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Monday, March 30, 2015

#12 Rap Music Analysis - Big Sean's Signature Flow

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This rap music analysis may take some of my readers to musical horizons that they have not seen before. In contrast to other rappers I’ve looked at, such as Jean Grae, Common, or Eminem, the rapper we will be taking a look at today is very popularly acclaimed. I would like to take this opportunity though to consider the role that single, specific flows play in a rapper’s overall oeuvre (the oeuvre of an artist is considered his or her entire body of work.) Big Sean’s own unique case of a signature flow offers an excellent, very specific example of a phenomenon that is rather more general in the works of other rappers. Furthermore, we will consider whether this phenomenon of having this particular recognizable flow reflects positively or negatively on Sean.
It occurred to me, after listening through Big Sean’s major record label album debut (from Kanye West’s G.O.O.D. Music label) that, on multiple songs throughout the album, he uses the same flow. First, what elements is flow comprised of? Throughout our analyses, such as my Jean Grae analysis,, we can identify the following characteristics of a flow, more or less:

1.     Rate of accent - how many poetic accents, such as rhymes, there are per bar –(for a bigger discussion of this, see the Jean Grae post)
2.     Nature of articulation – for instance, staying words either staccato (very sharply) or legato (rolling them all together) – credit to Kyle Adams "Flow In Rap Music" paper (don't worry, it's very readable - look for point [8]) – for a bigger discussion of legato vs. staccato, see the staccato wiki page or the legato wiki page
3.     Nature of grammatical phrases (formerly called syntactical phrases in my work) – a grammatical phrase is the natural musical “grouping-together” that occurs due to grammatical separators, such as conjunctions like “and” or “but”, or punctuation, like commas or periods at the end of sentence. This considers where grammatical phrases begin and end in relation to the bar.
4.     Use of musical phrases – whether a musical phrase (a short musical idea repeated over and over) are used or not
5.     Nature of rhymes – whether they are isosyllabic or multisyllabic, whether they always occur in the same metrical position from bar to bar or in different places, whether they are internal rhymes (occurring inside grammatical phrases) or end rhymes (occurring at the end of grammatical phrases), and so on.

My thesis is that Sean, on the real “Finally Famous” album (there were 3 mixtapes leading up to it), has a signature flow that is readily identifiable. This is because it’s rate of accent, the natures of articulation, grammatical phrases and rhymes, and the use of musical phrases, are all consistent. I’ve transcribed this flow from 5 different songs of “Finally Famous” album. These songs are “Meant To Be”, “What U Doin’ (Bullshittin’)”, “Supa Dupa Lemonade”, “My Closet”, and “Too Fake.” For a single flow to show up so prominently, being used for extended lengths of bars and at important parts in the song, such as on the chorus, is, in my knowledge of rap, unprecedented. It may not seem like much when you consider that there are may 17 songs on the entire album, but this has to be seen in relation to the great amount of flows there are by a rapper on one album. That is to say, a rapper spits many different flows on a single album; and when one flow shows up so much, it is noteworthy. But more on that is perhaps better for another post.
            So what is this signature flow? An archetypal example might be from from the song "My Closet", starting at 1:06, when Sean drops the following 4 bars:

So, what are the characteristics of this particular flow?

