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Boom bap is a subgenre and music production style that was prominent in East Coast hip hop during the golden age of hip hop from the late 1980s to the early 1990s. [1]The term "boom bap" is an onomatopoeia that represents the sounds used for the bass (kick) drum and snare drum, respectively.
"Smoking on My Ex Pack" is a song by American singer-songwriter SZA from her second studio album, SOS (2022). The second of the album's three rap tracks, it is a boom bap song with a chipmunk soul production style, fusing hard-hitting drum beats with a sped-up sample of Webster Lewis's "Open Up Your Eyes" (1981).
Vice 's Dhruva Balram described the instrumental as "psychedelic", [3] while Smith thought that the drum programming resembled boom bap more than trap. [9] Paul Simpson of AllMusic described the drums as "sludgy". [15] "I'm God" extensively samples a stretched-out version of Imogen Heap's "Just for Now". [3]
Wilson's music style combines hazy, traditionalist boom bap with wavy, loop-based production. [3] His production is often characterized by warm, naturalistic vibes, [10] with sped-up lo-fi beats, disjointed timing, instrumentation, and soul samples. [4] Some listeners have compared his production style to that of J Dilla. [4]
Criminal Minded is the debut studio album by hip-hop group Boogie Down Productions, released on March 3, 1987, by B-Boy Records.It is considered a highly influential hip hop album [1] and one of the first in the gangsta rap genre.
For All the Dogs is a hip hop record with production described as a "sterilised studio sheen" that wanders to "an earthy fusion of soul samples and boom-bap drums". [30] The album incorporates elements of contemporary rap , [ 31 ] pop rap , [ 31 ] hardcore rap , [ 31 ] and trap . [ 32 ]
The review says the album "brought tough street-metal grit to bear upon flagrant boom-bap grooves", summarizing with this: "Rap-metal by default rather than design, it was a natural and neat fit for a band that deserves more credit for their pioneering nous." [13]
Our rhythm on the drum pattern, we had to switch it up a little bit. 50 Cent said he wanted to go back to the boom-bap hard-core gangsta stuff. We tried to fit his style. I think 50 is gonna come back. He's a hitmaker. He's written a lot of hits for a lot of people.