Magazine: Shaking It to New Orleans Bounce – nytimes.com/video
New Orleans Bounce
New Orleans Bounce is a raunchy, local hip-hop style that developed in the 1990s but is only now escaping its hometown with the help of some unlikely stars. Related Article: nyti.ms
Vince Vance’s music video, I am New Orleans, is a musical collage of sights and sounds of the city released for the fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. Vance, who has lived in New Orleans for most of his life attempts to honor the city and showcase its beauty and its uniqueness. Read and watch more on Bayobuzz.com
Video Rating: 5 / 5
New Orleans Bounce music is an energetic style of New Orleans hip hop music which is said to have originated as early as the late 1980s, but is typically believed to have begun with the 1991 single “Where Dey At” by MC T.Tucker and DJ Irv. A highly influential cover of “Where Dey At” was also released by DJ Jimi in 1992.
New Orleans Bounce – Structure
New Orleans Bounce is characterized by call and response style party and Mardi Gras Indian chants and dance call-outs that are frequently hyper sexual.
These chants and call-outs are typically sung over the “Triggerman beat,” which is sampled from the songs “Drag Rap” by the Showboys, “Brown Beat” by Cameron Paul, and also Derek B’s “Rock The Beat”.The sound of bounce has primarily been shaped by the recycling and imitation of the “Drag Rap” sample: its opening chromatic tics, the intermittent shouting of the word “break,” the use of whistling as an instrumental element (as occurs in the bridge), the vocoded “drag rap” vocals and its brief and repetitive melody and quick beat (which were produced with use of synthesizers and drum machines and are easily sampled or reproduced using like-sounding elements).
New Orleans Bounce – Influence
The genre maintains widespread popularity in New Orleans, LA and the southern United States and has a more limited following outside of the Deep South. Throughout this decade, the Take Fo’ record label has dominated the genre with artists such as DJ Jubilee, Choppa, Baby Boy, Lady Unique, Da’ Sha Ra’ and Willie Puckett. Overtly queer “sissy bounce” or “sissy rap” performers such as Katey Red, Big Freedia and Sissy Nobby have also made significant contributions.
Like crunk, Miami bass, Baltimore club and Juke music, bounce is a highly regional form of urban dance music. Nevertheless, bounce has influenced a variety of other rap subgenres and even emerged in the mainstream. Atlanta’s crunk artists, such as Lil’ Jon and the Ying Yang Twins, frequently incorporate bounce chants into their music (such as, “shake that thing like a salt shaker”) and slang (such as, “twerk”).Mississippi native David Banner’s hit “Like A Pimp” is constructed around a screwed up sample of the “Triggerman” beat. The mixtapes of Three 6 Mafia’s DJ Paul also prominently feature traditional bounce sampling. DJ Paul, a native of Memphis, TN, has, in fact, been one of the most prominent purveyors of bounce outside of Louisiana, having incorporated its features into tracks produced for La Chat, Gangsta Boo and his own group, Three 6 Mafia. Another significant mainstream record influenced by bounce music was Beyoncé’s 2007 release “Get Me Bodied”.
Perhaps the most well known majordomo of New Orleans Bounce music has been Cash Money Records and their former in-house producer Mannie Fresh. Mannie Fresh began producing for MC Gregory D in the late 1980s, but in the early 1990s was signed to Cash Money and produced all of their albums. After Cash Money signed a national distribution deal with Universal Records in 1998, the label’s music began to reach much wider audiences. The label’s Hot Boys (Juvenile, B.G., Lil Wayne, and Turk) and Big Tymers (Mannie Fresh and Baby) released platinum albums and had several nationally charting hits using the bounce style. This was the genre’s first major mainstream exposure.
In 2010, the Ogden Museum of Southern Art in New Orleans featured an exhibition entitled “Where They At: New Orleans Hip-Hop and Bounce in Words and Pictures”, examining bounce’s origins, development, and influence.



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Man i love my state ! Bouncy-Biggity-bouncy-biggity-bouncy-biggity-Boucyy LMBO
Good Lord, that dirty little place on that corner, used to be a place you went to buy drugs, now its hands on the wall hands on the wall… Maybe I need to take a little trip back to NOLA to see wtf is going on down there… When I left home, the bus driver said, you are about to time travel, you will travel 20 years into the future in a couple hours, when you leave this place, sit back, relax and I will drive you there, I never went back either…Someone tell me whats going on…
i can’t wait for this to explode (pause). i want to see this in different places.