1.     The grammatical phrases, here indicated by puncutations at the end of sentences (“Tell me me who’s the freshest of them all? / I step inside the closet and that shit look like a loft. / etc.”), all abide largely by the barline. They are mostly 4 beats long, (“Tell tell tell me who the freshest of them all?”) with some smaller 2 beat phrases right next to each other that together add up to 4 beats (“Tryna get what’s in my closet, nah, bitch I bought it all” + “Yeah bitch I got it all”.
2.     Articulation: Big Sean says these words legato. That is, he mostly rolls them all together, with no unnatural separations between the words.
3.     Rhymes: the rhymes are rather simple. They are made up of single words (“all” with “loft” with “balls” with “all”.) Furthermore, they are end rhymes; they occur at the end of the grammatical phrases. Next, they also all occur in the same place: right on beat 3. His rate of accent is low, at about 1 accent (again, roughly equivalent to “rhyme” here) per bar, harking a throwback to Golden Age of Rap rappers.
4.     Use of musical phrases: a musical phrase is a short musical idea repeated over and over, sometimes with small variations. There might be a musical phrase her: “Tell tell tell me who the freshest of them all” is so similar in rhythm to “I step inside my closet and that shit look like a loft” I am somewhat tempted to call it a musical phrase consistent of a beat 1 full of 4 sixteenth notes, a beat 2 full of 4 sixteenths notes, a dotted eighth note on beat 3 plus 1 sixteenth note, and then a beat 4 of sixteenth notes. Big Sean, in fact, is fond of the use of musical phrases, almost and perhaps past the point of becoming tedious. (For a discussion of musical phrases, see my Eminem "Business" analysis or my "Upping The Ante" postpost.) But here, I’d decline to make it a phrase, simply because the rhythms of it are so ubiquitous: you can find single beats all filled with 4 sixteenth notes all over rap. Eminem’s example from Business, 

      quoted above, is a much better example of a musical phrase, because its rhythms, when combined, stand out so much
5.     In terms of rhythm, as just described in the previous,  Big Sean does not use a lot of syncopation; that is, there are no heavy metrical accents that occur off the beat. All off-the-beat notes are simply pick-ups to an on the beat accent, such as the word “I” in “I step inside…”, or “Tryna” before “claim what’s in my closet.” He is also fond of filling up a beat completely with 16th notes.

This is perhaps what delineates and separate’s Big Sean’s unique flow here so much from other rappers: his lack of strong syncopation. As a relatively small comparison, early Lil Wayne and Eminem use heavy syncopation. Practically all rappers rely on heavy syncopation; that’s what makes a lot of rap sound so aggressive, even when its lyrical content isn’t aggressive (such as Wiz Khalifa’s extremely, extremely awkward collaboration with Maroon 5 for their new song “Payphone.” If Adam Levine is singing about a lost love, why is Wiz Khalifa yelling at me about balling or whatever? That song in itself deserves its own analysis…a decidedly negative one, but one from which we could learn a lot.) This makes Big Sean flow sound like it has a lot of swag, pride, or whatever you want to call it: it makes the flow sound kind of lazy and laidback, but when you combine it with his words, it sounds pretty cool.
            Big Sean brings this flow back later in the song, at 2:03. 

This example hits all of our bulletpoints from before:


1.     Grammatical phrases that abide by the bar line and are 4 beats long (“Like Oh, My God, it’s stunning in my closet”, “I got diamonds, I’m so rocky you could bungee in my closet”, and so on.).
2.     End rhymes with a small number of syllables – here, the number is generally 2. (Although I’ve accented the words “in my closet” as well, since they are repeated so often here and throughout the song. In reality, though, repeating a word isn’t really a rhyme, so I still call them 2 syllable rhymes. I also call them end rhymes, because the rhymes are still at the end of rhymes, and the words “in my closet” almost count as their own grammatical separators with their great amount of repetition, like a period or comma.) End rhymes at the end of grammatical phrases. Rhymes that occur in the same place in the bar: here, again on beat 3, which is also characteristic of this flow.
3.     Lack of syncopation – strong on-the-beat rhythms, with beats often full of 4 16th notes.
4.     Legato articulation

So, the flows are extremely similar, and easily identifiable as similar by the ear.

But can we find this flow in other songs? I think we can: check out "Too Fake":


Consider the above example from “Too Fake”, at 0:25. Look familiar? Grammatical phrases abiding by the bar line, isosyllabic end rhymes, lack of syncopation, legato articulation – it’s all there. I consider that to be perfectly clear.
            What about at 1:24 though? Here, Sean mixes it up a little. We see that there are still the isosyllabic end rhymes, syntactical phrases abiding by the bar line, lack of syncopation, and legato articulation. However, the accents are varied. Instead of just a strong, on-the-beat rhyme on (once again) beat 3, the rhyme is 2 eighth notes on beat 3 (“ain’t shit”, “same shit”, “man, Big!”, “James shit.) However, this preserves the lack of syncopation of the other archetypal examples, so I just consider them variations of the same flow.
            Another singular example of this flow is from "Meant To Be", at 0:14 – it’s the chorus.

