Duh, Obviously. The genre is more than just the sound, it's also the lyrical content. T.I's 03 album Trap Muzik popularized the merge of the trap sound with the street subject matter of trapping.
You is right. But yet all credits go to the artist. I hope someday WE would recognize the hard work producers make, to make beats sound unique on each hit song
The triplet rapping flows came from that, but i can't say the production style came from that. The Memphis peopme werent really talking about trap too much either. It wsd really just their flow and their rpested phrases for the hooks that got coppied in Trap.
UGK started it subject matter wise in '88/'92, T.I. brought it to mainstream in '01, and Jeezy/Shawty Redd gave it a signature sound in 05. The rest is history.
Shout out to Zaytoven another innovator of the trap sound. We didn't have enough time to talk about him in our video, but he produced tracks like the Gucci Mane and Young Jeezy hit, Icy in 2005!
Gangsta Pat 8 Ball 3/6 Then had a hint of it from Chicago with Crucial Conflict. That's why BONE upsets me.......because their noises and mumbling have NOTHING to do with Trap Music and they keep wanting to want CREDIT.
@@SoundFieldPBS It would be awesome if you guys looked into how the 808 bass sound has since been developed by trap producers into a whole family of sounds, like the spinz, the plug, etc.. They don't need no sub
Producers back then used to have tags too like David Banner. Rappers also shouted out a lot of producers in the early 2000s. I believe names like Mike Will and Metro became famous because of how catchy their tags were and/ or how their beats set them apart from others
yeah honestly most music journalism channels on youtube are a pain to watch because everybody with a camera thinks they can be a critic these days but these guys are actual MUSICIANS and you only really understand something once you make it so big ups sound field *clap emojis here*
Loving this channel! A perfect mix of nerdy information and dope creativity. Love that you show how technology, geography, culture and musical evolution intersect to make trap music what it is. Keep it UP!
Even though the word trap was invented and used by artist in ATL in the mid 90s, but I think the sound was founded in Memphis. They used a bpm of around 100-150 and the drums on their TRs was playing in half time for the bounce with those dirty hi hat rolls. The low quality tape sound actually made the 808s sound distorted despite it coming directly from the sequencer. However this is the main reason why you can't deny they originated the sound: The triplet flow was their sound since 1991. (the flow that most contemporaries are mumbling such as Migos) Some notable artist that have that sound is Triple 6 Mafia (now Three 6 Mafia), Tommy Wright III, and Dj Zirk. But can't deny the fact ATL and other southern rappers have shaped the sound of what we hear across the globe. Hell, I even heard Indian songs influenced by it.
@@NiggamakesbeatsfrYou got producers in Atlanta who helped shape the Trap sound that are from Memphis. Drumma Boy who produced Trap or Die by Young Jeezy as well as Jazze Pha who produced for Jeezy and TI. Let's not for David Banner producing Rubberband Man for TI. He is from Mississippi. Y'all ATLiars got to stop putting on this front like y'all created this. You were given the Pedistol but you wouldn't have gotten where you are today without us!! You took from every city in the South and lied to the world. The Truth is coming out now!! 💯💯
The actual sound of trap music was absolutely 36 Mafia, Gangsta Pat, Tommy Wright III and old school Memphis Crunk/horrorcore artists. From the dark atmospheric sounds, to the flows and rhyme patterns, even the melodic deliveries, the lofi asthetic, the horror imagery. Quit over looking these pioneers when talking about trap.
Can't forget about the Miami bass sound. I honestly think that was the daddy of trap. DJ Magic Mike, DJ Fury, 2 Live Crew (Luke) are some examples. 808 all day on these albums with fast hi hats, deep bass, and a tempo built for dancing/ twerking at the club
I remember I used to hate trap because the only time I heard it was when it was played on phones with no Bass. I heard it once when I let someone borrow my speaker at school, and I'm like, "This actually has groove...?" Crazy, man
This was very educational. I know that nowadays almost every rapper is doing TRAP, so I wanted to learn about it's creation and composition. Thanks for the information.
this genre has become the foundation of contemporary pop music in Italy. it's by far the most popular style of music with the younger generations of listeners and artists alike. check out Tran Tran by Sfera Ebbasta or virtually anything by Ghali for the top-level, safe stuff, which then trickles down into more violent music that correlates to various mafia / camorra aesthetics the deeper you go down the rabbit hole.
I just love this channel, you're both excellent musicians and great at explaining, the guests are super cool and informative, the aesthetic and editing is on point... Thank you for this high quality content :D
I know the sound of the hihat is fromt the 808 .. but i cant help but feel like the MPC is the reason the beats got made the way they do with the roll function and the way to devide that .. also the ability to pitch the kick on the 16 pads.. it all just comes so easy on an MPC.
Remember that the 808 snare and hit hat rolls originally came from using the Akai MPC 60 repeat button. That was the easy way, and the influence has been around since the late 80s.
OK for real... Wow!!!! You interviewed the one and only DJ Freddy Fresh on the 808. Outstanding! You got yourself a Like and a Sub from this Minnesota Musician.
Here’s an absolutely genuine question. How can I get involved in helping create this show? It’s been three episodes and it’s already my favorite thing on youtube
Probably the most important part of the trap beat is that 808 bass. That's what drives the songs, and makes us bop our heads and dance the orange justice. This video was amazing. Those Nahre Sol samples are something else. Keep them videos coming!!! 😁😁😁
Does anyone knows what's the name of the program (software), they are running on their pc? Looks fantastic, by i have no clue on what is called (7:30).
