Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Sonic Necessity and Compositional Invention in #BluesHop

View through CrossRef
Rap, the musical element of hip hop culture, has depended on the recorded past to shape its birth, present and, potentially, its future. Founded on a sample-based methodology, the style’s perceived authenticity and sonic impact are largely attributed to the use of phonographic records, and the unique conditions offered by composition within a sampling context. Yet, while the dependence on pre-existing recordings challenges traditional notions of authorship, it also results in unavoidable legal and financial implications for sampling composers who, increasingly, seek alternative ways to infuse the sample-based method with authentic content. But what are the challenges inherent in attempting to compose new material—inspired by traditional forms—while adhering to rap’s unique sonic rationale, aesthetics and methodology? How does composing within a stylistic frame rooted in the past (i.e. the Blues) differ under the pursuit of contemporary sonics and methodological preferences (i.e. hip hop’s sample-based process)? And what are the dynamics of this inter-stylistic synthesis? The article argues that in pursuing specific, stylistically determined sonic objectives, sample-based production facilitates an interactive typology of unique conditions for the composition, appropriation, and divergence of traditional musical forms, incubating era-defying genres that leverage the dynamics of this interaction. The musicological inquiry uses (auto)ethnography reflecting on professional creative practice, in order to investigate compositional problematics specific to the applied blues-hop context, theorize on the nature of inter-stylistic composition, and consider the effects of electronic mediation on genre transformation and stylistic morphing.
Title: Sonic Necessity and Compositional Invention in #BluesHop
Description:
Rap, the musical element of hip hop culture, has depended on the recorded past to shape its birth, present and, potentially, its future.
Founded on a sample-based methodology, the style’s perceived authenticity and sonic impact are largely attributed to the use of phonographic records, and the unique conditions offered by composition within a sampling context.
Yet, while the dependence on pre-existing recordings challenges traditional notions of authorship, it also results in unavoidable legal and financial implications for sampling composers who, increasingly, seek alternative ways to infuse the sample-based method with authentic content.
But what are the challenges inherent in attempting to compose new material—inspired by traditional forms—while adhering to rap’s unique sonic rationale, aesthetics and methodology? How does composing within a stylistic frame rooted in the past (i.
e.
the Blues) differ under the pursuit of contemporary sonics and methodological preferences (i.
e.
hip hop’s sample-based process)? And what are the dynamics of this inter-stylistic synthesis? The article argues that in pursuing specific, stylistically determined sonic objectives, sample-based production facilitates an interactive typology of unique conditions for the composition, appropriation, and divergence of traditional musical forms, incubating era-defying genres that leverage the dynamics of this interaction.
The musicological inquiry uses (auto)ethnography reflecting on professional creative practice, in order to investigate compositional problematics specific to the applied blues-hop context, theorize on the nature of inter-stylistic composition, and consider the effects of electronic mediation on genre transformation and stylistic morphing.

Related Results

Sonic Necessity and Compositional Invention in #BluesHop
Sonic Necessity and Compositional Invention in #BluesHop
Rap, the musical element of hip hop culture, has depended on the recorded past to shape its birth, present and, potentially, its future. Founded on a sample-based methodology, the ...
Prediction of SR-71 sonic booms by THOR and Thomas codes
Prediction of SR-71 sonic booms by THOR and Thomas codes
A major concern of recent sonic boom work has been accounting for the effects of molecular relaxation on sonic boom waveforms. Several new codes accounting for these effects have b...
Local and Global Connotations in Sonic Composition
Local and Global Connotations in Sonic Composition
AbstractAn aspect of the local/global binarism in music regards the cultural identity of the sounds, musical styles and grammars of a composition. This article intends to explore t...
Swamp, Sound, Sign: Reflections on interspecies difference in compositional practice
Swamp, Sound, Sign: Reflections on interspecies difference in compositional practice
Soundscape composition and environmental sound art already imply critiques and negotiations of nature/culture divide and human/non-human difference. This article, along with the co...
Listening and hearing Carmen: Sonic cartographies of struggle in U-Carmen eKhayelitsha (2005)
Listening and hearing Carmen: Sonic cartographies of struggle in U-Carmen eKhayelitsha (2005)
Abstract Situating U-Carmen eKhayelitsha (2005) within a diasporic genealogy of black opera that privileges black sonic/aural epistemologies, I am interested in how these knowledge...
Sonic Postcards
Sonic Postcards
Sonic Postcard 1: From Chelsea Children's Hospital School, London, created by the pupils from the Collingham Gardens site, facilitated by Jo Lucas. Sonic Postcard 2: From Ashcott P...
Hip Bop
Hip Bop
This article explores Afrofuturist countermemory and alternative history, and the potential of these concepts to be applied to the legacy of Miles Davis’s final fusion concept. Thr...
Premsagar (1810) and Orientalist Narratives of the “Invention” Of Modern Hindi
Premsagar (1810) and Orientalist Narratives of the “Invention” Of Modern Hindi
What exactly was invented when the language department of Bhakka was formally instituted at Fort William College in 1801 and Lallu Jee Lal was selected as the first Braj Bhakka sch...

Back to Top