It’s Sunny Where The Cold Wind Blows

This class reminded me of how much I love music. How the essence of it makes me feel human and alive in certain ways I can’t explain. This class taught me how to look at music from a different perspective than before. When I would just look for certain lines that resonate with me or certain moments in an artist’s active time, it’s now with a better lens. It’s with knowing that, now I have the utmost respect for writers and critiques that truly love the culture of music more than before. It makes me realize everyone has a connection. Whether we’re different, or the same, sometimes we all feel something, and that’s what music is all about. Feeling something, My portfolio, “It’s Sunny Where The Cold Wind Blows” Spreads across many artist and subjects that I adore, I hope that you enjoy.

 

 

 

With someone like Kanye West, you can never be surprised at what you learn. As the times come, we find out more and more about the genius that Kanye West truly is. But what is not spoken about is the fact that he is one of the most sampled artists in music today. Knowing his work, it would make any fan raise an eye thinking that someone who has a very sample influenced sound that can be the canvas of other’s masterpieces? Especially with the way Kanye’s sound has developed through change in tempo, tone (through autotune), subject matter, and even the intricate use of old classic music.  Also, we look through some monumental moments in Kanye’s career with some of his best collaborators. Also, the fact that all of these songs went number one and were highly favored by the people for their use of samples and collaborators, shows the significance and importance of Kanye’s musical genius to the people.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ue1v0o9_hJM

 

I figured I give us an oldie but goodie that fills my soul with good vibes. The song might be familiar to some who are versed within the 90’s R & B, or to someone who watched the early seasons of FX’s “Snowfall”, but this funky slow melody by Roy Ayers has been a staple in music for a long time since its 1976 release.  This song has been referenced in Movies as well. Used as inspiration, “Everybody loves the sunshine” is from a generation dealing with oppression and hate but these synths and easy lyrics make for an easy listen of positivity in a time of strife. The song has a slow tempo the background vocals and Roy Ayers a better gain for the vibrato of the song. Lyrics like “Just bees and things and flowers” as its bridge gives you a sight into how simple but vivid this song is. Other parts of this song have been included in recent music history and which has made it easy for Ayers to not lose the impact of their song throughout the years.

 

The intro has been used as a sample in other works too. for example “My Life” By Mary J Blige:

Also pop references within tv and film:

And Finally, A Recent Performance By Roy Ayers Circa 2019

 

Intro: A passage or section which opens a movement or a separate piece, preceding the theme or lyrics. The introduction establishes melodic harmonic or rhythmic material related to the main body of the piece.

Vibrato: a slightly tremulous effect imparted to vocal or instrumental tone for added warmth and expressiveness by slight and rapid variations in pitch.

Tempo: The Speed at which a piece of music should be played.

 

“You don’t know what’s in store
But you know what you here for”

-The Weeknd, High For This

It’s important to understand that I was in my second semester of college, experiencing the beginning of my life as an adult. Finding new ways to love, making old habits die hard and just being a student. I remember the morning of the royal wedding of Prince Philip, I was writing this speech for my public speaking class but taking a break from the long presentation process to listen to some music. Not knowing what I pressed play to, in the sunrise hours of the morning, I was going for the ride of my life.

In some ways, I experienced The Weeknd in the wrong way according to himself, but nonetheless, I was intrigued. On my third refill of coffee, I clicked on this Twitter link that led me to a Mixtape link that had me ultimately asking “Who is The Weeknd?”.I found myself wanting to know more about the man with his face blurred, starter locs, and a mysterious candor to himself,.The album cover was a naked woman with balloons all around her in a bathtub. The mixtape would be known as The House of Balloons. This 9 track Mixtape had so much sultry, drug-filled, sexually driven energy, that my mind couldn’t understand what was going on. This was not my parent’s R & B. To hell, it wasn’t even my older siblings R&B from the ’90s. This was something extreme in comparison, this was an ultimate game-changer.

This influenced me to have a party in the Trump hotel (Pre-Election), buy out the penthouse suite on the 23rd floor overlooking central park, and recreate the toxicity that we now know as the beginning of a trilogy. Who knew at the time that he was changing the music industry as we saw it. This mysterious man, who didn’t even bother to show his full face until his third tape was released, had a hold on me and a generation of people who wanted the soundtrack to their illicitly filled nights.

Years before The Weeknd, R & B was going into an electronic and rock music upheaval. From the production to the way the songs were written, it was either about partying or loving. You would still get your traditional ballads from some of the staples of the genre but nothing changed as we came out of the 00’s decade. With acts like Rihanna, Beyonce, And Ne-Yo exploring the new sounds of music that went against the status quo, there was a storm brewing in the northern hemisphere of America. Drake, who is accredited with the social awakening of the Weeknd, has been a supporter of him since 2010.

With this distinct Canadian sound of drowning bass with muffled samples, The Weeknd takes you on a ride as if you’re going to a haunted strip club with whatever vices you want in the back. With songs like “Wicked Games”, “What You Need”, “The Party And The After Party”, “The Knowing”, Weeknd talks on the subject of sex, drugs, intimacy, and infidelity in ways that were way more sultry than the norm. Lyrics like:

“I Left My Girl back home
I don’t love her no more
And She’ll Never F*cking know that
These f*cking eyes that I’m staring at”

“Wicked Games”
are what make the Weeknd such an enigma inside of R & B and hip hop.

The tempo of the popular R & B music was very fast-paced with the melodies to match at the time. Sounds coming from the likes of the contemporary crowd of this genre of music, but this music more of the new generation of R & B. Weeknd was not the first in this new way of R & B. Acts like Frank Ocean and Jhene Aiko were also starting their respective careers. When in hindsight you can see the influence that they currently have on the genre as a whole, but it’s not the clearest vision without a guide. It’s believed that this mixtape is the mixtape that shaped the sound that currently comes out of the Canadian side of America that has given acts like Drake, Justin Bieber, and PartyNextDoor the ability to breathe a new sense of quality music into the industry.

The production plays a major role in the way that the music is perceived. Doc Mckinney, A long-time producer for the Weeknd was a major staple into this sound. He created this sound that The Weeknd used as a backdrop to the climatic stories of his Toronto lifestyle. While I can see the influence in today’s artists like 6LACK, 24KGLD, Gallant, and Brent Faiyaz, Weeknd has gone far beyond his debut mixtape and has solidified himself as one of the most successful artists in the 21st century. Even in today’s age, Weeknd has elevated the genre once again. Making his hit single “Blinding Lights” a certified mainstay on billboard’s top ten for a whole year. But those Balloons on the bathroom floor will forever mean a new change in the guard for our generation.

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