Look for the same 4 points on your own: grammatical phrases, indicated by the curved lines underneath the notes (such as from “This” to “Be” in the above example) falling within the bar line, lack of syncopation, simple end rhymes always falling in the same place metrically, legato articulation.

To avoid redundancy, here are more examples, just without the obvious explanation. However, it should be noted that these examples vary things a bit more, with less lack of syncopation and more extended rhythms, such as with 32nd notes in "What U Doin (Bullshittin)" and ""Supa Dupa Lemonade"


            So, we have established that Big Sean indeed does have a signature flow that he brings back again and again. In fact, this flow can be found all over the album, not just on these songs. But what are we to make of it?
            Well, we could say that it shows he lacks creativity, and doesn’t quite cut it as a rapper. It could come across as repetive, and simply a crutch for him to lean on when he runs out of new rhythms to rap off of.
            Instead, I would view this phenomenon as a positive thing. I think it’s pretty amazing that Sean has identified a flow with very unique yet consistent characteristics that stands out so much from not only the flows of his other raps, but also the flows of other rappers. It is almost instantly identifiable. Also, it fits his rapper persona extremely well: upper-class swag, still bad-ass, just not really gansta… not gonna talk about how many guns he’s got or drugs he’s sold or whatever, but still a BAMF. It is extremely hard to do this, to 1. Make it stand out from all other flows, but also to 2. Make it not get boring or tiring – to his credit, as we saw, Big Sean does vary this flow while always retaining its core identifying characteristics.
            As mentioned briefly before, I’m hard-pressed to find another example of this in the rap repertoire. Perhaps we can make general statements about rapper’s flows, like “Eminem favors internal rhymes”, but we can’t identify a single flow. Furthermore, we might be able to identify what I’d call unique musical signifiers, such as the role of sextuplets in Outkast’s flows (Big Boi AND Andre 3000), but they are also easily co-optable by other rappers, and in fact are used by other rappers. It would be really cool to see other rappers try to do this.
            So, we’ve identified what kind of rapper Big Sean is: not overly technically complicated, favors simple end rhymes with grammatical phrases that largely abide by the bar line. Remind you of any other rappers?

Perhaps a rapper who, in his words, has “blessed” Sean?

Perhaps the founder of the record label Big Sean’s on?

Yes, Kanye West and Big Sean are rather similar rappers, for the characteristics just described. They both won’t overwhelm you technically, but they will go for the knockout verbal play: the double entendre, the pun, etc. How similar is “Don’t worry ‘bout my niggas, thurgood – Marshall / Ballin’, til I get a mill-a-check, Darko” similar to “’Oh My God, is that a black card?’ / I turned around and replied, why yes / but I prefer the term ‘African-American express.’”, a gem from Kanye’s debut album?

Hope you enjoyed it! Check out my other posts, and follow me @ComposersCorner on Twitter. Also, I’m still teaching people how to rap and produce, so check it out! Also, I’ll be putting up one of my songs finally on here, so look for that! Thanks for reading this rap music analysis!

Sunday, March 29, 2015

Rap Analysis #13 - How To Make a Pitbull Song

Today I decided to take a look at someone who's really popular, Pitbull. Rather than going over his flow, like we did with Big Sean or Jean GRae, I wanted to break down his basic song structure. Let's take a look at how to make a Pitbull song:

1. Yell "Dale!"
2. List 3 cities, including Miami at least once
3. Mumble something in spanish

There you go! Good thing he's not gettin paid ridiculously more than Jean Grae, Mos Def, Talib, (insert other rapper featured on this website here)!! Right?!??!






