Center for Black Music Research - Columbia College Chicago

Hip-Hop Drumming: The Rhyme May Define, but the Groove Makes You Move Author(s): Jeff Greenwald Source: Black Music Research Journal, Vol. 22, No. 2 (Autumn, 2002), pp. 259-271 Published by: Center for Black Music Research - Columbia College Chicago and University of Illinois Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1519959 Accessed: 22-01-2016 17:11 UTC

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This content downloaded from 140.247.168.35 on Fri, 22 Jan 2016 17:11:56 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions HIP-HOP DRUMMING: THE RHYMEMAY DEFINE, BUT THE GROOVEMAKES YOU MOVE

JEFFGREENWALD

In this article, I investigate the use, creation, and manipulation of the drums in hip-hop. In most works on black popular music, whether refer- ring to rock,, blues, rap, or other genres, little attention is paid to the drummer beyond providing an overview.' I hope that this article can begin a dialogue about drumming to compare with that surrounding pianists, vocalists, guitarists, and other instrumentalists. I am not attempting here to uncover the social, diasporic, or cultural significance of the hip-hop genre; that has been and is being done by scholars whose interest and expertise lie in these areas (Gilroy 1991; Lipsitz 1994;Rose 1994); rather, I am concerned with analyzing the use of drums in this music and how that use exemplifies some of the musical attributesdefin- ing the hip-hop style in a broad sense. I have chosen musical examples that not only best illustrate my analysis but that also come from artists who are important to the hip-hop genre, such as James Brown and A TribeCalled Quest, whose 1991 TheLow End Theoryis "hailed as a masterpiece of jazz/hip-hop fusion" (Werde 1999, 44). My goal is to provide a guideline for deciphering the drums within this music, whether they come from samples, a drum machine, a live drummer,or a combination.

1. There are important works that scratch the surface of the importance of the drummer, including Berliner's Thinking in Jazz (1994) and Monson's Saying Something (1996). My con- tention is that while these works (and others) offer great insights into the world of drum- ming, they do not explore the role of the drummer to the same depths afforded to other instrumentalists.

JEFFGREENWALD is a professional studio drummer and an adjunct faculty member in the Fine Arts Department of College Misericordia in Dallas, Pennsylvania.

259

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The typical description of hip-hop states that the development of this genre was influenced by four distinct elements: (1) break dancing, (2) graffitiart, (3) emcees or rappers,and (4) DJs.Although each of these fac- tors serves as a culturalmarker, the lyrics stand out to many scholarsand fans as thedefining characteristic.Both RobinD. G. Kelley (1996,186-194) and TriciaRose (1994,99-124) give evidence to show how lyrics are used to createreal and imagined identities.2Greg Dimitriadis(1996, 180) states that "[t]heconstant searchfor meaning through rap's vocal content alone has led to much cross-culturalmisunderstanding." Furthermore, if what Ingrid Monson (1999, 52) tells us is true-that "[h]owever good various types of grooves may make us feel,. . . they cannot be presumed to be innocent of power"-then we must examine how these grooves are estab- lished. Therefore, I will not argue the position of whether the lyrics should carry so much weight; rather,I will discuss the music that sup- ports the lyrics, particularlythe groove, as establishedby the drums. It is essential to examine not only how certain beats are manipulated but where they originated.Olly Wilson's "TheHeterogeneous Sound Ideal in African-AmericanMusic" (1992) serves as a point of departureto address this issue. Wilson suggests that to define what constitutes black music, we need to devise means through which to uncover meaning in black music, a task that he notes, is "made difficult by the fact that the music of black Americans exists within a larger,multicultural social context, like that of all ethnic groups within the "(327). He develops a concept called the "heterogeneoussound ideal," which he defines as the "coreof underlying conceptions that define African and African-American music," noting that "thereexists a approachto music making in which a kaleidoscopic range of dramatically contrasting qualities of sound (timbre)is sought after in both vocal and instrumentalmusic. The desirable musical sound texture is one that contains a combination of diverse timbres" (329). Wilson presents two ways in which this ideal is practiced that can in turn be related to hip-hop drumming. Wilson's first point is that the heterogeneous sound ideal is "reflected in the nature of the 'sound' texture of musical ensembles, [meaning] the relationship of the resultant qualities of sound produced when several instruments perform simultaneously" (329). The basic drum set consists of three elements-a bell (hi-hator ride cymbal),a high drum (snare),and a low drum ( drum or kick drum)-each of which is generally dis-

2. Neither Rose nor Kelley explicitly states that the lyrics are the defining characteristics of hip-hop, but they do spend a fair amount of time discussing the role of lyrical presenta- tion and reception.

