now trust me I had the same hate attitude for producers from the Dirty South but I gotta give it to them they do have some skills with sequencing.I have been coming into contact with a lot of producers that produce those kind of tracks and they actually know a lot about production too, so I got respect for Mannie Fresh's techniques and concepts. Cash Money was an Army (and Navy) and Juvenile became the first breakout star, finally separating the imprint from a longstanding debt owed to the successes of Master P and No Limit Records, and finally giving the South another voice against hip-hop’s dominant bicoastal narrative.
#Juvenile 400 degreez sample plus#
I challenge you to use what the Dirty south producers do with a lot of their tracks.I mean this (production is an art.but who really cares if it don't sound like Primo or Blaze.LOL I listen to every production style and I can just about emulate it.those beats rely heavily on very good drum programming there are a lot of cats that can make a simple soul beat backdrop, there is not a lot of complexity or changeups for the most part.Dirty South beats are fuggin fun to make plus they test your skills to try and figure out the sequencing.for one reason a lot of people think they are dope is because a lot of times they have to really make up the melodies or replay them along with the bassline.not rely up just fitting in a sample from vinyl which is dope but a lot of the ground work is already done for the track you just have to match the loop or beat to the sample loop. Mannie Fresh is tite.there's a lot of soul sample producers following Kanye and Blaze.but fugg that.