that rappers, or any artist for that matter, should only have about one or two producers driving their album?
I believe having one or two producers leads to an album that has a natural togetherness that ususally means not skipping tracks when listening to the album. For example, take Jay-Z's "Reasonable Doubt" album. Most of the tracks have the same kind of feel, but they're different(same thing with "Blueprint"-Kanye & Just Blaze). This same thing drove the sound of the 60's and 70's. I'm not saying that we should go back to the past, however, I think that the feel those album had would be a breath of air. Instead, we have 15 track albums with 13 different producers, many tracks sticking out like a sore thumb(recent Talib Kweli)I know this noting takes food out of the mouths of us as up and coming producers, but do you feel what I am saying?
What do you think about that?
One!
I believe having one or two producers leads to an album that has a natural togetherness that ususally means not skipping tracks when listening to the album. For example, take Jay-Z's "Reasonable Doubt" album. Most of the tracks have the same kind of feel, but they're different(same thing with "Blueprint"-Kanye & Just Blaze). This same thing drove the sound of the 60's and 70's. I'm not saying that we should go back to the past, however, I think that the feel those album had would be a breath of air. Instead, we have 15 track albums with 13 different producers, many tracks sticking out like a sore thumb(recent Talib Kweli)I know this noting takes food out of the mouths of us as up and coming producers, but do you feel what I am saying?
What do you think about that?
One!