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From:
Heiko Hoffmann
To:
Sean Cooper
Cc:
Date:
Fri, 30 Jan 1998 22:45:13 -0500 (EST)
Subject:
(idm) Planet Rock
Msg-Id:
<l03110701b0f80894e9a7@[165.123.21.177]>
In-Reply-To:
<Pine.BSF.3.96.980130171554.409D-100000@shell7.ba.best.com>
Mbox:
idm.9801.gz
alright, here's a compromise: both, _Numbers_ (beats) and _TEE_ (melody) were used for _Planet Rock_. h
quoted 15 lines afrika bambata(sp?) used kraftwork's "Numbers" off of computer world for>> afrika bambata(sp?) used kraftwork's "Numbers" off of computer world for >> the basis of "Planet Rock." back to square one. > >not that it really matters, but "trans-europe express," not "numbers," was >the basis for "planet rock" (although from an electro standpoint >"numbers" is the superior track). regardless, man parrish's "hip-hop >be-bop (don't stop)" and "man made" were released a year prior to "planet >rock" (the former even charted!). both in terms of songwriting and >innovation, man parrish's work *far* exceeds that of soulsonic force, >whose importance in the history of early electro and hip-hop, though >extensive, tends to be overstated. as popular as "planet rock" was and is, >it was a typical arthur baker/john robie bite, and better examples of >old-school new york electro-funk exist. > >sc