This content downloaded from 140.247.168.35 on Fri, 22 Jan 2016 17:11:56 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Greenwald * Hip-Hop Drumming 261 cerniblefrom the others.3Besides being audibly differentfrom one anoth- er, each element serves both a singular and group function;that is, while each instrument is played independently, it is also contributing to the overall feel. This is not unlike the notion of coordinatedindependence in jazz drumming, which states that each limb should work independently to create a singular pattern.4Keil's (1995)notion of participatorydiscrep- ancies can help us understand how the various instrumentsof the drum set interact within their own set of participatorydiscrepancies beyond those that exist between the drummerand other members of the rhythm section.5That is, it is equally importantto understandhow the ride cym- bal interactswith what the drummeris playing with the other three limbs as it is to understandhow it is interactingwith the bass, piano, and so on. The is important to the beat because it signifies movement on the dance floor, largely through matching the rhythm and sonic force of the bass.6The bass drum in hip-hop usually does not mark the pulse, falling in a syncopated ostinato pattern. This is much like the concept within jazz drumming of droppingbombs, the placement of sporadichits on the bass drum for the purpose of driving both the music and soloists (see Greenwald 1996).In hip-hop, the often emphasizes beats two and four, while the use of marginaland prominent ghost notes adds depth to the groove. The significanceof the bass drum and its sonic prop- erties and snare drum ghost notes will be discussed later. One of the most-sampled beats used in hip-hop music comes from James Brown's "Funky Drummer" (1970), with Clyde Stubblefield on drums.7 This recording demonstrates several aspects of the heteroge-

3. Kick drum is a term that I have never liked, but it is used for logistical reasons (it is played with the foot) and practical reasons (a producer requesting "more on the bass drum" wants to avoid confusion with more on the bass guitar). However, since I am relating hip- hop drumming to jazz drumming, where the term kickdrum is not used, I use the term bass drum here. 4. The term coordinatedindependence was developed by Jim Chapin (1948). 5. A standard drum set is a combination of various percussion instruments from around the world, including cymbals from Turkey, tom-toms from Africa, and the snare drum from Europe. Just as a drummer simultaneously hears one groove as four separate parts and four parts as one groove, drummers approach the drum set as both a singular instrument and an amalgam of instruments. 6. My implications are that the bass drum and the bass provide the underlying pulse to which people dance. In this article, I do not address the issue of how the drums relate to movement, even though this argument is ripe for discussion. The topic of dance within the realm of popular music is often cited because movement as a conveyer of musical meaning helps us to understand both the performance and reception of music. For discussions of music and dance, see Fikentscher (2000) and Aparicio (1998). 7. The James Brown CD In the Jungle Grooveis a collection of recordings from 1969 to 1972 and includes the original version of "Funky Drummer" as well as the remix version titled "Funky Drummer (Bonus Beat Reprise)." Stewart (2000) discusses "Funky Drummer" as

This content downloaded from 140.247.168.35 on Fri, 22 Jan 2016 17:11:56 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 262 BMRJournal neous sound ideal. Throughout the recording, Stubblefield's playing varies a specified pattern composed of fairly unchanging straight six- teenth notes on the hi-hat, while the bass drum has slight deviations. The snare drum is the most varied, notably through the use of short press rolls. Around the five-minute mark, when Brown calls for "everybodyto lay out and let the drummergo," Stubblefieldplays alone for eight bars, slightly altering his patternfrom measure to measure.In comparison,the remix version is basically one unchanging phrase looped together (see Ex. 1). Within each instrument of the drum set, there are a variety of tones. Stubblefieldplays straight sixteenths on the hi-hat and changes the tone by opening the hi-hat on the fourthsixteenth note of beat two and the sec- ond sixteenth note of beat four,as indicated by the open noteheads in the example. The snare drum marks beats two and four,but two is the most prevalent. The prominent use of ghost notes from the end of beat two through the end of beat four creates a variable sound texture within the snare sound. In addition, the bass drum plays loudly on the two eighth notes of one and softly on the second half of beats three and four, again creatinga variable sound texture. Three key aspects of this pattern help establish the groove. The first two, which are of nearly equal importance,are the bass drum strokes on each half of beat one and the snare stroke on beat two. The bass drum establishes the phrasing of the groove and grounds the pulse by defining the downbeat, while the accentuationof the first weak beat by the snare drum sets up the heavily syncopated feel of the rest of the phrase. The on- the-beatpattern of "boom-boom-cha"grounds the groove while also say- ing, "Thisis where things loosen up." The third key aspect of the phrase