Oh. Em. Gee. lol I am so excited to find this channel!! A PBS Digital Studios channel about contemporary music. Hell fucking yeah. Everything PBS Digital Studios is amazing.
The thing with this beat you've made, helps me recognize the meaning of what makes it sound like the genre Trap. It's got a kick to it yet that call and reply music in the background really helps sell what makes it intoxicating.
ok ok, this is the “Trap Genre” in rap. there’s also EMD trap, actually it’s more like HybridTrap at this point, which a is 80% tryna be Dubstep but failing.
Diplo is a big pioneer in the "Trapstep" Express Yourself is the 1st song I heard like that, Beatport labels that style "Twerk" which is smart 'cause that's more of a Bouncy-pattern not the typical ride and blow your trunk-sub out-type beat! There's also Trap house (DJ Snake, Party Favor, Carnage) EDM Trap is such a blanket-term I'm a DJ so I like to get technical like that
This was incredibly interesting. I don't have the first idea about rap music, but when I watched the video I noticed how familiar that style is to me, just from pop music on the radio, I guess. So thank you for giving me some background!
I still like rage against the machine over trap, but from the south I grew up on goodie and OutKast. If your going to listen to hip hop start there and turn the radio off, new hip hop of hop flop is awful. Sounds good tho. I miss DNB.
I would argue that the scene going down in Memphis during the 90's had a lot of influence on trap. Gucci mane even said that he was influenced by Tommy Wright III.
Metro Boomin seems like such a sweet ordinary guy for someone who has been so hugely influential on the last ten years of music. I can't believe I've heard his tag like dozens and dozens of times and never even knew his name though. And yall's track at the end was amazing. I kinda hope that's gonna be a somewhat regular feature of the channel
That was extremely interesting!! I loved to know that story of the pretty bad electronic boards just getting trashed and picked up to make a new genre! The song that you made is really good and i might look for more trap too.
If you're looking for more music to listen to, you should check out our spotify playlist for this episode. open.spotify.com/user/7oy5zhs4q1e3hn3rbriego1xd/playlist/7F9DryvLL9seMWIvMZDLVg?si=_AqgZHiAS_6E-tyuOjjNAg
Whilst this genre of music isn't something I enjoy and I thought that I'd click off the video before it ended, I stayed around till the end. You guys always make some interesting videos.
I think trap is quite diverse that it can appeal to lots of people but then I probably see genres that aren't considered trap, but influenced by trap as kind of trap. But it's understandable if it doesn't appeal to you.
This right here! Thank you! I was trying to explain to someone the sound that I liked, but didn't have any of the vocabulary to convey my meaning. Didn't know it had a name. I've got words! Great video.
2:48 I always wondered what that sound was called. The cowbell sound was HUGE in 80s & 90s West Coast gangsta rap. I still hear it to this day but not nearly as much. #themoreyouknow
Should have mentioned Memphis artist like DJ Spanish Fly, DJ Squeaky, Tommy Wright lll and of coarse Triple Six Mafia. Also a shout out to producers of the ‘Miami bass’ sound. They were using triplet hi-hats in the 80s.
HAVE TO BE HONEST HERE 36MAFIA IS THE 1ST TRAP SOUND I EVER HEARD APART FROM WATCHING HUSTLE AND FLOW HAHA.... BUT THE 1ST PERSON WHO I EVER HEARD ACTUALLY SAY TRAP, WAS T.I - ON THT TRACK "DOPE BOYS IN THE TRAP"
I used to dislike the Trap sound and its pervasiveness in modern popular music, but now that I understand where it came from, I can truly appreciate Trap as its own unique genre.
Id like to add that Ring Shout from Plantation Singing was the original Trap Music..If you really wanna give credit to where credit is due. Ring Shouts were used as Messages passed from Plantation to Plantation about warnings, Info, and or just messages in Code about anything that was about to be a trap for someone on another plantation. I guess we are still using our own form of code as always, and always will. I love It!
The term trap was coined in the mid 90s by outkast and goodie mobb but lets be clear here...t.i. did create the term trap muzik. No point in debating the facts here people. Trap muzik august 19 2003. Ima leave this here....
This is the first sound from you i can honestly say sounds original. That was real music, not the usual "we are making Foux music" stuff ya'll do. 10/10. I want that beat on loop for a full track so i can study with.add some "hey!" Every now and then with some lines relevant to something you're passionate about and you have a hit. Good job
big ups. excuse my ignorance here. were any of these dj's/producers prominent in the strip bars of Columbus, GA. My understanding was that that scene also contributed. for the ladies dancing with isoluions. cuz i remember only hearing trap back in 2000 when stationed at Ft. Benning.
Three 6 mafia early records, before phonk era is a real dark trap music, hands down, DJ PAUL JUICY J SHITTTTAFUCCKAAAA Project Pat is GOAT too, nowadays even popstars like drake baits Pat's flow
Jeezy is credited, along with fellow Atlanta-based rappers T.I. and Gucci Mane, for helping to pioneer and popularize trap music with a mainstream audience.
u can listen to late 70s early 80s rock and hear the same, but in the urban landscape all credit goes to Memphis producers, 3-6 & atl producer shawty red for reviving it in the mid 00's.
