• djsoren19@yiffit.net
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      1 hour ago

      So the joke here isn’t sampling, it’s the idea of being “featured” on a track. Idk Khaled enough to know if this would be too extreme an example, but imagine a lesser known hiphop artist making nearly 100% of a song. Then Khaled comes in, does a few whoops and hollers, maybe a few bars, but the song ends up on a Khaled album. The lesser known artist is credited as “featured” on the track, even if it was mostly their work.

      • HubertManne@moist.catsweat.com
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        1 hour ago

        yeah honestly from reading the comments im sorta glad I don’t know this guy. ugh though like amazon keeps on advertising me mr beast stuff and if it was not for that I would only know him from comments. I hope this guy does not get a deal like that.

    • Delphia@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      Dj Khaled is kind of the posterchild for egotistical dickhead, I will never dispute this. However, his skill is bringing talent together and he is pretty damn good at it. He’s more like a movie producer/casting director than a music producer in how he does business. He hears a beat, thinks “Who would destroy on this?” Buys the beat, Makes some phone calls, gets some artists onboard to do a verse, pays the artists for their work, mixes the track or pays a producer who he thinks has skills to do it for him and releases it.

      He is the child of Palestinian immigrants and built himself his dream job and is worth an estimated 70 million, have a look at his wikipedia for the sheer number of awards he has been nominated for… Talentless hacks cant do that. Raging egomaniacs with annoying personalities sure can tho.

      • shalafi@lemmy.world
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        19 hours ago

        Don’t know anything about the man, but love watching social media bag on him.

        “He has no talent of his own!”

        Well, he must have something as he got filthy stinking rich in one of the most competitive fields out there.

        • 5in1k@lemm.ee
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          5 hours ago

          I can’t speak on his talent but he’s a giant asshole and incredibly insufferable.

        • Benjaben@lemmy.world
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          17 hours ago

          I am normally on board with the idea of “this person made it to the top of a competitive field, he can’t be XYZ” but in this case, idk man. People absolutely become famous in the music industry while having very little to offer beyond the ability to generate hype/buzz. It’s an industry that basically exists to misrepresent people in positive ways for profit, and there’s an almost endless number of levers to pull and buttons to push to make that happen. Talent and success in that world are just not all that well correlated.

          Edit: you just said you don’t even know much about him, so thanks for coming to my TED talk and I’ll now go back to being old and grumpy quietly.

          • Delphia@lemmy.world
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            16 hours ago

            You said it yourself he is very good at generating hype in an industry that survives on hype. He was a flashy obnoxious tool when everyone was wearing Ed Hardy jeans and 3 inch round Ecko watches studded with fake diamonds. He was Mr Miami when the south was blowing up rap wise. He was the right personality, in the right place, at the right time with the right skills and right connections and he hustled.

            I know I’m repeating myself saying “I think he is a tool” but that being said, I was really into rap and the scene during the era he had his come up and I know he didnt stumble into success.

            • Benjaben@lemmy.world
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              14 hours ago

              Fair enough, definitely will not disagree with you cuz you sound way more informed. I found him (and I guess his era if I’m being honest) too overtly manufactured and obnoxious to really engage with. I do imagine bro worked his ass off, and yea must have been a confluence of factors, many of them his own personality traits and effort. Maybe what irks me is people regard him as egocentric and cocky when to me he seems the opposite, just extremely fragile and fake because he’s hyper-aware of his own shortcomings (and worse, absolutely correct about them). I guess that describes a fair portion of “egocentric” personalities anyway though, thorny and fragile.

              • Delphia@lemmy.world
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                13 hours ago

                Your assesment of that era of rap is 100% spot on. That was a very braggadocious and flashy era leading up to the financial collapse in 08. Dj Khaled was music for nightclubs, it was “gangster rap” for the masses, it was radio play accessible without being edited to death… and it sold.

                I dont know the man but I think it was a lot like what happens to a lot of people in entertainment, you have to fake it till you make it. Nobody wants to hear songs about how you’re going to climb to the middle. But eventually at some level of success you need to stop huffing your own farts and show some humility and I dont think he ever has.

    • SatyrSack@feddit.org
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      23 hours ago

      Did he ever? From what I understood, the “DJ” in his name just comes from his time as a radio DJ or whatever.