**Credit goes to The Internet

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Hip Hop Headlines Support

The "Hip Hop Headlines" app, from www.RapAnalysis.com, is easy to use. Just tap any of the rapper's name on the intro screen, and you'll be taken straight to a feed with customized news stories about that rapper. There are also included top sources for news on any rapper that you can click: The Source and Watch Loud, for instance. A custom search can be located on the button in the very bottom left with the title "Search." Just input the name of a rapper you'd like news on, and you'll get top news stories on that person.

For questions, comments, or restaurant suggestions, email mepc36@gmail.com

Thanks for downloading! And please think about donating.

Love,

Martin Connor

P.S. - This app, available for iPhone (and hopefully Android soon) was developed in March 2015 by Martin Connor. The names of the rappers and sources were compiled from the top posts on the reddit forum /r/HipHopHeads.

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Sunday, March 22, 2015

Share The Hip Hop Headlines App!


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Thursday, March 19, 2015

Donate For The Hip Hop Headlines

What's up! My name's Martin Connor, a 20-something freelance writer and musician from Philly, PA, and it is I who made the rap news aggregator you now hold in your hands. Do you want to see more stuff like Hip Hop Headlines? Maybe a news aggregator for other music genres? Great! You can help make those other projects happen by donating here:     
                                        
$1 or $2 would, seriously, mean the world to me. I don't ever forget anyone who furthers my vision through their support, monetary or otherwise. So if you could find it in your heart to help make this day unlike any other in your life by right now trying to correct the structural inequities of capitalism, well, then, why wouldn't you? Right?
Look man, I get it. You expect to get everything free online: music, video games, whatever. Shit, I do the same damn thing, so I'm not saying that's wrong. But I am saying that, as of yet, there is a disconnect online between the quality of someone's work and how they are in turn compensated for that work. I've gotten over 500,000 page views, had my work featured on the biggest media outlets in the rap industry, and never seen a dime from any of it. And you know what those-magazines-who-shall-not-be-named did with my articles that went viral? They copied and pasted my work, and straight up stole my content. Not only did I not see a fraction of a penny from any of this, but I didn't even get the puerile satisfaction of seeing my page views go marginally up.

But I know it's a balance. If people did have to pay to see my articles or download my apps, I probably wouldn't have gotten 500,000 page views in the first place. I'm not saying what I'm proposing to you now is the be-all, end-all answer. But I am saying that I'm at my fucking wits' end trying to make this work, because bussing tables every weekend on back-to-back graveyard shifts isn't what I want to do the rest of my life.

So, thanks. And, as always,

Love,

Martin

Monday, March 16, 2015

Rap Music Analysis - Kendrick Lamar - Rigamortis, Pt. 2

*This article is a continuation of the first part of how to listen to "Rigamortis," which you can read here. You can hear the Kendrick Lamar song here.

As I mentioned in the first article, these exact lines below — what I'll call Refrain 1 — occur at 0:21, 0:59, 1:26, 1:36, 2:31, and 2:42, and last 4 bars:

[got me breathing with dragons] [i’ll /

crack the egg in your basket, you /

bastard] [i’m marilyn manson, don’t /

ask for your favorite rapper]


Below is the second refrain, Refrain 2. These exact lines occur at 1:31, 1:42, and 2:36, and also last 4 bars:


[he dead] /

[amen] /

[he dead] /

[amen] /


When you combine these 2 refrains, the entire 12-bar chorus that happens at 1:26 and 2:42 is this. It's Refrain 2 + Refrain 1 + Refrain 2.


[he dead] /

[amen] /

[he dead] /

[amen] /

[got me breathing with dragons] [i’ll /

crack the egg in your basket, you /

bastard] [i’m marilyn manson] [don’t /

ask for your favorite rapper] /

[he dead] /

[amen] /

[he dead] /

[amen] /

However, there's a mismatch here. Refrain 2 happens at 0:59, but the chorus (which, again, should mention both Refrain 1 and Refrain 2) happens only at 1:26 and 2:42. How is this possible?

