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Chopped and screwed

Music genre and technique of remixing music


Summary

Music genre and technique of remixing music

FieldValue
nameChopped and screwed
other_names* Screwed and chopped
cultural_originsEarly 1990s, Houston, Texas, United States
derivatives
other_topicsCodeine
regional_scenesHouston and Longview, Texas
stylistic_origins* Southern hip hop
* codeine effect<ref name"MTV" /
subgenres
  • slowed and throwed
  • electro
  • bounce
  • Memphis rap
  • sampledelia
  • codeine effect

Chopped and screwed (also called screwed and chopped or slowed and throwed) is a genre of hip-hop music and technique of remixing music that involves slowing down the tempo and DJing. It was pioneered by DJ Screw, and became a staple in the Houston hip hop scene in the 1990s. The screwed technique involves slowing the tempo of a song down to 60 and 70 quarter-note beats per minute and applying techniques such as skipping beats, record scratching, stop-time and affecting portions of the original composition to create a "chopped-up" variant of the material.

Characteristics

In dance or hip hop music sampling, the term "chopping" is the "altering [of] a sampled phrase or [break] by dividing it into smaller segments and reconfiguring them in a different order."

History

Origins

Prior to the late 1990s, most Southern hip hop was upbeat and fast, like Miami bass and Memphis, which was inspired by Afrika Bambaataa & the Soulsonic Force with their groundbreaking track "Planet Rock". Unlike its southern musical counterparts Houston's rap style has consistently remained slower, even in the beginning of Houston hip hop, as can be heard on the earliest Houston based group Geto Boys records from the mid to late 80's. It is unknown when DJ Screw definitively created "screwed and chopped" music. Screw's former manager Charles Washington stated, "Screw mistakenly created the sound while hanging out with friends at an apartment in the late 80s." Screw discovered that dramatically reducing the pitch of a record gave a mellow, heavy sound that emphasized lyrics to the point of storytelling. Initially, the slow-paced hip hop genre was referred to as laid-back driving music and was limited to South Houston until it was popularized by DJs such as DJ T-Rent Dinero and DJ Z-Rusty.

In Houston, between 1991 and 1992, there was a notable increase in the use of lean (also known as purple drank and sizzurp) which, as Patel Joseph from MTV News believes, contributed to the allure of screw music. The drug beverage has been considered a major influence on the making and listening of chopped and screwed music due to its perceived effect of slowing the brain down, and giving the slow, mellow music its appeal. In an interview for the documentary film Soldiers United For Cash, DJ Screw denounced the claim that one has to use lean to enjoy screwed and chopped music, saying, "People think just to listen to my tapes you gotta be high or dranked out. That ain't true. There's kids getting my tapes, moms and dads getting my tapes, don't smoke or drink or nothing."

In the mid-1990s, chopped and screwed music started to move to the north side of Houston by way of DJ Michael "5000" Watts, and later OG Ron C. A rivalry between north and south Houston over the true originators of chopped and screwed began to arise. Michael "5000" Watts always gave credit to DJ Screw as the originator of chopped and screwed music, although Watts has been a proponent of the slogan "screwed and chopped" instead of "chopped and screwed". In the late 1990s, with the help of P2P networks such as Napster, chopped and screwed music spread to a much wider audience.

On November 16, 2000, DJ Screw was found dead in the bathroom of his music studio. The autopsy report later revealed that Screw died from a combination of codeine, Valium, and PCP.

2000s–2010s

Following the death of DJ Screw, his influence spread all over the southern US hip hop scene.

The 2007 documentary film Screwed in Houston details the history of the Houston rap scene and the influence of the chopped and screwed subculture on Houston hip hop. In 2011, University of Houston Libraries acquired over 1,000 albums owned by DJ Screw. Some of the albums were part of an exhibit in early 2012 and, along with the rest, went available for research in 2013.

To date, the chopped and screwed music genre has been added to all forms of streaming services, including iTunes and Spotify; the genre has crossed over to receive mass mainstream appeal.

The Chopstars created by Swishahouse Records co-founder OG Ron C, they began calling their remixes ChopNotSlop due to all the “sloppy” remixes that came out after the passing of DJ Screw. Since 2001, they have dedicated their cause to the legacy of DJ Screw. The Chopstars have become the prominent source for chopped up music. With official releases with Brent Faiyaz, Don Toliver and Little Dragon (Nabuma Purple Rubberband) they have made a niche in the sub genre. They currently have a radio show called ChopNotSlopShow on Sound 42 which is Drake’s radio station on SiriusXM. Notable members include DJ Ryan Wolf, official DJ of the Cleveland Browns; DJ Candlestick; DJ Hollygrove; Mike G, formerly of Odd Future; and Oscar Award winning director Barry Jenkins as a creative collaborator.

References

References

  1. Washington, Jesse. (January 18, 2001). "Life in the Slow Lane".
  2. Schloss, Joseph G.. (2004). "Making beats: the art of sample-based hip-hop". Wesleyan university press.
  3. Pearce, Sheldon. (2017-01-24). "From DJ Screw to Moonlight: the unlikely comeback of chopped and screwed". The Guardian.
  4. (January 21, 2013). "The Slow Life and Fast Death of DJ Screw".
  5. (November 1995). "DJ Screw: Givin' It to Ya Slow". Larry Flynt Publications.
  6. Patel, Joseph. "Chopped And Screwed: A History".
  7. "DJ Screw Soldier's United For cash Documentary".
  8. (July 2, 2016). "Sauce Walka reflects on North Houston vs South Houston beef".
  9. Allah, Sha Be. (2021-11-16). "Today In Hip Hop History: Houston Legend DJ Screw Passed Away 21 Years Ago - The Source".
  10. Mininger, Dylan. (March 31, 2019). "Behind the scenes of chopped and screwed music". Driftwood.
  11. "Archived copy".
  12. (September 26, 2017). "Mixtape #1 (Verses) [Screwed & Chopped] by The Network & Pollie Pop".
  13. (March 3, 2015). "Future Screw: The Internet's Version of Houston's Chopped and Screwed".
  14. (November 2020). "Lo-Fi Hip-Hop Has Become One Of The Internet's Most Popular Subgenres; Is Slowed & Reverb Next?".
  15. WECB GM. (March 14, 2020). "What's Up with 'Slowed + Reverb' Music?".
  16. (2006-04-30). "Kafan - Injecting Evil In Thy Veins".
  17. "Kafan - Topic".
  18. (April 7, 2020). "How Slowed + Reverb Remixes Became the Melancholy Heart of Music YouTube".
  19. (March 18, 2020). "There's a Reason Spotify Is Filled With Fake Podcasts of Bootleg Songs".
  20. (October 30, 2020). "Slowed + reverb, remix à pleurer".
  21. (August 14, 2020). "DJ Screw's Legacy Is Being Celebrated After TikTok Teens Tried Gentrifying His 'Chopped and Screwed' Style".
  22. (August 13, 2020). "'Slowed + Reverb' is just chopped & screwed gentrified".
  23. MacColl, Margaux. (August 1, 2020). "The Reverb Remix community is YouTube's sensitive, supportive refuge".
  24. Zhang, Cat. (2020-06-25). "How Belarusian Post-Punks Molchat Doma Became a TikTok Meme".
  25. (2021-07-20). "'Thom Yorke made a doomerwave version of his own f***ing song!'".
  26. Tiffany, Kaitlyn. (2020-02-03). "The Misogynistic Joke That Became a Goth-Meme Fairy Tale".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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