You've forgotten (EDM) trap beats from 2012/13, which has made the trap genre really well known. Baauer, Yellow Claw, Hucci, Mr. Carmack, Diplo, Dj Snake, UZ, Stooki Sound, Just Blaze, Tropkillaz, Wayvee, Dj Carnage, Flosstradamus, RL Grime, Gent & Jawns, GTA, and hundreds more. Before that nobody knew the term "trap music" in Europe. Only through this genre and various remixes was Trap known. There were not even any commercials with this genre, only 3 years later you could hear commercials with a snare from modern producers, that had made me so proud. In my opinion, this is an important reason why Trap also made a name for himself in hip-hop.
Yep artists like Uz, hucci was my 2nd trap xperience after 36mafia u can hear the connection between those genres.... But edm trap is more danceable or a club thing...so we can say they are some differences between these trap artists and some others..
It's existed and was popular well before EDM's 'discovery' of it. Just because Europe wasn't aware of it doesn't mean that it didn't exist or hadn't taken flight.
@7:16 divide all those numbers in half for the correct bpms. It may be easier to work with 126 bpm as the tempo when using software to produce beats but the tempo is actually 63 bpm.
im a producer and the sound itself was invented by 36 mafia its in those dark classical beats and 2-4 clap pattern outkast and goodie mob might have been the first to talk trap but the sound itself was made in memphis
I know my damn history I remember when all of this happened it was DJ ZIRK early 90s DJ SOUND early 90s THREE 6 MAFIA early 90s DJ TOOMP early 2000s SHAWTY REDD Late 90s early 2000s D.RICH Late 90s early 2000s ZAYTOVEN early 2000s KE ON THE TRACK early 2000s LEX LUGER early 2000s SOUTHSIDE early 2000s METRO BOOMIN early 2000s Also that famous trap snare is from Polow da don sample library and first appeared in Field Mob - Baby Bend Over (Look it up for a shocker) and it got put onto a drum kit called The Trap Music Drum kit ThaJokerBeatz Edition (probably several more before this one)
great work. toomp's snares will always come to mind when i think of trap. playing trap hi hats are way easier on real drums rather than pads. solid digging.enjoyed the vid.
"Head Like a Hole".... what a great song. My son is now deceased...but raising him in the 90's opened up awareness of industrial rock....and l LOVE it. This particular song is great to sing and belting out those lyrics just seems to "cure what ails you"....and you can just move on with your day. Still a particularly BIG FAN OF "TOOL"... massive stuff on all levels. Thanks for the reminder!!!
Why doesn't anybody else see this connection? Bass music was huge down south (including Atlanta) via Miami. 2 live did "Get it Girl" w/ that triplet sound before ANYBODY (1986). MC Shy D repping from Atlanta was signed to Luke Skywalker records (1987) and pulled that sound into Atlanta that helped spread it to the rest of the south (Memphis, Louisiana). Just do a quick search #facts
I came in ready to hate on this video, but I think its an alright introduction to the subject. Kinda like a broad strokes kinda thing. Like the lady in the video(forgot her name), when you grow up with these sounds as a cultural backbone and then see it transformed into something almost unrecognizable and stripped of its essence and soul that made it a powerful unifying force in your community at one time, it can be frustrating. I remember saying to my brother a couple years ago when 'trap music' became a thing, to us growing up, it wasn't trap music, it was just music. All we had around for the most part until the internet became readily available and fast enough for most people to go looking into other stuff easily. Personally I woulda mentioned Boosie and Foxx and all them Louisiana dudes, (there were others besides Jeezy and them obviously), but thats probably due to my regional preference. Flauge too, of course. But yeah, I think they showed a fair amount of respect on a subject they obviously aren't particularly versed in, unlike some other channels I feel like try to tell ME what rap is all about like they're experts cause they have a black friend with twisties that put them on to a mediocre Gucci mixtape from '09 and they remember hearing Roses and Bombs Over Baghdad growing up. Anyways... lol.
TheJetsdoit thanks for sharing your story!! We aren’t experts in all genres of music but we are definitely here to appreciate all forms of music. Also we are grateful to talk to experts that help us keep our perspective in line ✌🏽
"When you grow up with these sounds as a cultural backbone and then see it transformed into something almost unrecognizable and stripped of its essence and soul that made it a powerful unifying force in your community at one time, it can be frustrating" I don't see it that way at all, my man. Nothing's happening to any of the music you listened to back then. It's just that it's inspiring some more music to be produced, and a lot of that new stuff is a lot more cross-cultural. No one can take what is or what was from you. That music you had growing up - it'll always be exactly as it was, and exactly as it has been all these years. The newer more popular things inspired by it though? That's just art, man. Everything's mixed and mashed in a never-ending continuum. Artists are influenced by and borrow from the people who came before them. They meld their own experience into the old stuff to make something new. The music you heard growing up is your community's experience, but the fact that newer artists' experiences were different doesn't mean they don't have the right to be influenced by parts of what helped make yours. Remembering Bombs Over Baghdad and some mid-rate Gucci growing up doesn't make their influences any less valid than your community's more singularly-focused purist ones. Seems to me that that's just an elitist way to think about it, that elevates no one and only really has the potential to stifle the creativity and experimentation that breeds new music. I can see how it'd be irritating to constantly see people claiming their new stuff was totally original though - never crediting the artists who obviously influenced them, since yeah, it _is_ all a continuum, and none of us can make music now without owing our product in some ways to those who came before us - those who laid down our influences and established the framework within which we're able to keep making new things. Idk man. Just some thoughts.
This was really interesting. I've loved trap music since Young Jeezy days but it definitely took some time for me to realize when he was shouting out "Shawty Red on the track" on "Who Dat" who the hell that was! Now it's so common for the producers tag to be in the beginning of songs it's nice they get their credit too!