Just like what we see in part 1 of this article, the answer is in how Kendrick manipulates the musical material that he already has placed in the chorus. At 0:59, he raps only the first 2 bars of Refrain 2, so that “amen, he’s dead,” is repeated only once. Right after, at 1:01, he cuts right back into his proper verse rap by continuing the thread of semantic meaning from the refrain into the verse. He does this by extending the sentence of “amen, he’s dead” in explaining who it is exactly that’s telling him his rap adversaries are deceased.

The astute reader will also have noticed that a Refrain 1, at 1:42, was also left out in the cold. It doesn’t appear to be part of any chorus, or at the least, it appears to be an extra Refrain 1 on the end of a chorus. How is this to be interpreted?

Here, Kendrick once again demonstrates an unfailing lack of the means by which a rapper creates semantic and musical meaning. That’s because when he starts the completely new material of his second verse at 1:47, he continues a rhyme on the final vowel pattern of the last word of Refrain 1. He takes the word “rapper,” from Refrain 1, and rhymes it on “casper,” “nasa,” and so on.


[got me breathing with dragons] [i’ll /

crack the egg in your basket, you /

bastard] [i’m marilyn manson] [don’t /

ask for your favorite rapper] [i /

wrapped him and made him casper] [i /

captured the likes of nasa] / …

Not only are the rhymes from Refrain 1 continued into this new musical section, but they are also the same types of rhymes musically. That’s because they also all happen at the end of bars.

This strong similarity means that instead of interpreting the chorus at 1:26 as the real chorus that lasts 16 bars, and the ending chorus at 2:42 as a shortened chorus of only 12 bars, I interpret the real chorus as lasting 12 bars, and this addition of another Refrain 1 as an elision into the verse. Thus, the Refrain 1 at 1:42 is really part of both the verse and chorus. On the one hand, it’s material from the chorus that we’ve heard before, but on the other, it’s part of the verse because Kendrick goes on to rhyme off its words. Kendrick has blurred the lines between what a chorus is and what a verse is. And without an aid from the production, such as a distinct musical idea that separates the verse from the chorus, we’re left answering that this section is both.


Love,

Martin

Rap Music Analysis - Kendrick Lamar - "Rigamortis"

All of the rappers in my own personal Top 10 are unique and special in their own way, just like their mamas always told ‘em. However, there are also certain overlaps between their artistic oeuvres. For instance, AndrĂ© 3000 and Nas have both utilized metric transference, which stands as a good measuring stick for just how technically complex a rapper is. But Kendrick Lamar, along with Eminem, is one of those few rappers about who it can truly be said that they’ve made certain songs in rap music that have never been done before, and have never been imitated since, even poorly.

“Rigamortis” is one of those songs.

The title of the song alone bespeaks some sort of consciousness of the history of rap or its poetic themes, as it recalls his West Coast godfather Dr. Dre and his lines about turtles dying from the 1987 N.W.A song “Express Yourself.” Poetic? Not the most. Rhyming? Yep, and that’s often good enough for Dre when he isn’t using a ghostwriter.

That, of course, is not true when we talk about Kendrick’s lines. As I say over and over in my articles — I should really get it tattooed somewhere  — we can only appreciate rappers' musical abilities when we understand the musical conventions that they’re working on top of. The important convention in “Rigamortis” is how choruses (also called hooks) are written in rap. This knowledge will allow us to see how Kendrick cleverly deviates from what used to be unquestioned musical commandments in order to make something knew. To see this, we need just the tiniest bit of music theory. Rappers brag by saying, "I got bars, I got bars." Well, what the hell's a bar?

A bar is the base unit for the musical system of time, just like a second is the base unit for a chronological system of time. Musicians use bars though, and not seconds, because seconds always last the same amount of time, while music can be either fast, like Macklemore's "Can't Hold Us," or slow, like The Roots' "Boom!". Hence, bars can come at different speeds, because they don't always have to last the same amount of time. The use of a bar, and not a second, expresses this difference. But just like seconds, bars are repeated over and over in order to make up longer lengths of times, like a whole musical section of a verse or a chorus. About 99.99% of the time, those bars are added up in groups of 4 to make those larger sections. For instance, verses usually last 16 bars, and choruses usually last 8, although there are small, differing exceptions sometimes.

