Hip hop beats are done at a slow tempo below 100bpm typically, and the highest I've seen it go is 110bpm.
You can call grime, the version of rap music for teenagers with low attention spans, who like hyper beats, who don't want to listen to meaningful lyrics, or a load of lyrics like with Common or Nas.
Grime has more emphasis on having a cool beat, and some cool bars, they don't have to mean anything if you know what I mean. Lil Wayne's A Milli could have been a grime song as it has that kind of lyrics.
Hip hop beats do have a slow tempo, even if it's that new dirty south subgenre of hip hop.
Whether it's east coast, west coast, gangsta rap, or dirty south, it's got a low bpm.
Which idiot prompted this discussion by saying that hip hop has a high bpm? A 2step drum pattern has come to this.
Try this! Download some grime and hip hop acapellas, and place a kick on the first beat of every bar. Then change the tempo until the kicks fit in with the lyrics.
Once you've done that, come back and tell me that hip hop rap lyrics are designed for a higher tempo.
I'm including this because some people on this forum do not understand music genres
Mortal wrote:2-step?!?!
can we PLEASE stop with all of the sub-genres of dubstep now...GODDD!
East Coast: Eyedea & Abilities (the whole album is there), Medina Green - Crosstown Beef,serox wrote:Dont forget a lot of hip hop is made between 150 and 170 bpm.
breakbeat drums, turntabalism, flutes, tambourines, trumpets, guitar licks, chill rhymin, the lyrics are typically said with no pauses like in west coast
West Coast: Heavy D - Black Coffee Will Smith - Greatest Hits
i dunno how to describe it
Gangsta Rap: 50 Cent, The Game, G Unit
self explanatory
Dirty South: Really good dj mix 3:42 Monica featuring Dem Franchize Boyz - Everytime Tha Beat Drop
music influenced by crunk music by Lil Jon, R&B by T-Pain, (Iyaz - Replay) and hip hop by Lil Wayne (Young Money, Drake)
Now let's go back to the 2step. Argument over.