Trap Sound was invented by the producers not by the rappers
Duh, Obviously. The genre is more than just the sound, it's also the lyrical content. T.I's 03 album Trap Muzik popularized the merge of the trap sound with the street subject matter of trapping.
👍
A-dam-shame Dirty Game 4 years before Ti thats where he got it from.@@PrimeraEspadaStark
You is right. But yet all credits go to the artist. I hope someday WE would recognize the hard work producers make, to make beats sound unique on each hit song
@@ibaadali813 South Korea is way better about that, but even they could still be better.
The legends always go without being recognized... Three 6 Mafia
At least Wikipedia credits DJ Paul as a pioneer
Memphis originated this
@R.A.M. Ikr!!
Tfre not trap people know the difference between gangster rap n trap music.
word. Tommy too
trap is really dat memphis sound. Three 6 Mafia
Did they really do this whole video and not mention Mystic Stylez?
this video shouldve talked about tommy wright iii
Thank you man .
@richard smoker i agree!!!
The triplet rapping flows came from that, but i can't say the production style came from that. The Memphis peopme werent really talking about trap too much either. It wsd really just their flow and their rpested phrases for the hooks that got coppied in Trap.
It was 36 mafia. Grew up in Memphis, this was the sound in the mid 90s. They even made an oscar winning movie about it before it was popular.
Three Six Mafia....... Discussion over! I have all the tapes. DJ Paul started the groove and it's used today.
Ugk since 92
@@ronniethornton8548 www.google.com/url?sa=i&source=web&cd=&ved=2ahUKEwic0dz0xpjhAhWlm-AKHc37C_UQzPwBegQIARAC&url=https%3A%2F%2Fuproxx.com%2Fhiphop%2Fpimp-c-death-ten-year-anniversary-legacy-ugk%2F&psig=AOvVaw091fUh8qsDyh1NLWkWcLpV&ust=1553440487421279
UGK started it subject matter wise in '88/'92, T.I. brought it to mainstream in '01, and Jeezy/Shawty Redd gave it a signature sound in 05. The rest is history.
+Doctor's Order KURTIS MANTRONIK invented trap! Period!!!
@@qtippz MANTRONIK invented TRAP! 1985.
It's a shame the producers that start this don't get the credit the deserve...
Shout out to Zaytoven another innovator of the trap sound. We didn't have enough time to talk about him in our video, but he produced tracks like the Gucci Mane and Young Jeezy hit, Icy in 2005!
Thanks for the amazing content!!!!
This doesn’t really explain the actual spread of it though...
Y'all didn't have enough time on a UA-cam doc
Um Dj Toomp was already buzzing b4 Zay on the trap sound
@@calvinginya718 t.i was buzzing before Gucci on the trap sound, So what's your point.
Trap music was heavily influenced from Memphis Rap and generally from memphis area.
Three six mafia?
no
Gangsta Pat
8 Ball
3/6
Then had a hint of it from Chicago with Crucial Conflict.
That's why BONE upsets me.......because their noises and mumbling have NOTHING to do with Trap Music and they keep wanting to want CREDIT.
Nah it’s from ATL
I love the format. Although it is kinda blasphemous to mention the origins of the modern Trap sound and not mention Three 6 Mafia.
Memphis was only mentioned once..
Pastor Troy not being mentioned was shocking
@walt234234 ikr
Blasphemous is the best way to describe it
Really started in Memphis but only the Real know that
Tay Keith is from Memphis and he's got that grimy-old Memphis sound
ua-cam.com/video/dga7SqXN__U/v-deo.html
Check out my Memphis Sound
Three 6
@TruMusic89 no it was influence from Memphis so it started there.Dont try to twist it
The feeling when the 808 bass is so low you can't hear it on your speakers.
D:
Isaiah Sugar yes for this episode I recommend watching with a Sub!
@@SoundFieldPBS It would be awesome if you guys looked into how the 808 bass sound has since been developed by trap producers into a whole family of sounds, like the spinz, the plug, etc.. They don't need no sub
@@xiiibc9246 Fr the 808 they using weak /trash af lmao
Trap was meant for being played in ur cars smh
Producers back then used to have tags too like David Banner. Rappers also shouted out a lot of producers in the early 2000s. I believe names like Mike Will and Metro became famous because of how catchy their tags were and/ or how their beats set them apart from others
I love seeing you guys compose music as a way to explain the genre! Taking that extra step is what makes you stand out from other YT channels
David Shi thanks David! We like to think that’s our shows super power!
yeah honestly most music journalism channels on youtube are a pain to watch because everybody with a camera thinks they can be a critic these days but these guys are actual MUSICIANS and you only really understand something once you make it so big ups sound field *clap emojis here*
@@SoundFieldPBS but the bpm 126 on the demo track...The drums are actually at half-time?
Shout out to PBS talking about young black males in a good way. I would never think in a million years PBS would be talking about trap music.
Man, the people you have for your videos are the icing on the cake and I love how much background you two give. This is a real music lesson!
Thanks for watching. We are excited to learn about all kinds of music!
Learning music is also learning about culture! Keep it up!
Yooo PBS is dope af. No matter the content, news, history, PBS has always had my best interest in mind.
Loving this channel! A perfect mix of nerdy information and dope creativity. Love that you show how technology, geography, culture and musical evolution intersect to make trap music what it is. Keep it UP!
