural origins | 1980s, Southern United States |
Typical instruments | Drum machine - Turntables - Rapping - Sampler - Synthesizer - Human beatboxing |
Derivative forms | Crunk |
Subgenres | |
Bounce - Snap Music - Miami Bass - Atlanta hip hop - Chopped and Screwed (complete list) |
Southern hip hop, also called southern rap, is a form of American Genre music influenced by hip hop that emerged from a late-1980s club-oriented vibe in southern U.S. cities, including New Orleans, Shreveport, Nashville, Atlanta, Charleston, Memphis, Virginia Beach, Charlotte, Raleigh-Durham, Birmingham, Mobile, Orlando, Tampa, Miami, Jacksonville, Jackson, and Baton Rouge.[1][2][3] The music was a reaction to the 1980s flow of hip hop culture from New York City and California, and can be considered a third major American hip hop genre, after East Coast hip hop and West Coast hip hop.[4] Many early Southern rap artists released their music independently or on mixtapes after encountering difficulty securing record-label contracts in the 1990s.[5]
For more information on music from one specific area, see Atlanta hip hop.
Style
Southern hip hop is marked by exuberant production. Lyrics are fairly straightforward and are typically about car culture, fashion trends, dances, nightlife, sex and unique Southern slang.[6]
Notable musicians
References
- ^ http://www.indexmagazine.com/interviews/dj_deluxx.shtml
- ^ http://www.spiritus-temporis.com/southern-rap/history-and-rise-to-popularity.html
- ^ Burks, Maggie (2008-09-03). "Southern Hip-Hop". Jackson Free Press. Retrieved 2008-09-11.
- ^ SANNEH, KELEFA (2005-04-17). "The Strangest Sound in Hip-Hop Goes National". Retrieved 2008-09-11.
- ^ allmusic
- ^ [1]
External links
- Film New Flavors: The Emergence of Southern Hip Hop (2008)
- News about Southern hip hop artists
- Local Houston Rappers and Hip Hop Artists
- Matt Miller, "Dirty Decade: Rap Music and the U.S. South, 1997-2007", Southern Spaces, 10 June 2008. http://southernspaces.org/2008/dirty-decade-rap-music-and-us-south-1997-2007