Example1. JamesBrown, "FunkyDrummer (Bonus Beat Reprise),"Clyde Stubblefield,drums, recorded 1970 (Polydor829 624-2)

Hi-hat

4 > SnareDrum 41•7- - JJ ...... 5...... 1J. .. . .

Bass Drum ! 7 7

evidence of a stylistic development borne out of New Orleans "second-line" drumming. Whereas Stewart uses "Funky Drummer" as an end point of a musical evolution (funk), I am employing "Funky Drummer" as a departure point for the evolution of hip-hop. Any inconsistencies between his transcription and mine are my responsibility.

This content downloaded from 140.247.168.35 on Fri, 22 Jan 2016 17:11:56 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Greenwald * Hip-Hop Drumming 263 is the second sixteenth of beat four, which has both a bass drum stroke and an open hi-hat serving as a breath mark. Whereas the first two ele- ments give a jumping-off point for the syncopation of the groove, the weight of the third signifies the return to the grounded first beat. Wilson's second point is that "the heterogeneoussound ideal is reflect- ed in the common usage of a wide range of timbres within a single line. ... Within that tradition, the single-line instrumentalsoloist is expected to explore a wide range of timbral variations, so much so that some observershave spoken of the traditionof making the instrumentsimulate vocal technique, or 'talk' or 'speak"' (Wilson 1992, 329). Regarding the variablesound texturewithin the snare sound, ghost notes (whether they are marginal or prominent) vary in tone color. A marginal ghost note, achieved by letting the stick come to rest on the drum head after an attack, tends to be faint and dull, whereas a prominent ghost note, achieved through a definite stroke, tends to be clearer and brighter.8 Furthermore,there are gradations within these categories that allow for what Wilson calls a "wide range of timbralvariations." It is common in hip-hop to expand the timbralvariety especially along the bell-type sonority, in effect replacing the cymbal sonically but not functionally. These "replacement sonorities" refer to the many idio- phones (sleigh bells, chimes, triangles,cymbals, tambourines,handclaps, as well as )that are available to most percussionists and pro- ducers in the form of actual instruments or through a drum machine.9 Note that many of these "toys,"as percussionistsrefer to them, have been part of the jazz drummer's arsenal for decades. Sonny Greer,drummer for Duke Ellington, surrounded himself with a wide array of percussion instruments ranging from orchestralpercussion (chimes or timpani) to folk percussion (washboardand woodblocks).10 Two examples can serve to illustratethis use of timbralvariety. First, in "TheDip," by Goodie Mob, a triangleand shakerare used instead of a hi- hat to establish the groove (see Ex. 2). This example has several distin- guishing aspects. First,while the triangle and shakerplay a one-measure ostinato, the bass drum and snare drum play a two-measure ostinato. This is significant because it alters the phrasing to allow the listener to hear the groove as either a one- or two-measure phrase, and it also cre-

8. Ghost notes can be replicated on a drum machine, (re)producing the effect of a stick hitting the drum head with varying degrees of force and precision. 9. Scratching is a process in which a vinyl record is moved back and forth by hand while the tonearm is on the record, producing a scratching effect that is understood both for its musical characteristics and for the reference to the recording scratched. 10. I use folk percussion cautiously because it is a dangerously loaded term. I am referring here to common items that have become employed as percussion instruments, notably the cowbell, woodblock, and sleigh bell, to name a few.

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Example2. GoodieMob, "TheDip" (LaFace/Arista73008-26064-2)

Triangle.... .