Above The Noise all the love to Above The Noise!
The term came from Atlanta but alot if the musical style came from and was influenced by Memphis artists of the 1990s
TR-808 a legendary drum machine. Used in everything from hip hop, pop, dance to R&B ❤️
Even though the word trap was invented and used by artist in ATL in the mid 90s, but I think the sound was founded in Memphis. They used a bpm of around 100-150 and the drums on their TRs was playing in half time for the bounce with those dirty hi hat rolls. The low quality tape sound actually made the 808s sound distorted despite it coming directly from the sequencer. However this is the main reason why you can't deny they originated the sound: The triplet flow was their sound since 1991. (the flow that most contemporaries are mumbling such as Migos)
Some notable artist that have that sound is Triple 6 Mafia (now Three 6 Mafia), Tommy Wright III, and Dj Zirk.
But can't deny the fact ATL and other southern rappers have shaped the sound of what we hear across the globe. Hell, I even heard Indian songs influenced by it.
Nah, it originated from the ATL with the rap flows coming from Memphis
@@Niggamakesbeatsfr nah, it originated in Memphis with ATL taking it to the next level.
@@trollkilla7681 it was created by producers in Atlanta, not Memphis. It took elements from the Memphis SOUND ya, but
@@NiggamakesbeatsfrSo taking elements from something else and calling it your own is basically stealing.
@@NiggamakesbeatsfrYou got producers in Atlanta who helped shape the Trap sound that are from Memphis. Drumma Boy who produced Trap or Die by Young Jeezy as well as Jazze Pha who produced for Jeezy and TI. Let's not for David Banner producing Rubberband Man for TI. He is from Mississippi. Y'all ATLiars got to stop putting on this front like y'all created this. You were given the Pedistol but you wouldn't have gotten where you are today without us!! You took from every city in the South and lied to the world. The Truth is coming out now!! 💯💯
The actual sound of trap music was absolutely 36 Mafia, Gangsta Pat, Tommy Wright III and old school Memphis Crunk/horrorcore artists. From the dark atmospheric sounds, to the flows and rhyme patterns, even the melodic deliveries, the lofi asthetic, the horror imagery. Quit over looking these pioneers when talking about trap.
Can't forget about the Miami bass sound. I honestly think that was the daddy of trap. DJ Magic Mike, DJ Fury, 2 Live Crew (Luke) are some examples. 808 all day on these albums with fast hi hats, deep bass, and a tempo built for dancing/ twerking at the club
memphis is the father of trap music, search any old memphis song and speed it up from 1.00 to 1.25, instant trap beat
I feel atlanta had improved that sound significantly in the 90s and helped cultivate it into what trap became
I remember I used to hate trap because the only time I heard it was when it was played on phones with no Bass. I heard it once when I let someone borrow my speaker at school, and I'm like, "This actually has groove...?" Crazy, man
bass is always important
This was very educational. I know that nowadays almost every rapper is doing TRAP, so I wanted to learn about it's creation and composition. Thanks for the information.
They didnt even mentioned memphis tho?!
Memphis started trap music #901
this genre has become the foundation of contemporary pop music in Italy. it's by far the most popular style of music with the younger generations of listeners and artists alike.
check out Tran Tran by Sfera Ebbasta or virtually anything by Ghali for the top-level, safe stuff, which then trickles down into more violent music that correlates to various mafia / camorra aesthetics the deeper you go down the rabbit hole.
sfera and ghali are from the mid 2010s tho, definitely not the firsts
Cap
La S la F la E la R la A
Cerco di vedermi un video americano e mi trovo i fan di Sfera pure qua ahaha
I just love this channel, you're both excellent musicians and great at explaining, the guests are super cool and informative, the aesthetic and editing is on point...
Thank you for this high quality content :D
Simrasil we really appreciate you!
I know the sound of the hihat is fromt the 808 .. but i cant help but feel like the MPC is the reason the beats got made the way they do with the roll function and the way to devide that .. also the ability to pitch the kick on the 16 pads.. it all just comes so easy on an MPC.
Remember that the 808 snare and hit hat rolls originally came from using the Akai MPC 60 repeat button. That was the easy way, and the influence has been around since the late 80s.
OK for real... Wow!!!! You interviewed the one and only DJ Freddy Fresh on the 808. Outstanding! You got yourself a Like and a Sub from this Minnesota Musician.
Here’s an absolutely genuine question. How can I get involved in helping create this show? It’s been three episodes and it’s already my favorite thing on youtube
This is awesome to hear! You can email us at soundfield@rewire.org
Grew up in Memphis during the 90s, I was deep into Memphis rap. Totally Memphis sound.
Damn, that beat they made was so dope. I love the subtle spookeyness of the additional instrumentation.
"Who invented Drill Music" up next ?
💯💯💯
Waka
Chief keef lol now thats the shit i dont like
We all know who invented it sosa chief keef the godfather. Chicago did
UK drill beats are nice in my opinion but I ain’t a fan of the rapping
Probably the most important part of the trap beat is that 808 bass. That's what drives the songs, and makes us bop our heads and dance the orange justice.
This video was amazing. Those Nahre Sol samples are something else. Keep them videos coming!!! 😁😁😁
Tony Lancer Nahre killed it on the samples! It was a fun moment introducing her to artists like Waka Flocka Flame and Future
it's the hi-hat and it was perfected by DJ Paul. Ridiculous to completely leave him out of this
Technically it’s an 808 kick drum that is pitched down. There is only an 808 drum machine, not a bass synth.
