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A Hyphy History with Producer Trackademicks

A Hyphy History with Producer Trackademicks

Before Hyphy Music there was Mobb Music, but Funk Music laid the foundation.

Rightnowish

July 23, 202118m 34s

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Show Notes

In 2006, when music producer Trackademicks remixed the smash hit by E-40 and Keak Da Sneak, "Tell Me When To Go," he created a cultural jewel that sent waves throughout the Yay. The remix took a seminal song from the Hyphy Movement, added a unique wrinkle, and then proceeded to make your face melt.

The track could be heard at pep rallies in the valley, in nightclubs in San Francisco and blasting out of the front grill speakers of Chevy vans as they smashed through Deep East Oakland.

Trackademicks, a half-Black and half-Filipino guy who was raised in Alameda, looks at his own lineage and says remixing things is in his DNA, literally.

It was already in the music too, the Hyphy movement has its own history of mixing genres, which allowed it to birth something unique in The Bay.

Now, as a number of rappers (including Trackademicks) make music that harkens back to that era, we thought it'd be a good time to discuss how the big sun glasses, fun dances, and uptempo music of the Hyphy Movement came to be.

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