I disagree with both those things. for one, being onto something early (like bape) doesn't mean you created the style. he had a hand in the 2000s but not nearly as much as scott storch, timbaland, or manny fresh. as for the 2010s fashion & whatnot almost all those people dress that way because of Lil Wayne whether they know it or not.
@@darkskinwhite As far as the Wayne stuff i gotta correct you a bit brotha! You're missin' like 2 or 3 elements PRE Wayne. Jim Jones--yes JIM JONES started rockin those Italian brands, put them with the checkered scarves that the habibis had in the corner stores, and combined them wit the skull belts, and accessories that Stack Bundles and bird gang wore. Then, if you recall, Wayne hung wit dipset for a half a second and the rest is history. It probably seemed like he started the wave. But it's all about the person on the biggest platform
The signiture synth that the neptunes used in their beats is in the tribe called quest " bonitta applebomb" n they also have influnces from James brown, for example the beat for shake ya ass is James brown. They also have a huge early 80s prince influnce on their beats. Like for example.. Kelis milkshake is nasty girl by vanity 6 which was wrote by Prince.
@@93Acres yea im a big Pharrell / neptunes fan n a fan of prince . like u can clearly hear the prince influence on the neptunes or pharrells solo work / production
Yeah... u can kinda hear a loose connection in arrangement between Nasty Girl and Milkshake. I always thought that the 'Nasty Girl' link was more prominent in Britneys 'Slave 4 U' tho.
I would say more, Chad and Pharell took their funk sound from the music of James Brown, Stevie Wonder and Prince, all their synth syncopated sounds similar to electro clave playing are all from Stevie's music, bass drumming and syncopation are from James' music, melody, virtuosity and innovation - this is from the music of the prince
analysis was amazing. I appreciate how deep you dove in and how well put together this if for one of my favorite producers. You just earned a sub. Blessings on your journey.
Greatest versatile producers/songwriters ever Pharrell Williams and Chad Hugo Known as #TheNeptunes🎶🎵💯🔥🙌🏿Till this day especially working with different artists from Pop Rock R&B Soul and definitely on Hip Hop Rap Music 🎶🎵💯🙌🏿🔥
Yes Stevie absolutely! They're some of the talented & hardest working producers out there for sure. To be at the top of the game for over 20 years is unbelievable 🙌
Love this, i think this kind of video is what youtube needs, this is one of the kind video. i always want this type of content, but people only covers about the gossip instead of their works. we need deep dive of the artists background, and how they became who they are, how they work, their workflow, etc, too bad, the view count is low, but i think if you keep pushing this type of content, you could become mainstream youtuber like roomie official
He literally became the number 1 or 2 producer of the late 90s and 2000s he literally created a whole style that every producer tried to duplicate he's a genius along with Chad who doesn't get the credit he deserves but as the Neptune's they are one of the greatest production teams to ever exist in music and definitely deserve many more flowers and Grammys
Actually who cares 😂 the made half the video about him and you think they don't respect his influence , and from what every one said in the video he did not necessarily do most of the work , he did was was important to the songs and pharrell has never denied that , your statement does sound like you want to bilittle the legacy or maybe am over reaching
@@GILLISH Well no but there's credits on some of the songs, and its credited what pharrell would do, also, chad stepped away from the neptunes a little bit and P did a lot of the beats so there's that haha
@@sleepingmedicine.x Credits? you might want to educate yourself on the music Bizz there could be 7 people in the room getting credit. that means nothing seeing that there are ghost writers also. he walked away 4 a reason
DUDE WTF I WAS JUST STARTING TO LISTENING THE PHARRELL DISCOGRAPHY TODAY AND SEARCHING HIS PRODUCE TECHNICS JUST TO DISCOVER THAT THE NEPTUNES IN THE DEADMAU5 TRACK RELEASED LAST YEAR I WAS SOOOO ADDICTED TOO IS THE PHARRELL NEPTUNES, I'LL NEVER GUESS, OMG
You left out the most important factor behind his success. He was personally mentored by Teddy Riley - one of the biggest producers in music history. Teddy mentored Pharrell ever since he was in high school and gave him access to all his industry connections. If you dig deep, behind anyone who “made it” in entertainment is either: Family connections, money, or both. For example, Akon became a multi millionaire by selling stolen luxury cars and used to money to buy his way into the music biz. Irv Gotti became a multimillionaire in the construction industry and used his money to buy his way into the biz as well (that’s how he funded Murder Inc, signed Ja Rule and paid for all the marketing, promo, and production to make those songs blow up.) Scott Storch was personally mentored by Dr Dre for many years. Etc…
You are most welcome Vraajawat! Great question, but a tricky one to answer 😄 My simple answer is when you feel comfortable (or preferably excited) showing it to people. It is a tricky one no doubt, as we nearly always want to make more changes. But if you make the music you want to hear, that will help you locate the finish line 🙌
I think most people struggle with this! It's important to learn when to step away, or you'll end up spending a year on a track and that won't do you any good 😄
@@93Acres theres a playlist of comparisons with direct song references i made on my channel for research purposes if u like. theres a short and a long version. not to plug!! i just think someone needs to make that vid and im lazy and busy lol
hey man do you where I can be teached on Logic pro x? Im struggling doing things that should be simple like syncing samples and shit :( Im almost giving up tbh
Hey Purple Heart, sorry I missed your comment it got caught in the 'held for review' section. Don't give up, I believe in you! 🙌 If you're willing to go to the lengths of watching RU-vid production tutorials I know you have got the drive in you to improve! I'm setting up tutorials through my patreon atm ( www.patreon.com/93Acres ), but there are so many ways to learn for free too, so don't rush into anything! Take your time and focus on one challenge at a time, like lining up samples for drums. Take on a new challenge each week. Spent at least 20 minutes each day of focused (put your phone in your bag) learning on that particular subject. You'll be amazed at how quickly you can improve. You can do it!!! 💜
Juist a heads up - Distrokid is one of the worst publishers out there. They have no AR.. no help center, no nothing. Sometimes they respond on twitter, but I can't make them respond to any of my tweets in the past year regarding me running a youtube channel that is also used for promoting my music. So what I get is copyright strikes from my own publisher because I can't whitelist a whole channel... The only way to deal with that is to whitelist each video once I release it. Which can take up to 4 days to process, which is basically the lifespan of those kind of videos (talking head with one of my songs in the background). So if you're promoting them, and if you have any contact with them, you should talk to them about this. I'm not the only one that has this issue.
Hey GE, will definitely mention this to them next time we're chatting. Totally understand your frustration there. Just a potential work around that issue, if you make the video prior to release you could upload it to RU-vid as unlisted and get it cleared of the copyright strike before making the video public? Also to clarify I've only had super experiences with DistroKid personally. I would never promote any brand or product that I didn't find amazing myself.
@@93Acres thank you man, I know about the "workaround" but the issue is that I tend to upload almost on a daily basis.. so I really can't do that. I have had good experiences with them when I was only releasing music.. made 2 of my youtube channels to be artist channels with ease.. but the stuff that I do right now has both (videos on different topics and my music in the background and foreground) and I wrote them a ton of times on twitter, but I guess they're just ignoring those kinds of tweets.. Without them having any AR, that's the only way of communicating with them, unfortunately
Man from the start you are all wrong "Drop it like it's hot" "Milkshake" "Hot in here" "Hollaback" are not Pharrell creation it's from the Neptunes. A producers DUO. Which means him AND Chad Hugo created those hits. At some point you have to stop wanting to attribute everything to him alone, it's annoying at the end.