Trap associated with car culture and played in ur car
Does anyone knows what's the name of the program (software), they are running on their pc?
Looks fantastic, by i have no clue on what is called (7:30).
That last beat is dripping sauce
Oh. Em. Gee. lol I am so excited to find this channel!! A PBS Digital Studios channel about contemporary music. Hell fucking yeah. Everything PBS Digital Studios is amazing.
The thing with this beat you've made, helps me recognize the meaning of what makes it sound like the genre Trap.
It's got a kick to it yet that call and reply music in the background really helps sell what makes it intoxicating.
ok ok, this is the “Trap Genre” in rap.
there’s also EMD trap, actually it’s more like HybridTrap at this point, which a is 80% tryna be Dubstep but failing.
Diplo is a big pioneer in the "Trapstep" Express Yourself is the 1st song I heard like that, Beatport labels that style "Twerk" which is smart 'cause that's more of a Bouncy-pattern not the typical ride and blow your trunk-sub out-type beat! There's also Trap house (DJ Snake, Party Favor, Carnage) EDM Trap is such a blanket-term I'm a DJ so I like to get technical like that
This was incredibly interesting. I don't have the first idea about rap music, but when I watched the video I noticed how familiar that style is to me, just from pop music on the radio, I guess. So thank you for giving me some background!
Jana Deppe we are so happy to be able to provide context to what you’ve been hearing on the radio. We hope you keep learning with us!
Shawty Redd invented the best trap beats tho
Even though rap music is almost never my choice to listen to, I enjoyed that. Because I learned something :) keep it up chaps.
Thanks for watching, and we are glad you learned something! We are here to appreciate all kinds of music.
I still like rage against the machine over trap, but from the south I grew up on goodie and OutKast. If your going to listen to hip hop start there and turn the radio off, new hip hop of hop flop is awful. Sounds good tho. I miss DNB.
Do you want a medal for "not listening to rap"?
@@SoundFieldPBS "We are here to appreciate all kinds of music." #admirable
Y'all attackin this dude for sayin he doesn't listen to the type of music you guys like lmao. Wack.
I would argue that the scene going down in Memphis during the 90's had a lot of influence on trap. Gucci mane even said that he was influenced by Tommy Wright III.
Metro Boomin seems like such a sweet ordinary guy for someone who has been so hugely influential on the last ten years of music. I can't believe I've heard his tag like dozens and dozens of times and never even knew his name though.
And yall's track at the end was amazing. I kinda hope that's gonna be a somewhat regular feature of the channel
Geli we create an original piece of music for each episode ! You can hear them all on our soundcloud linked in the description 💞
Mantronix innovated that hi hat pattern on the 808 back in the 80's...
Thank you, only old heads know the whole story
@@namtaru1 True Dat!!!
yes sir! "Fresh Is The Word" 1985
That was extremely interesting!! I loved to know that story of the pretty bad electronic boards just getting trashed and picked up to make a new genre! The song that you made is really good and i might look for more trap too.
If you're looking for more music to listen to, you should check out our spotify playlist for this episode. open.spotify.com/user/7oy5zhs4q1e3hn3rbriego1xd/playlist/7F9DryvLL9seMWIvMZDLVg?si=_AqgZHiAS_6E-tyuOjjNAg
And those pretty bad electronic boards are being sold for thousands of dollars today.
Juicy j ,Project Pat, Dj Paul they started this groove before 1995 U can find some tapes on youtube !
Whilst this genre of music isn't something I enjoy and I thought that I'd click off the video before it ended, I stayed around till the end. You guys always make some interesting videos.
Glad you stayed with us! What do you think it was that kept you around?
Learning something new about music, plus two great hosts, makes it worth staying till the end :)
I think trap is quite diverse that it can appeal to lots of people but then I probably see genres that aren't considered trap, but influenced by trap as kind of trap.
But it's understandable if it doesn't appeal to you.
This right here! Thank you! I was trying to explain to someone the sound that I liked, but didn't have any of the vocabulary to convey my meaning. Didn't know it had a name. I've got words! Great video.
2:48 I always wondered what that sound was called. The cowbell sound was HUGE in 80s & 90s West Coast gangsta rap. I still hear it to this day but not nearly as much. #themoreyouknow
You can still hear it in Jay Rock's songs
Should have mentioned Memphis artist like DJ Spanish Fly, DJ Squeaky, Tommy Wright lll and of coarse Triple Six Mafia. Also a shout out to producers of the ‘Miami bass’ sound. They were using triplet hi-hats in the 80s.
152 bpm be banging. Ask Sizzle 808 mafia boss
HAVE TO BE HONEST HERE 36MAFIA IS THE 1ST TRAP SOUND I EVER HEARD APART FROM WATCHING HUSTLE AND FLOW HAHA.... BUT THE 1ST PERSON WHO I EVER HEARD ACTUALLY SAY TRAP, WAS T.I - ON THT TRACK "DOPE BOYS IN THE TRAP"
I used to dislike the Trap sound and its pervasiveness in modern popular music, but now that I understand where it came from, I can truly appreciate Trap as its own unique genre.
Id like to add that Ring Shout from Plantation Singing was the original Trap Music..If you really wanna give credit to where credit is due. Ring Shouts were used as Messages passed from Plantation to Plantation about warnings, Info, and or just messages in Code about anything that was about to be a trap for someone on another plantation. I guess we are still using our own form of code as always, and always will. I love It!
