Not unity, not "a unique sound", not "out of the trunk hustle mentality"...Just sampling laws. That's it. Keyboard beats are cheap, easy, and disposable. There are no strings attached to them. No natural warmth underneath the digital, just a synth sheet to go over a bed of bass.
This is not a hate status, this is a "think about it" status.
2 facts:
1.I was born in the south
2.I didn't write a single rhyme until I lived in Texas.
Think about it. East Coast (jazz/rock) AND West Coast (funk/soul) hip hop were both sample based. Down south rap didn't really have the same musical roots as the other subgenres. It's the first hip hop subgenre that's based upon an era in hip hop. It's basically early 1980s NYC electro-dance rap with better equipment, harder subject matter, and an accent.
The labels saw an untapped resource and they pounced on the opportunity.
They wouldn't have to worry about anybody talking about politics, much. The conscious to dumb nikka ratio is off down there...so that's two birds with one stone. Dumb nikkas down and make cheap ass Casio 808 synth beats popular. NICE.
Very interesting point. Couple this with the fact that ring tones created a new avenue to sell music so artist from the south were making money hand over fist without having to pay for sample clearances.
link this up, what was this about?