Shaker 4 SnareDrumr

BassDrum f ates a variety of polyrhythms that are reflected in the vocal rhythms. Another important element is that the timbral qualities of the triangle, shaker,and snare drum are distinguishablefrom each other as individual voicings, while at the same time blending into a dense soundscape. Second, "Humble Mumble," by , features an eight-measure "break-down"section that uses a driving ride cymbal and scratchingto keep the pulse as well as to add timbralvariety (see Ex. 3). The ride cym- bal, snare drum, and bass drum are constant, while the scratching fea- tures a differentrhythm with a slightly altered pitch in every other mea- sure, beginning with the second. It is difficult to assign a specific pitch to each note of the scratch,but there does seem to be a discerniblehigh and low, which is representedin the transcription.The rhythm of the scratch as a whole is unsyncopated, yet if one looks at the pitch change within the scratch, a syncopated pattern emerges. This syncopated pattern can be seen both within the scratch and against the groove pattern estab- lished by the ride cymbal, bass drum, and snare drum. Like snare drum ghost notes, the tones of the ride cymbal and of the scratching are varied within themselves. A ride cymbal has two distinct tones-the bell and the body. Within these tones, there are gradations, depending on where and how the stick hits the cymbal. For instance, using the tip of the stick on the bell createsa shorter,more piercing sound than using the shaft of the stick on the bell, whereas using the shaft of the stick near the perimeter of the cymbal will produce a more sustained sound than hitting the midsection of the cymbal. Scratching parallels cymbal playing; just as where the cymbal is struck and the part of the stick used affect the sound, what portion of the trackis scratchedand the rhythm of that scratchaffect the sound. With the basic understanding developed thus far of how the drums function in hip-hop, it becomes imperative to investigate other avenues that relate to hip-hop drumming:(1) the role of technology and its effects on hip-hop drumming; (2) the repetitiveness of the beat and its correla- tion to other African diasporic musics; and (3) the relationship of the rhythm of the vocals to the rhythm of the bass drum.

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Example3. Outkast,"Humble Mumble," Earthtone III, producer (LaFace/Arista 73008-26072-2)

RideCymbal 4

Scratch SnareDrum _w/

Bass Drum

• } f, - },, }, .• , , f.,fk,

~ IJ JI I 7 J I 41 ww w w ww_ ww_

_- , .

The most important element to come out of the technological develop- ments in the hip-hop genre is the prominent use of the drum machine. Second to the drum machine is the use of digital sampling and audio sys- tems. Paul Theberge (1999, 218-219) describes digital sampling as fol- lows: "[Sampling] refers to the use of prerecorded sound and music ... in the creation of rhythm tracks for use in hip-hop and rap, in dance remixes, and in so-called 'mastermixes,' with the origins of the sounds being more or less recognizable depending on the intentions of the artists and the knowledge base of their audience." Digital sampling, when used as a form of musical (de)construction, dissolves the distinction between musician and listener as one's musical memory catalog recalls sampled pieces, thus bringing additional meaning and (re)construction to the music. Not unlike the advertising world, which inverts images and sounds into unified target audience categories, through this postmodern assemblage, technology acts as a bridge between varied demographics. As George Lipsitz (1994, 37) states: "Digital sampling in rap music turns

This content downloaded from 140.247.168.35 on Fri, 22 Jan 2016 17:11:56 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions 266 BMRJournal consumers into producers, tapping consumer memories of parts of old songs and redeploying them in the present, . . . [calling] into question Western notions of cultural production as property through its evocation, quotation, and outright theft of socially shared musical memories." Tricia Rose (1994, 78) asserts that "[r]ap's heavy use of sampled live soul and funk drummers adds a desired textual dimension uncommon in other genres and that programmed drum machines cannot duplicate." Indeed, sampling has been used to recapture established drum beats, in which case the sampler may be considered a drum machine. There are two reasons I place greater significance on the drum machine (or sampler as drum machine) over sampling technology as a whole. First, the drum machine allows for minute alterations of a groove. Take, for example, the beat for "Funky Drummer" (Ex. 1). Perhaps a producer wants to move the emphasis of the second sixteenth of beat four ahead to its third six- teenth. The reprogrammed beat changes the feel to create a new groove. Second, the drum machine eliminates the necessity for the services of a live drummer yet does not allow for the elimination of drum (i.e., rhyth- mic) sense. Because many producers understand that subtle changes in the beat can alter a groove or a song, they develop a sense of how to push and pull the feel, which has a twofold effect. (1) The effect of subtle changes answers the naysayers who claim that hip-hop is the same thing over and over again. Through minutely significant (e.g., the change in sonority from hi-hat to triangle) and significantly minute (e.g., altering the place- ment of ghost notes) changes throughout a chorus, song or album, the same thing is not happening over and over again." (2) It addresses the issue of innovation. Hip-hop has been compared with even by beboppers themselves, most notably by drummer Max Roach. Roach states that "[t]he thing that frightened people about hip hop was that they heard rhythm-rhythm for rhythm's sake. Hip hop lives in the world of sound-not the world of music-and that's why it's so revolutionary" (quoted in Lipsitz 1994, 38). And although the technological innovations are undeniable, the musical innovations appear to be more like musical renovations. As Keyes (1996, 224) puts it, "[h]ip hop represents ... cul- tural reversioning-the foregrounding (both consciously and uncon- sciously) of African-centered concepts in response to cultural takeover, ruptures, and appropriations." Said another way, the technical innova- tions lead to a (re)interpretation of the rhythmic elements and freedoms from bebop onto hip-hop. One of the more prominent drum machines used in hip-hop is the

