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Cheat Codes is a collaborative studio album by American songwriter/producer Danger Mouse and American rapper Black Thought, released on August 12, 2022, by BMG.It followed three albums of solo work for Black Thought, but was Danger Mouse's first hip-hop album since The Mouse and the Mask in 2005.
Blah, Blah, Blah is the debut studio album by American Brooklyn-based hip hop duo Blahzay Blahzay.It was released on August 13, 1996, on Fader/Mercury/PolyGram Records.The recording sessions took place at D&D Studios and at Firehouse Studio, in New York.
Sampling is one of the foundations of hip hop, which emerged in the 1980s. [34] Hip hop sampling has been likened to the origins of blues and rock, which were created by repurposing existing music. [24] The Guardian journalist David McNamee wrote that "two record decks and your dad's old funk collection was once the working-class black answer ...
Hip hop producer and rapper RZA in a music studio with two collaborators. Pictured in the foreground is a synthesizer keyboard and a number of vinyl records; both of these items are key tools that producers and DJs use to create hip hop beats. Hip hop production is the creation of hip hop music in a recording studio.
HipHop for PHP (HPHPc) is a discontinued PHP transpiler created by Facebook.By using HPHPc as a source-to-source compiler, PHP code is translated into C++, compiled into a binary and run as an executable, as opposed to the PHP's usual execution path of PHP code being transformed into opcodes and interpreted.
Double Dee and Steinski is a duo of hip hop producers, composed of Doug "Double Dee" DiFranco and Steven "Steinski" Stein.They achieved notoriety in the early 1980s for a series of underground hip-hop sample-based collages known as the "Lessons".
As the Triggerman beat evolved it commonly would also sample the drum pattern of Cameron Paul's "Brown Beats" or Derek B's Rock the Beat co-produced by Simon Harris, both were released in 1987. [11] Brown Beats was from 'Beats and Pieces' a DJ tools series with beats and breaks which Paul produced, [ 12 ] the song name derives from having ...
The samples can be played back by means of the sampler program itself, a MIDI keyboard, sequencer or another triggering device (e.g., electronic drums). Because these samples are usually stored in digital memory, the information can be quickly accessed. A single sample may be pitch-shifted to different pitches to produce musical scales and chords.