Submitted by trytoholdon t3_z8ts6b in Music
I was listening to a classic hip hop channel and I noticed that all of the songs were very simple — basically a guy rapping over a drum machine. There wasn’t much musical backing or real melody in the rapping.
You can hear this kind of thing still around in NWA’s music in the late 80s, and then by the early-to-mid 90s you have artists like Salt N Peppa and Tupac, who were both pretty melodic in their compositions.
I’m just curious who was the first artist to release truly “modern”, melodic rap music — which I think you could argue arrived in the mid 90s — that replaced the “old school” hip hop sound.
ToxicAdamm t1_iydh87k wrote
In my mind, De La Soul was the forebearer of all the experimentation that happened in the early 90's. Early rap music had such a machismo aspect to it that even the women were expected to "act hard". Anything that veered out of that lane was called 'soft'. Pioneers like Public Enemy would experiment and layer depth of sound to their songs, but it still had that hard edge (aside from the Flav songs).
De La Soul showed that you could lose that edge, incorporate hooks, absurdism, musical flourishes and other experimentation into rap and still be seen as cool.
That next wave of college kid rappers that followed them were pushing rap in all different kinds of directions. Fusing jazz, pop hooks into the sound. They were dubbed the Native Tongues.
So, by the mid-90's you had artists like Warren G, Biggy, Tupac incorporating huge hooks in their music and no one even batted an eye or viewed it as 'soft'.