The term trap was coined in the mid 90s by outkast and goodie mobb but lets be clear here...t.i. did create the term trap muzik. No point in debating the facts here people. Trap muzik august 19 2003. Ima leave this here....
Classic album
TheHotSpot facts. ♨️🏀🏋🏾♂️
Playa fly was the first person to say "trap" on a trap song from his underground tapes
nwa - dopeman & ice t - im your pusher are the first "trap" songs in the 80s. playa fly the first one to actually use dat term in the 90s
@@lee_drifting dude I'ma just bh I'm the pusher ain't a trap song. Just because it got Hi hats don't make it a trap song
Heartbreaks and 808
Boom like an 808.
808 State.
This piece of equipment is part of pop culture language in a way no one could have predicted
got chills at the Trap Trinity 😍 3:42
I have been watching your channel a few days now. You two have great topics. I'm entertained and educated at the same time!
Tfw a classical pianist makes better beats than most commercial producer
What Universe?
@@babyzorilla Any and all probably.
@@bicualexandru246 I don't think so if they did classical music would be on the top of the charts but guess what it ain't
9:16 change your smoke alarm battery!! Always smoke alarm dead batteries going off!
“So now you back in the trap, just that trap, yo on and marinate on that” Big Boi “Spottieottiedopealicicious”
Big factz
Hollywood Cole !!!
wow that was amazing , jus found this site out of a comment I heard abut Trap music and low and behold an education. well done!
lex luger connect dirty south sound and crunk, orchetral and synth sound together
This is the first sound from you i can honestly say sounds original.
That was real music, not the usual "we are making Foux music" stuff ya'll do.
10/10. I want that beat on loop for a full track so i can study with.add some "hey!" Every now and then with some lines relevant to something you're passionate about and you have a hit.
Good job
appreciated your doing very good work and informative 👍👍👍
big ups. excuse my ignorance here. were any of these dj's/producers prominent in the strip bars of Columbus, GA. My understanding was that that scene also contributed. for the ladies dancing with isoluions. cuz i remember only hearing trap back in 2000 when stationed at Ft. Benning.
Three 6 mafia early records, before phonk era is a real dark trap music, hands down, DJ PAUL JUICY J SHITTTTAFUCCKAAAA
Project Pat is GOAT too, nowadays even popstars like drake baits Pat's flow
Jeezy is credited, along with fellow Atlanta-based rappers T.I. and Gucci Mane, for helping to pioneer and popularize trap music with a mainstream audience.
Great content! (Edit: paradiddles, double strokes, ect. are a must for drummers wanting to play hi-hat trap sounds)
u can listen to late 70s early 80s rock and hear the same, but in the urban landscape all credit goes to Memphis producers, 3-6 & atl producer shawty red for reviving it in the mid 00's.
You've forgotten (EDM) trap beats from 2012/13, which has made the trap genre really well known. Baauer, Yellow Claw, Hucci, Mr. Carmack, Diplo, Dj Snake, UZ, Stooki Sound, Just Blaze, Tropkillaz, Wayvee, Dj Carnage, Flosstradamus, RL Grime, Gent & Jawns, GTA, and hundreds more. Before that nobody knew the term "trap music" in Europe. Only through this genre and various remixes was Trap known. There were not even any commercials with this genre, only 3 years later you could hear commercials with a snare from modern producers, that had made me so proud. In my opinion, this is an important reason why Trap also made a name for himself in hip-hop.
Yep artists like Uz, hucci was my 2nd trap xperience after 36mafia u can hear the connection between those genres.... But edm trap is more danceable or a club thing...so we can say they are some differences between these trap artists and some others..
Hell no. the People in EDM pretty much stole it from the HipHop community.
It's existed and was popular well before EDM's 'discovery' of it. Just because Europe wasn't aware of it doesn't mean that it didn't exist or hadn't taken flight.
Well-known outside the Hip-hop crowd, I was about 7 or 8 when I 1st heard T.I.
Your so ignorant
@7:16 divide all those numbers in half for the correct bpms. It may be easier to work with 126 bpm as the tempo when using software to produce beats but the tempo is actually 63 bpm.
Great video, this is my fav channel on UA-cam. But not enough Nahre :)
this is among many of the most awesome things i have seen on pbs!!
Started in MEMPHIS, TN in the late 80s to early 90s... Was BUCK music. Made it to ATL and it went from there. Crunk, Trap, etc...
Ugk since 92
@@ronniethornton8548 they got it from Memphis, too, I believe
3 6 Mafia - Paul With Da 45 (1994)
im a producer and the sound itself was invented by 36 mafia its in those dark classical beats and 2-4 clap pattern outkast and goodie mob might have been the first to talk trap but the sound itself was made in memphis
Loving this series. Hope to see more from you guys! :)
Thanks for watching!
what program is he usuing?.
I need it for a hw and i dont know how to creat a trap beat
I know my damn history I remember when all of this happened it was
DJ ZIRK early 90s
DJ SOUND early 90s
THREE 6 MAFIA early 90s
DJ TOOMP early 2000s
SHAWTY REDD Late 90s early 2000s
D.RICH Late 90s early 2000s
ZAYTOVEN early 2000s
KE ON THE TRACK early 2000s
LEX LUGER early 2000s
SOUTHSIDE early 2000s
METRO BOOMIN early 2000s
Also that famous trap snare is from Polow da don sample library and first appeared in Field Mob - Baby Bend Over (Look it up for a shocker) and it got put onto a drum kit called The Trap Music Drum kit ThaJokerBeatz Edition (probably several more before this one)
YUP U AWREADY KNOW
great work. toomp's snares will always come to mind when i think of trap. playing trap hi hats are way easier on real drums rather than pads. solid digging.enjoyed the vid.