The chorus of “Rigamortis" seems at first to be no different, because it lasts for 12 bars. What Kendrick innovates here in a way few other musicians have before is in just how his rap over those 12 bars interacts with the musical accompaniment behind it. That's because this song's actual chorus of 12 bars occurs only twice, while material from the chorus as a whole is mentioned at least 5 times in the song. How is this mismatch possible?

In order to keep track of all of these moving parts, we’ll consider the following lines to be the first refrain, called Refrain 1, and say that multiple refrains add up to 1 full, 12-bar chorus during this song. You can hear "Rigamortis" here. In the below transcription, brackets [ ] surround the start and end of sentences, and the slashes / indicate where each succeeding bar stops before the next one begins.

These exact lines below occur at 0:21, 0:59, 1:26, 1:36, 2:31, and 2:42, and last 4 bars:

[got me breathing with dragons] [i’ll /

crack the egg in your basket, you /

bastard] [i’m marilyn manson, don’t /

ask for your favorite rapper]


Below is the second refrain, Refrain 2. These exact lines occur at 1:31, 1:42, and 2:36, and also last 4 bars:


[he dead] /

[amen] /

[he dead] /

[amen] /


When you combine these 2 refrains, the entire 12-bar chorus that happens at 1:26 and 2:42 is this. It's Refrain 2 + Refrain 1 + Refrain 2.

[he dead] /

[amen] /

[he dead] /

[amen] /

[got me breathing with dragons] [i’ll /

crack the egg in your basket, you /

bastard] [i’m marilyn manson] [don’t /

ask for your favorite rapper] /

[he dead] /

[amen] /

[he dead] /

[amen] /

However, the real chorus doesn’t appear until an unusually long time into the song, at 1:26. That’s because the first time the listener hears these lines it is in a far different musical structure than that more traditional, 12-bar chorus chorus. The first time a listener hears Refrain 1, it is in the varied form of what we can call Refrain 1B, at 0:13:


[got me breathing with dragons] [i’ll /

crack the egg in your basket you /

bastard] [i’m marilyn manson with /

madness] [now just imagine the /

magic i light to asses] [don’t /

ask for your favorite rapper]


Kendrick has now inserted a new line in the middle of Refrain 1. He’s added, “…with madness, now just imagine the magic I light to asses.” This makes refrain 1 not 4 bars long, but 6 bars long. Why did Kendrick do this? Put another way, why does this new refrain not just work, but work well?

The key is that those opening 6 bars just quoted start 10 bars into the song.

“But wait!”

Yes?

“Neither those 6 bars or 10 bars are a multiple of 4 bars that you said every rap section is made out of!”

Ah! You’ve got me. But what’s 6 bars plus 10 bars?

“Enough happy hours to put Bobby McFerrin out of business!”

Yes! But also…16 bars. Which is a multiple of four.

On the one hand, Kendrick could have repeated Refrain 1 in the exactly correct way so that it lasted only 4 bars. But that would have left his rap ending at bar 14. This is a problem because the musical loop behind him — made up of those melodically spiraling jazz instruments — is 4 bars long, so he would’ve ended the opening of the song halfway through his loop, which would sound awkward without some kind of explicit support (like a beat drop) from the musical accompaniment.

On the other hand, Kendrick could’ve again repeated Refrain 1 exactly and started at bar 8 or 12, which would line up the end of his opening with the end of his rap. But this would have been really, really boring, because that's what 99.99% of other musicians do. So he decided to do what was on the other-other hand, and balance the 16 bars into 10 bars of an instrumental intro, plus the 6 bars of a slightly modulated Refrain 1. This is so musically groundbreaking that if all of my dozens of articles could be summarized in short, I would need only those 16 bars.

That relationship that’s just been described — the one between the lines of Kendrick’s verse and the lines of his chorus — is what drives this entire song, in a way that previously seemed impossible in rap. This is the core musical game that Kendrick is playing throughout this entire song. 

If you want to hear how, check out part 2 of this article here.

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