11. The recordings discussed in this article, notably 's The Low End Theoryand Outkast's Stankonia,exhibit these types of changes.

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Roland TR808 "because of its 'fat sonic boom,' because of the way it processes bass frequencies" (Rose 1994, 75). The TR808, a fairly large machine (twenty-two inches by twelve inches by four inches), is relative- ly easy to use. At its simplest level is step-timeprogramming, which is a piece of cake. You just select a drum sound with the rotary selector and start pressing the coloured step buttons while the patternis running,then move onto the next sound, building up your rhythm pattern, any mistakes are canceled by pressing the button a second time.... Real-timeprogramming is just as easy. ... It's possible to programmea total of 64 differentrhythm patterns into the 808. (Carter2000, 1)

The facility with which a producer or artist can use a drum machine provides a plethora of sounds that can be combined to create a desired sonority. Just as rappers can change their vocal styles to convey different meanings, and just as a rock guitarist can use different electronic effects to convey different meanings, the multiplicity of sounds that can be used or sampled with a drum machine conveys many different meanings. For example, sampling a drum sound that reminds an artist of being "back in the day" to emulate nostalgia would be as appropriate as sampling a gun shot for a snare sound to emulate urban decay. Referentialists, according to Leonard Meyer (1956, 1) "contend that ... [music] communicates meanings which in some way refer to the extramusical world of concepts, actions, emotional states, and character." Drum sounds can be seen to garner the power of suggestion through reference. As already stated, repetition is important in establishing the groove within hip-hop. James Snead (1984) notes that repetition is a crucial ele- ment in black music. He discusses repetition through the introduction of the "cut," which is the ability of performers to leave the music and pick up where they left off-a reference point: "The 'cut' overtly insists on the repetitive nature of the music. ... The ensuing rupture does not cause dis- solution of the rhythm; quite to the contrary, it strengthens it, given that it is already incorporated into the format of that rhythm" (69). This means that familiarity is the base of a musical pyramid as a "cut" brings a change or alteration of the musical elements, not its essentials. Repetition serves as a qualifying element, not a determining element; repetition enables musical progress, but the results of that progress are independent of the repetition itself. Scratching, then, is a form of a "cut" because it injects itself on top of the beat, like a drum fill, as a rhythmic diversion only to resolve or cut back to the beat in order to keep the feel going.12

12. This analysis of the "cut" is my own; however, it should be noted that Rose (1994, 61-72) has a similar interpretation of Snead.