You can also hear that kind of hi hat rhythm on Nine Inch Nail's Head Like A Hole. Rather odd as that has very little to do with trap music.
It's not odd it speaks volumes about how wide spread the sound is
Mantronix "Fresh Is The Word"--- 1985
"Head Like a Hole".... what a great song. My son is now deceased...but raising him in the 90's opened up awareness of industrial rock....and l LOVE it. This particular song is great to sing and belting out those lyrics just seems to "cure what ails you"....and you can just move on with your day.
Still a particularly BIG FAN OF "TOOL"... massive stuff on all levels.
Thanks for the reminder!!!
🔥 Vid with great information, and the beat at the end is fuego 🔥
6:59 DAT FLOW
started in Miami with the 2 live crew and Miami bass music.
Why doesn't anybody else see this connection? Bass music was huge down south (including Atlanta) via Miami. 2 live did "Get it Girl" w/ that triplet sound before ANYBODY (1986). MC Shy D repping from Atlanta was signed to Luke Skywalker records (1987) and pulled that sound into Atlanta that helped spread it to the rest of the south (Memphis, Louisiana). Just do a quick search #facts
I'm really enjoying this channel! The history you guys provide is incredible!
36mafia of course they legit been trapping since the late 80s nd juicy j eas my fav
THUG MOTIVATION 101 is the holy grail of trap. That album had you singing the lyrics AND the ad-libs. Know every got damn one of em!
the producers of memphis rap back in the nineties definitely made the sound fr fr
and trap is just hip hop w/halftimed drums
I came in ready to hate on this video, but I think its an alright introduction to the subject. Kinda like a broad strokes kinda thing. Like the lady in the video(forgot her name), when you grow up with these sounds as a cultural backbone and then see it transformed into something almost unrecognizable and stripped of its essence and soul that made it a powerful unifying force in your community at one time, it can be frustrating. I remember saying to my brother a couple years ago when 'trap music' became a thing, to us growing up, it wasn't trap music, it was just music. All we had around for the most part until the internet became readily available and fast enough for most people to go looking into other stuff easily. Personally I woulda mentioned Boosie and Foxx and all them Louisiana dudes, (there were others besides Jeezy and them obviously), but thats probably due to my regional preference. Flauge too, of course. But yeah, I think they showed a fair amount of respect on a subject they obviously aren't particularly versed in, unlike some other channels I feel like try to tell ME what rap is all about like they're experts cause they have a black friend with twisties that put them on to a mediocre Gucci mixtape from '09 and they remember hearing Roses and Bombs Over Baghdad growing up. Anyways... lol.
TheJetsdoit thanks for sharing your story!! We aren’t experts in all genres of music but we are definitely here to appreciate all forms of music. Also we are grateful to talk to experts that help us keep our perspective in line ✌🏽
"When you grow up with these sounds as a cultural backbone and then see it transformed into something almost unrecognizable and stripped of its essence and soul that made it a powerful unifying force in your community at one time, it can be frustrating"
I don't see it that way at all, my man. Nothing's happening to any of the music you listened to back then. It's just that it's inspiring some more music to be produced, and a lot of that new stuff is a lot more cross-cultural. No one can take what is or what was from you. That music you had growing up - it'll always be exactly as it was, and exactly as it has been all these years. The newer more popular things inspired by it though? That's just art, man. Everything's mixed and mashed in a never-ending continuum. Artists are influenced by and borrow from the people who came before them. They meld their own experience into the old stuff to make something new. The music you heard growing up is your community's experience, but the fact that newer artists' experiences were different doesn't mean they don't have the right to be influenced by parts of what helped make yours. Remembering Bombs Over Baghdad and some mid-rate Gucci growing up doesn't make their influences any less valid than your community's more singularly-focused purist ones. Seems to me that that's just an elitist way to think about it, that elevates no one and only really has the potential to stifle the creativity and experimentation that breeds new music.
I can see how it'd be irritating to constantly see people claiming their new stuff was totally original though - never crediting the artists who obviously influenced them, since yeah, it _is_ all a continuum, and none of us can make music now without owing our product in some ways to those who came before us - those who laid down our influences and established the framework within which we're able to keep making new things.
Idk man. Just some thoughts.
The beat at the end is too fire🔥🔥
Nice to learn how the music that I hate the most originated and is created. Seriously, good video.
jeezy, ti, gucci, along with the producers created the style + aesthetic that we associate with trap music nowadays.
they basically created the modern iteration of trap
This was really interesting. I've loved trap music since Young Jeezy days but it definitely took some time for me to realize when he was shouting out "Shawty Red on the track" on "Who Dat" who the hell that was! Now it's so common for the producers tag to be in the beginning of songs it's nice they get their credit too!
Yes! I remember hearing David Banner on T.I. Tracks but had no idea that was the producers credit!
Learned so much. Beautifully made, well-explained. TY!
I went to school with Shawty Redd
What software was he using to make that beat? I'm trying to make my own beats want to know what software would be good to get into
Love this channel. I love the aesthetic and content!
We appreciate you Cory R!
@@SoundFieldPBS 🤘You all rock! 👨🏾🎤
“I’ma keep on floss’n, pop’n long as Toomp is on the beat” -T.I 2005. 1 of the 1st times I heard a rapper shout out the producer.