HOW JDILLA CHANGED MY LIFE

in #jdilla7 years ago (edited)

For as long as I can remember, I have been a fan of Hip Hop music. As a pre-teen I loved the sound of drums over chopped samples, but I could not appreciate the time and skill involved in making those kinds of beats. I always had a deep interest in how hipHop beats were made, but I didn't know that beat making would end up being a part of my life until I found J Dilla.

J_Dilla.jpg
James Dewitt Yancey (AKA) J Dilla

James Dewitt Yancey was born on February 7, 1974, and is in my opinion the greatest and most influential HipHop producer of all time. Before I even knew who he was, I knew I loved his style and approach to music. I say that because I was a huge fan of A Tribe Called Quest, but I did not know that some of my favorite tribe tracks were produced my J Dilla. It was only when I decided to find out who The Ummah were after hearing Tribes "Find a Way" that I found Dilla. This is the day I decided that I needed, not wanted, but needed to make beats.
The_Ummah.jpg
The Ummah (Q Tip, J Dilla and Ali Shaheed Muhammad)

I knew that all of the years I spent listening to my grandfather' Jazz records, and all of my father's musical influences were not just small parts of my life. I knew that all of the hours I spent fiddling with my Uncle's bass guitar, drums and piano were not just passing phases of musical interest. So in the late 90's I bought my first MPC, it was a 2000XL. I had no idea how to use it but I knew what I wanted to make beats. I knew that I had something special inside of me that needed an outlet. I knew about keeping time, melody, bass etc, but it was all in my brain. Somehow, listening to Dilla's beats taught me all I needed to know with regard to using the MPC as a musical instrument.

10360952_10205762111515350_3957377200941616064_n.jpg
Me in the late 90's Chopping a Nina Simone sample

Dilla's production taught me that there is a true art to sampling. There is a BIG difference between sampling and looping, and the true art form lies within the chopping of samples, which is where Dilla was and still is king. I feel like every Dilla beat I have ever listened too was like taking a class in the art of organic beat production. I knew that the MPC was the root of his sound, even his bass lines were sampled onto his MPC, although in later years he got into his Moog Voyager for bass lines. I taught myself how to use the MPC as the sole instrument in my production, almost as if I wanted to see how far I could take it without incorporating any other pieces of gear. I knew that thats how Dilla did it, so I pushed myself until I finally found my own distinct sound as a producer. I would challenge myself to re-make some of Dilla's earlier beats, this is how I learned not to focus so much on timing, but to focus on the groove instead.

maxresdefault.jpg

When J Dilla Died in 2006 I was devastated, but his music will live on forever. I have 3 sons, and all 3 of them have listened to me rock J Dilla beats all their lives. My oldest son is 17 ,and he is actively producing HipHop beats for the nu skool HipHop kids of today. J Dilla impacted me in such a profound way that it literally changed my life for the better.

17635516_1573254539354381_3614577004724548952_o.jpg
Me and My MPC 60 V1

I never got in to beat making to get rich or famous, but I have been fortunate enough to have done some work with a few Hip Hop legends. I make music because I just want people to feel, and because it makes me feel good, and most of all complete. I would have never though in a million years that beat making would be such a huge part of my life. And for that I am eternally grateful. Thank you JD...

I am not going to bombard this post with my production, only one of my favorites... Enjoy

Sort:  

hello there nice post...i am upvoting you and following..please do the same for me and do let me know by replying...go vincentb

I really enjoyed your soulful story full with emotions I can relate to so well!!

Thank you for taking the time to read it man. I mean it when I say J DILLA CHANGED MY LIFE. RIP JD...

Awesome story, thanks for sharing. And the beat you made is groovy man. R.I.P. JD

Thank you man. JD is my biggest influence, his music will be around forever.

Yes it will

ONE LOVE DUDE. ANOTHER DILLA FAN I SEE.

Dilla all day....

Dope beat man. R.i.p jdilla

Thank you man I appreciate that!

the vincentb effect
upvoted, commented and followed

Excellent tunes at the end, really soulful beats, i generally express my creativity in writing like this

I must admit i was not aware of J Dilla, but shall certainly have to check out his works, love seeing all that old skool beat production stuff.

Niice! I do daily freestyles. Post more productions for sure! https://steemit.com/rap/@jaguarpawmu/another-daily-freestyle-rap this is my latest. its been like 21 days

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.21
TRX 0.25
JST 0.038
BTC 95691.61
ETH 3343.89
USDT 1.00
SBD 3.03