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Ingrid Monson (1999, 46) discusses three aspects of repetition in African diasporic musics that can relate to hip-hop drumming. Her first aspect, "how repeating patterns such as riffs are layered and combined," is evident in the layering of various timbres used to create the drum pat- tern. Whether it is through the use of the Roland TR808 or through a stan- dard drum set, the various timbres are often heard separately but listened to as a whole. Second, "how repetition supports improvisational call and response exchanges" can be heard through the scratching "cut" as well as through a vocally stylized "cut." Monson's third aspect of repetition, "how both shared and individualized patterns define overlapping stylis- tic areas," is evident through the analysis of the drum parts as both sep- arate and unified entities. In addition to the roles of technology and repetition, there is the issue of the bass drum rhythm in relation to the vocal rhythm. The bass guitar and the bass drum logically are often coordinated, which helps to per- petuate the desired "boominess" of the music, such as in the creation of Jeep beats designed to be blared from car speakers. However, this is less of an issue here than the rhythmic vocal patterns and how they interlock with the bass drum. As Keyes (1996, 232) argues, "What performers define as melodic qualities in rap, scholars refer to as tonal semantics.... Meaning is achieved, therefore, by accenting certain words or syllables in a rhythmic manner, thereby creating fluidity within the text." There are two fundamental elements within this relationship. First, there is the prominence of an accentuation of the downbeat followed by a syncopat- ed phrase. As mentioned in the discussion of "Funky Drummer," the emphasis of the downbeat grounds the groove while setting up the play- fulness of the rest of the phrase, as well as serving as a return from the "cut." For this reason, both the bass drum and vocals emphasize the downbeat while varying the remainder of the phrase. Second, and this builds on the previous point, there is frequent use of the "Funky Drummer" beginning to establish phrasing in hip-hop tracks. This is clear throughout A Tribe Called Quest's album The Low End Theory.13 On every track, the vocals and the bass drum emphasize the downbeat, and except for tracks five, six, and eleven (out of fourteen), the bass drum and vocals accent the "Funky Drummer" pattern of eighth- note/eighth-note/quarter-note (boom-boom-cha) to begin each phrase. The significance is not only in the coordination of the first two beats but also in the variation of the remaining beats. The vocal rhythm on top of the bass drum rhythm creates an interlocking pattern that gives move-

13. This pattern can be heard in many different recordings. Listening to hip-hop on the radio in search of the "Funky Drummer" beginning will reveal the prominence of this pattern.

This content downloaded from 140.247.168.35 on Fri, 22 Jan 2016 17:11:56 UTC All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions Greenwald * Hip-Hop Drumming 269 ment or groove to the phrasing. Take, for example, track ten titled "Everything Is Fair." In Example 4, a nonvocal example from "Everything Is Fair," it is clear that the "Funky Drummer" pattern begins each phrase, followed by a syncopated pattern that ends on beat four, thus allowing for a slight pause before the return to the strong emphasis of the downbeat. Example 5, a vocal example, shows the phrasing of the first four bars of the first verse. Throughout the song, the vocal rhythms change, except for the ini- tial emphasis. Example 5 illustrates that the rhythmic delivery of the lyrics in coordi- nation with the drums is as important in defining hip-hop as the lyrics

Example4. A TribeCalled Quest, "Everything Is Fair,"Skeff Anselm, producer, and A TribeCalled Quest, co-producer, first verse(Jive 1418-2J)

Hi-hat

Snare Drum

BassDrum 4 ,l

Example5. A TribeCalled Quest, "EverythingIs Fair,"Skeff Anselm, producer, and A TribeCalled Quest, co-producer, first verse(Jive 1418-2J)

Voice 4 . .-. i. Look at Miss E-laine. runs the fast lane. Bare-I) knows her name. struck by fame. She Hi-hat 7 4 J7 " "7 SnareDrum t - .. 4 7 Drum Bas••.s -

just got a Benz. she rides with her friends. Got- ta keep- a beep-er in her purse to make ends.

,7, 7 iTK J7 ,7 77 T7IT

-77:--

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Drums in popular music, even in jazz, are often overlooked. While scholars may acknowledge the importanceof the drums, many stop their analysis here. The drums in hip-hop serve an important role; they not only establish the groove and emphasize vocal style, but they also act as a cultural signifier.The incorporationof various drumming sounds and styles (including scratching)into hip-hop adds breadthand variety to the music beyond the lyrical content. The drums in hip-hop define the music as much as any other element, musical or extramusical.As we further understand the significanceof drums in hip-hop, we begin to see deeper layers of complex musical production and sophistication.We should be digging in the crates,listening for those backbeats,those grooves, that tal- ented hip-hop musicians find and use referentiallyand creatively.It is quite clear that they acknowlege the importanceof the drums, so why are we not listening?

Special thanks to Ellie Hisama and Robin D. G. Kelley for their insight and input in the development of this article.

DISCOGRAPHY

Brown, James. In the jungle groove. Polydor 829 624-2 (1986). Goodie Mob. Worldparty. LaFace/Arista 73008-26064-2 (1999). Outkast. Stankonia.LaFace/Arista 73008-26072-2 (2000). A Tribe Called Quest. The low end theory.Jive 1418-2-J (1991).

REFERENCES

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