BLACK EYED PEAS...

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L.D.S.

The Bakersman
Aug 14, 2006
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Mizzourah
#12
post youtubes of the beat he made and the beat he stole it from


If you don't know who the Black Eyed Peas are, you're either a time traveler or have recently woken up from a coma (and in either case, congratulations!). The rest of you already know how insanely successful they are, despite having some of the worst music imaginable. What you probably don't know is that very little of that music is actually theirs.
For instance, a young rapper named Phoenix Phenom recently accused the Peas of ripping off her song "Boom Dynamite" and calling it "Boom Boom Pow." On the one hand, the only similarities are with the beat and the "boom boom" part. On the other hand, the beat and the "boom boom" part is as much of the Black Eyed Peas that we can listen to before our souls begin to atrophy.
In hip-hop, there are two schools of thought when it comes to sampling. Some people follow the P. Diddy method, which does involve spending a fuck-ton of money, but the upside is you get to take a huge, steaming, shiny-suited shit all over pretty much any beloved song of your choosing. But it's not for everybody. The Vanilla Ice method of blatantly stealing a song and hoping nobody notices may work better for the cash strapped.
Apparently, the Black Eyed Peas are an impoverished bunch. Shortly after they released the song "Party All the Time," a band called Freeland suddenly realized that their song "Mancry" had been sampled--unfortunately, the Peas had neglected to inform them of this fact.
We tried to chalk all this up to an overworked will.i.am, who "makes" most of the beats for the group. Writing original songs is hard enough, imagine having to do it while also balancing the daunting task of finding something for those two weirdoes who aren't Fergie to do. But no, even solo they can't be trusted. For instance, back in 2007 will.i.am grabbed a hefty chunk of Daft Punk's "Around the World" (without asking) to use in his first single. For some reason, Daft Punk wasn't too happy about the whole deal.
But by far the worst example of song plagiarism is Fergie's hit single "Fergalicious," which is pretty much just J. J. Fad's "Supersonic" with slightly altered lyrics and a remarkably amped up realization that you're listening to all that is wrong with music when you hear it.
This isn't sampling so much as stealing an entire goddamn song, and since (as usual) the original artists got screwed over, Fergie's now facing a lawsuit of her own.











Some may have been credited, while others have not.

Sampling is perfectly fine as long as everyone's music gets a cut of the profit. But to take full credit for melodies and sounds that you didn't create is underhanded.
 
Jul 24, 2010
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#16
when they first came out BEP was dope, but now smh, they dont have any rawness in em.

fergie is like the modern day yoko ono, just fuckin killed what the group shoulda been

underground radio was all like this was back in the days

 
Jan 9, 2009
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#17
Props L.D.S. You came through with the video proof.
yea props i knew ud come thru with it. i wanted to do that search myself me and this mash up dj was talkin on nye about beat biters makin the same songs over and over gettin big checks. in 2010 it was like the in thing.
our convo started with the california girls vs tik tok after he played one. haha