@weezyzlady601 I responded to your comment “These white people are NOT what bounce? music is.”
Sometimes writing on you tube out cpmments are misunderstood by others, my comment was ” @weezyzlady601 Hes in NOLA,? plenty white ppl there that will at least like it…” I thought my response was nice…
Whatt did you really mean by your comment? we are all adults here I hope and can have discussions without getting pissed…
“
@VercingetorixXIII What’s your point? That had NOTHING to do with what I typed. I didn’t say white ppl wouldn’t like it………
@weezyzlady601 Hes in NOLA, plenty white ppl there that will at least like it…
These white people are NOT what bounce music is.
lmao, them white women CAN’T SHAKE AT ALL!
OMG THATS MY BOY KEVIN! :35! HE’S FAMOUS!
Big Freeda reminds me of Tracy Morgan
I LOVE THE NEW ORLEANS BOUNCE AND IM FROM NY! I BE GETTING IT IN!
@ambermash
LOL. i hate to be cynical about it, but i get so tired of other races, esp whites, labeling us and telling our history….esp since they NEVER give the correct story. *sighs*
@plprz Darn Whites!
go head cousin
im glad for the success but he or SHE is weird
they had the wrong footage to describe what bounce music is .
love it!!!
Alriiitteeee! Big Free made the NYtimes! They should have took some footage from Fusions lol
yeah do it big N.O
LOVE MY BOUNCE IN MY CITY <3 NEW ORLEANS <3 BABY
Alright Big Freedia thee Qween Diva!! #Thnkya!!!!
BIG FREEDIA IS A GAY MAN NOT A WOMAN
brings me back home
as much as i LOVE this video and LOVE this song – it always sticks out that it says “2009 Vince Vance” even though he’s talking about the 2010 oil spill and the Saints Super Bowl XLIV Victory. In my mind it’s not a mistake – I like to think Vince saw it allllll coming.
Goosebumps every time I watch and listen……Thanks Vince!
Sharing the New Orleans Spirit. The venue for our next Rotary World Convention in May 2011.
Along with Jimmy Buffett’s “Breathe In, Breathe Out, Move On” this is one of the BEST Katrina tributes I have ever seen or heard. Thanks, Vince, for being New Orleans and helping the rest of us remember that we are, too! Right on, brother!
this is awesome! Thanks, Vince
Great video!!! Is that W. L. Cohen pep squad at 1:57?
He’s got it about right.
Lived in Met-ry (lol) till I had kids, then left the parish for Ponchatoula. Had to move my kids for school after Katrina, but I’ll be back, even if I’m the crazy plantation cat woman….I AM New Orleans!
Great video! It makes me feel as if I was there.
thats my neighbor at 53 seconds lmao
Oh, how I miss New Orleans! Great video and music. Makes me want to pack up and move back right now. There’s truly no place in the World quite like it.
Vince you’ve always been and alway will be New Orleans……from Liz -Howard Johnson…Metairie
my home. my life. my world.
Captures our soul and love of the this. Way to go Vince.
Awesome!
Am only too proud to call Noo-Awleens my birth city …. I can taste the beignets and smell the red beans & rice all the way from Thailand! There is only one NOLA.
I LOVE THIS!!! I want to paste this on my facebook. So many of my friends want to visit New Orleans. I’m going to have a house full of guests after they see this. This is so cool, this is NEW ORLEANS! xoxox Juliette Lucarini Harch
Love the hair-do (don’t) at the end! Thanks for this vid. I love my adopted home of New Orleans.
Absolutely AWESOME! I got goosebumps at the third line; a lump in my throat at the first “I Am New Orleans”.
Thank you for taking us home…
I Love All the Great things about New Orleans.
Just Hate the Evil Entrenched there.
Wonderful! Loved that! Must have lived there in another life time…..
Maybe one of the songs should be “Next Time They Say a Cat 5 Hurrican is Coming This Way I’ll Head the Warnings to Evacuate.”
And another song could be “Maybe We Should Have Raised Those Levees During the Boom Years When We Had Lots of Money.”
Fabulous!!! Hey Vince ….I love it!!!!!!!
Fantastic, fantastic, fantastic!! Professional produciton values and great music. Thank you!