Daymo said:
Really good point there mate. My MC and I have always attacked our projects the same way since day one. He comes up with a concept for the track then writes his rhymes to a basic drum loop that I’ve put together. Then once I get a feel for the lyrics and content of the song – I’ll put down the rest of the production. I’ve found that this allows me to create a beat that really compliments the content of the lyrics.
Hip hop for me is at its best when the production is slick but actually puts the focus on the MC rather than taking it from him.
I hear you. I've always favored sculpting a beat around the vocals. I like to produce the song from the beginning, when I'm writing the lyrics and have something musical in mind. Like... I wrote this song about drinking and sampled bottles and used them as a melody, blew across the bottles for flute-like sounds and played the chords on my ASR-10 keyboard. <a href="http://hypnotixhiphop.tripod.com/sitebuildercontent/sitebuilderfiles/wishgiver.mp3" target="_blank">Check it out if you want.</a> Later, I found out that the LIKS did the same thing. But I did it differently, so it doesn't matter.
As a composer, I hate sampling other people's music. If you can do it creatively, and put your own spin on it, then I MIGHT give you credit as a composer, ONLY if you do some CRAZY melodic spin to it and add your own melodies.
If you just chop up a sample and drop some drums on it, I'd give you credit as a DJ/beatmaker, which is fine. But just know where you stand, that's all. Don't give yourself credit as a sick producer/composer if that's all you do.
The same thing stands for Puff Daddy, P. Diddy, or Diddy or Hey Diddle Diddle, whatever you call him. I will only give him credit as a businessman, and not so much for his creativity, especially as a lyricist. Producer, yes, because he has a goal in mind and something profitable comes out of it.
I'm not saying anything bad about anyone who does this. But I do know people who will take a sample, barely alter it, throw a kick, snare and hi hat on it, and THEN call themselves a sick producer. If it sounded hot and everyone loved it, or it sold at least a few copies, then I would call you a producer.
As long as you get the samples cleared with the original writer of the music, then there's no problem what you do. You could even sample a whole entire song, and say "hell yea" over the intro for all I care. Just give credit where it's due, that's all.
I've sampled before, and I've recorded over sampled-beats. But as a composer, I wouldn't want someone to sample anything I've done (it's happened before!) and not even give credit to me at all, AND say that THEIR beat is HOT. Hmmm, I wonder why your beat is so hot?