andreas said:
My take on it is that if he had a sample he could acompany it with the right stuff. He'd make the bassline right and put stuff in there like synkops that an untrained person wouldn't know how to operate.
What I'm saying is. If you can make music and are a musician you can transend genres. Ofcourse there are schooled musicians that can't compose and only play other peoples work. but if you can compose music, I think you might have a preedisposition to make beats, or techno, or whatever. Cuz the basics of mucial production. Pop, techno, beats, whatever is structurarely the same.
There's harmonies and subharmonies and rhythms. And those things are really a common denominator I think.
That, of course, depends on what type of hiphop you're reffering to... if you're talking about some orcherstrated "The Roots" kind, well, yeah, a trained musician can play that shit... but, of course, he needs to know hiphop and have creative skills...
Thing is, hiphop dont really have a set structure, so you cant really train to make an hiphop track... Having music skills will help, but it's not all. Or then, that person will do beats with no personality... like a "standard" hiphop track with a standard hiphop structure (if that's possible)...
To summerize my idea: Someone who's not into but is a musician who learned the basics will do a basic beat. But if he doesn't have that little plus, his beats will never match the beats of professional beatmakers...
As for using samples, well that's actually kind of hard,
if you do it seriously. Looping a 4 bars sample is kind of easy and lazy. the hard part is cutting/rearranging the sample to make something new out of something old. And knowing music doesn't REALLY help...