I think scratching is a brilliantly innovative way to use analog sound equipment to make music. Although a DJ might be using other artists' material as the medium for creating his sound, what he does is every bit as original as what any guitar player, drummer, singer or other instrumentalist does.
Give the same LP to Grandmixer DXT and Terminator X of Public Enemy, and you'll get two very nuanced and different sounds.
I see rapping, scratching, sampling and remixing as art forms with every bit as much innovation and validity as Lou Reed's spoken word singing style, John Cage's "chance music" and "extended technique", the cut-and-splice compositions of musique concréte, Harry Partch's original handcrafted instruments and compositions, and Les Paul's experiments with electrified guitar.
Those of you who disagree, should perhaps examine your real reasons for disregarding hip hop as true art. Is it because of its popularity and commercial success? Or because of its origin in low-income urban and ethnic communities?
Shellac chopped & screwed...?
121
Last edited by Colonel Panic_Archive on Tue May 01, 2007 3:56 pm, edited 1 time in total.