Saturday, July 16, 2011

The Ruler Zig-Zag-Zig Allah breaks down the ethics of sampling and live instrumentation. Over the past decades, the Wu-Tang Clan's the RZA has proven to be one of the most versatile producers, using both samples and live instrumentation to his multitude of Hip Hop and film projects. Now, in a recent interview with MTV's Mixtape Daily, the RZArector talks about sampling versus playing a traditional instrument. The multi-instrumental RZA related how a brief and somewhat critical encounter with a disgruntled musician pushed him to delve into the study of musical theory. He explained that some Hip Hop producers manage to skate by without a traditional understanding of music, and that his own instance of critique pushed him to face the music. “Two things happened: the first thing was that I was at a music store buying equipment. I went platinum…I probably was feeling myself egotistically…and a regular musician stopped me, ‘cus people were giving me attention like, ‘That’s the RZA,’ and this guy said [to me], ‘You’re ruining music,’” the Abbot explained. “[I was like] ‘What’s this guy talking about?’ He was a musician, but because of sampling, he can’t get a job. Because of drum machines, his drummer can’t get no work. He said, ‘You’re not a real musician.’ I said, ‘What are you talking about I’m not a real musician? I’ve got a platinum album.’ He said, ‘Yeah, but you’re not a musician. You don’t know nothing about music.’ He was right; I couldn’t tell him what a C note was. So he challenged me, basically.” He continued, “I didn’t say nothing to him, I just took it to myself. I came back a week later and bought some music theory books and started studying music theory so I c[ould] be a legitamite musician, just to respect the craft of music. He was right; it’s unfair sometimes to have success on things when we haven’t paid our dues. I had paid my dues to Hip Hop, but I didn’t pay my dues to music, so I went and started studying theory.”


A clever hacker changed Rawse's avatar and background to 50 Cent icons and wallpaper and posed as the G-Unit general.

Last night, a 50 Cent impersonator hacked into Rick Ross’ Twitter account (@rickyrozay), changing the background, name and profile picture to that of Fif’s page and posing as the G-Unit leader.

The updates began last night with a tweet stating, “I want to impact peoples lives more. I created a new goal for my self, I want to feed a billion people in africa over the next 5 years.” For the next two hours, the 50 Cent impersonator interacted with fans, tweeted at Shawty Lo and telling aspiring rappers to call G-Unit and ask for Dr. Dre.

After inflicting the damage, the hacker said that it had been an “entertaining social experiment” and that “if you think 50 Cent really has the mental capacity and/or time to hack a Twitter account, you’re even more gullible.”

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