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Gadget Inspector: Black Music Tech Evolution - The Electric Guitar to Fruity Loops
Published Thursday, June 26, 2008 7:00 PM
By Eliana, The Gadget Inspector



[photo: Akai MPC3000]

When you think about the evolution of music, where does your history book begin?

 

From Diddley to Diddy, James Brown to Jay-Z, the rules of the game may have changed, but it’s still about groove, beats and having the right sound.

 

Let’s take a look at just a few key pieces of gear that helped shape Black Music over the years, and remain integral to modern times.

 

Electric Guitar

 

Making its debut in the 1930s, the electric guitar revolutionized acoustic sound by amplifying it. Its first usage was in jazz orchestras, with guitarist and bandleader Gage Brewer believed to be the first to use the electric guitar during a performance.

 

Hitmakers like Chuck Berry and Jimi Hendrix took it to the next level, making the instrument as important to their sound as their vocals. Hendrix was also known for his use of amplification, effects and distortion.

Today, we don’t necessarily think about the electric guitar as integral to Hip-Hop, but in fact many artists are well versed on the instrument, and those traveling with bands are proof that the electric guitar remains key to any musician’s craft.

 

Wah Pedal

 

One of the effects most often associated with Jimi Hendrix is the wah, or wah-wah, pedal. Hendrix’ name is usually connected to the Crybaby wah, but in fact the Vox figured prominently in his work.

The wah’s distinctive sound became synonymous with 1960s guitar, but it was also highly popular during the ‘70s, when bands like Rufus incorporated it into their recordings. In modern times, DJ Mix Master Mike developed his tweak scratch sound by connecting the wah to his turntable.

The Vocoder

 

Invented in the 1930s, the vocoder was primarily used for coding speech for telecommunications transmissions, and made its musical debut in 1970, often used in soundtracks. Sometimes referred to as the “talking synthesizer,” and not to be mistaken with the talk box, it changed the face of pop music when incorporated by prog-rock bands like Pink Floyd and Electric Light Orchestra (ELO).

 

The vocoder soon made its way into the R&B world, where bands like Zapp used it regularly, bringing it forward in hits like “More Bounce to the Ounce.”

The vocoder remains a staple in the Hip-Hop world, with artists like T-Pain, Snoop Dogg, Lil Wayne and Kanye West incorporating its effect into their recordings.

 

Originally a Moog product, vocoders are now manufactured by companies like Electro Harmonix, Roland and Korg. The vocoder is a key feature in Roland keyboards.

 

The Turntable Mixer

 

Every Hip-Hop head knows that Grandmaster Flash revolutionized DJing when he created a turntable mixer from a mic mixer. He and dozens of other turntablists revolutionized Black music with their groundbreaking magic on the turntables, and the DJ mixer in tow.

Although there were other DJs and engineers who had toyed with the turntable mixer idea, it was Hip-Hop’s use of the technology that forced equipment companies to take notice. These days you have mixers that work for everything from CDJs to iPods, but there will never be anything quite like the original sound of a real DJ and two turntables.

 

Roland TR-808

 

Sir Mixalot may have said it best in his hit single “My Posse’s On Broadway”… “the 808 kick drum makes the girlies get dumb.

 

Roland was among the first manufacturers to introduce a programmable drum machine. Their TR-808, with its preferred kick-drum sound, came out as a comparably affordable model in 1980.

 

Working in analogue held it back from instant success, but in time—and even after being discontinued—it became a favorite of studio musicians, thanks to its variety of sounds, effects and available patterns.

 

Credit the 808 for that infectious backbeat in Marvin Gaye’s 1982 hit “Sexual Healing.” That same year, Hip-Hop and funk collided in the classic “Planet Rock,” as Afrika Bambaataa’s vocals boomed as loudly as the 808 that drove the beat.

In the early ‘80s, producers like Mantronix and Rick Rubin utilized the bass of the 808 to create a fuller sound for Hip-Hop. To date, artists still seek out 808s to enhance their beats.

The whole bass/booty music movement incorporating the 808 is pretty fascinating within itself. For instance, did you know that 2 Live Crew actually started out in California? There's a lot of info online about it, so google to your heart's content!

 

Akai MPC 3000

 

Workstation, sequencer and drum machine - the Akai MPC 3000 exploded onto the scene in 1994 and immediately became the workhorse of beat makers everywhere, in every genre.

 

Years later, the 3000 remained such a favorite that in 2000 the company came out with its MPC3000LE (Limited Edition) to satisfy customers who couldn’t get their hands on a used model of the original. Since then, Akai has continued developing their MPC line, debuting the 5000 this year, but the 3000 remains a sought-after piece of equipment and Akai users still talk about it.

    

Easy to program, easy to tap beats into, highly intuitive and user-friendly with its scroll help screens, featuring MIDI inputs and outputs, pad banks and sampling memory, the 3000—successor to Akai’s wildly popular MPC 60 (1988)—was the flagship for future Akai MPCs.

 

The 3000 made it easy for anyone to walk into their local music store and utter those five famous words: “I wanna be a producer!”

Home Studio Software

 

Pro Tools, Garageband, Fruity Loops, Cakewalk, ACID… the list goes on. As technology improved and advanced, so did the sound, the effects, and finally, in the age of the Internet, the ability for anyone to set up a home studio and release their original material to the world.

 

Software programs like Pro Tools and Garageband have given independent artists a voice and completely changed the way music is made, heard, distributed and sold. Hundreds of budding producers are able to work on their music in the privacy of their own home, and with success stories like Little Brother, Soulja Boy and others, it’s only the beginning of what’s to come for independent production.

Which legendary artists influenced your sound? Which piece(s) of gear turned your beats or vocals around? The Gadget Inspector wants to know. Let’s hear your comments!

 


Comments

 

Iopnr said:

good shit. Always good to take that walk down memory lane. I miss fukin w/ the 3000. Now I'm all digital w/few regrets.
June 27, 2008 11:11 AM
 

Ten $ Shades said:


The TR808 'sounds' are used now on most
the South beats. That long kick is on near
every track they make. lol

Salute for the article.
June 27, 2008 11:23 AM
 

BLUNTBLAZER said:

I USE GARAGEBAND BUT I HAVE A BOSS DRUM MACHINE TO

www.myspace.com/thagrindaholic
DAM A TANK OF GAS COST MORE THAN A 8TH OF GRASS
June 27, 2008 11:42 AM
 

big1on said:

Pound it out, MPC 3000 4ever!
June 27, 2008 11:48 AM
 

Shoobydoop said:

I got my hands on a bootleg version of FL studio, but I've been savin up for damn near half a year for an MPC 3000. Them thangs are expensive as hell!
June 27, 2008 12:38 PM
 

Mic Terror said:

I don't have everything up there but I got some... Technic 1200's Serato Mixer MPC 2000XL and Protools, but my Roland Fantom FA-76 doesn't have a Vocoder built into it. They must have skipped that model
July 9, 2008 2:29 PM
 

DJ D MO said:

I got Reason 4 and a MIDI keyboard. It works for now but that MPC is looking tasty and familiar. Too bad I'm broke as fuck...
July 12, 2008 7:14 PM
 

BlackFlipInTheFrontYard said:

SP 1200 anyone?
July 13, 2008 7:28 PM
 

Bizar Mindz Inc said:

big ups to "blackflipinthefrontyard" the sp 1200 was a classic... but i had a mpc, and figured out, u can do what ever usin a daw, like "cubase", and "reason" to bang out some sounds... midi mpd are just as good to pound dem pads on...
July 16, 2008 6:59 PM
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