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  1. Feb 17, 2015 · Freestyle, orLatin hip-hop — essentially salsafied electro — was a natural fit in sunshine state and Tony (Anthony Butler) crafted hits for Debbie Deb, himself, and his group Freestyle, who released “When I Hear Music,”“Fix It In The Mix,” and “Freestyle Express,” respectively. 1983 proved to be a significant year in hip-hop not ...

  2. Aug 15, 2023 · The album propelled Southern hip-hop to the masses, and featured a track entitled "Dirty South." The term, first used by Atlanta rapper Cool Breeze, gave a name to the burgeoning hip-hop movement south of the Mason-Dixon line. Instead of rejecting the coastal elitism of hip-hop, the Dirty South embraced it — in fact they sold it.

  3. Nov 28, 2023 · During the early 1990s, hip-hop was predominantly associated with the East Coast and West Coast scenes, with artists like NWA, Notorious B.I.G, and Tupac Shakur defining the genre. However, Goodie Mob emerged from the South, specifically Atlanta, to give voice to a marginalized region.

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    • Introduction
    • Rap and Place
    • The Rap Map Unfolds
    • Rap Scenes and Styles of The South
    • Marketing The South
    • Dirtiness Defined
    • Dirtiness in Southern Rap and Beyond
    • Get Crunk, Tear The Club Up
    • Visual Culture of The Dirty South
    • Conclusion

    Introduced in a 1995 song by the Atlanta-based group Goodie Mob, the idea of the "Dirty South" spread quickly throughout the rap music subculture and industry, and by the early years of the twenty-first century moved into more general usage in a variety of contexts not directly related to rap. The concept of the Dirty South as elaborated by the Goo...

    Perhaps the most remarkable dimension of the Dirty South phenomenon is the way it brings to the fore paradoxical and contradictory ideas about the relationship between music and place. For some scholars, this relationship is more or less "organic" — the stylistic differences between music produced in different places are unavoidable outgrowths of d...

    From its beginnings in New York's neighborhoods, rap spread first to other large cities in the northeast, then jumped across the continent to southern California, for reasons that had much more to do with the preexisting structure of the music industry than with any sort of monopoly on talent held by the California-based rappers and producers who e...

    For all of its novelty in the areas of vocal performance, narrative voice, and musical backing, rap was strongly tied to previous genres of African American music, a fact which helped make the music accessible to Black southern audiences. In addition to sustaining an interest in and a market for "mainstream" rap produced for national audiences, inh...

    If we include Miami in "the South" (a move which brings traditional geographical and historical definitions of the South into question) people had been rapping, DJing, and releasing records in this part of the country for almost two decades before the idea of "southern rap" as a category emerged in the mid-1990s. Prior to that time, any artist or g...

    For music critics and journalists, the "Dirty South" became shorthand for the growing numbers of rap artists from the former Confederate states. Sometimes appearing as a geographical referent, at other times the Dirty South described a genre of music. On the website allmusic.com in 2008, the Dirty-South-as-genre appeared as "a stoned, violent, sex-...

    Within rap culture, the utility and adaptability of the Dirty South popularized by Goodie Mob became evident in the various ways that ideas or images of dirt and dirtiness continued to proliferate in artist names as well as album and song titles. The debut album from a Mississippi-based artist named Dirty South was advertised in XXL magazine in ear...

    The crunk concept was born in the late 1980s and early 1990s in nightclubs in southern cities like Memphis and Atlanta, as DJs, producers and artists strove to produce the kind of music appropriate to a rowdy, collective, and embodied experience. Before it became a rap subgenre, crunk's meaning evoked a high level of crowd energy and enthusiasm. In...

    "In the field of representational politics," writes Katherine Henninger, "that is, the ongoing contest to assert what can and cannot be represented in a given culture — visual representations have played, and continue to play, an extraordinarily complicated, nuanced role in the South."109Katherine Henninger, Ordering the Facade: Photography and Con...

    What is at stake in the creation of imagined spaces of rap? Or an imagined South? Spatial imaginaries arise, already connected with material concerns and economic struggles. A shift in imagining the geography of rap opens possibilities to new participants. Imagined in a different way, the economic, material, and cultural resources of the South, onc...

  5. Dirty South (song) " Dirty South " is a song by American hip hop group Goodie Mob featuring American rappers and fellow Dungeon Family members Big Boi and Cool Breeze. It was released in 1996 via LaFace Records as the third single from Goodie Mob's debut studio album Soul Food (1995). Recording sessions took place at Purple Dragon Studios and ...

  6. May 6, 2024 · The success of southern rap music can be traced to the early success of acts like MC Shy D The Geto Boys and 2 Live Crew. By the mid-1990's Atlanta would become the center of Southern Hip Hop music.The rise and success of Organized Noize , Outkast , and Goodie Mob , solidified Atlanta as the center of Southern Hip Hop music.

  7. Hip-hop culture began on the East Coast. The West Coast has had several runs of supremacy. But arguably, no region has enjoyed continued success like the Dirty South. From Houston’s own Geto Boys’ “Mind Playing Tricks on Me” to trap music from Atlanta, the Dirty South has produced classic rap songs seemingly non-stop since 1991.

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