Search/Recent Changes
DBTropes
...it's like TV Tropes, but LINKED DATA!

Doo-Bop (Music)

 Doo-Bop (Music)
type
TVTItem
 Doo-Bop (Music)
label
Doo-Bop (Music)
 Doo-Bop (Music)
page
DooBop
 Doo-Bop (Music)
comment
Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_1'); })Doo-Bop is a jazz-rap/acid jazz album by Miles Davis. Released on June 30, 1992 on Warner (Bros.) Records, it was the last studio album the legendary trumpeter worked on prior to his death in 1991.While staying in New York during a particularly hot summer, Miles typically had his apartment window open, and frequently heard teenagers blasting Hip-Hop, particularly the music of Def Jam Recordings, out of their boomboxes, but none of his music. Miles then decided he wanted to make an album that captured the sound of hip hop; though that decision isn't too surprising if you knew that one of his favorite albums at the time was Paul's Boutique. Calling up his friend and Def Jam owner/co-founder Russel "Rush" Simmons, Miles asked him to find some young hip-hop producers to help him create the sounds he wanted. Simmons proceeded to send Miles a stack of beat tapes from some of his best producers, including Chuck D and Flavor Flav, but the standout among them was a relatively-unknown producer by the name of Easy Mo Bee, who was also part of a group called "Rappin' Is Fundamental".Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_2'); })Davis and Mo Bee recorded and produced the majority of the album between January and February 1991, with Mo Bee and his R.I.F. bandmates providing their "doo-hop" sound to the album by contributing both rap and doo-wop influenced vocals, which inspired the album's eventual name of "Doo-Bop". Davis took a break from recording to tour and perform, including a performance at the 1991 Montreux Jazz Festival that would become Miles & Quincy: Live at Montreux, but died from a stroke later that year. At that point, only six tracks had been finished during the recording sessions, so Warner Bros. gave Mo Bee some of Miles' unreleased "RubberBand" recordings (which, according to Mo Bee himself, came from unreleased sessions Miles had with Prince) to make two more tracks "Miles would have loved" to finish the album.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_3'); })Doo-Bop was released posthumously in 1992, and was mostly received negatively by critics, but nonetheless managed to win a Grammy for "Best Instrumental R&B Performance" in 1993; netting Miles his seventh and first posthumous Grammy. As for Mo Bee, he would continue to build his name by producing for future legends RZA and GZA, before breaking into the mainstream as the main producer of both The Notorious B.I.G.'s Ready to Die and Craig Mack's Project: Funk Da World in 1994. Davis would see one more posthumous album release with Rubberband in 2019, 27 years later.
 Doo-Bop (Music)
fetched
2022-03-05T09:40:12Z
 Doo-Bop (Music)
parsed
2022-03-05T09:40:12Z
 Doo-Bop (Music)
processingComment
Dropped link to JazzRap: Not a Feature - UNKNOWN
 Doo-Bop (Music)
processingUnknown
Jazz Rap
 Doo-Bop (Music)
isPartOf
DBTropes
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_2719ab04
type
Special Guest
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_2719ab04
comment
Special Guest: Easy Mo Bee's Rappin' Is Fundamental bandmates J.B. and A.B. Money show up on the title track, singing the hook and providing guest raps. Mo Bee himself is a subversion, as he produced the album with Miles.
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_2719ab04
featureApplicability
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_2719ab04
featureConfidence
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
Doo-Bop (Music) / int_2719ab04
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_364f54d3
type
Posthumous Collaboration
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_364f54d3
comment
Posthumous Collaboration: What Doo-Bop unfortunately became, since Miles died before the sessions could resume. "High Speed Chase" and "Fantasy" were the two tracks built from previously-unreleased recordings from Miles.
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_364f54d3
featureApplicability
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_364f54d3
featureConfidence
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
Doo-Bop (Music) / int_364f54d3
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_515eeccc
type
Sampling
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_515eeccc
comment
Sampling: Doo-Bop was the only time Miles himself sampled other peoples' music in his own. James Brown, Slick Rick, and even Gang Starr are among the artists sampled throughout the record.
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_515eeccc
featureApplicability
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_515eeccc
featureConfidence
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
Doo-Bop (Music) / int_515eeccc
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_78f26d1c
type
A Wild Rapper Appears!
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_78f26d1c
comment
A Wild Rapper Appears!: Because the album is largely instrumental, Mo Bee's verses serve as this.
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_78f26d1c
featureApplicability
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_78f26d1c
featureConfidence
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
Doo-Bop (Music) / int_78f26d1c
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_7efe2c19
type
Portmanteau
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_7efe2c19
comment
Portmanteau: The album's title is derived from both "Doo-Hop" (Mo Bee's doowop/new jack fusion), and bebop.
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_7efe2c19
featureApplicability
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_7efe2c19
featureConfidence
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
Doo-Bop (Music) / int_7efe2c19
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_8c00118f
type
Spoken Word in Music
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_8c00118f
comment
Spoken Word in Music: Miles himself can be heard speaking during "Blow" and "Duke Booty".
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_8c00118f
featureApplicability
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_8c00118f
featureConfidence
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
Doo-Bop (Music) / int_8c00118f
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_95426db4
type
Boastful Rap
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_95426db4
comment
Boastful Rap: And unlike most self-referential examples of this trope, the raps are centered around Miles and his trumpet skills.
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_95426db4
featureApplicability
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_95426db4
featureConfidence
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
Doo-Bop (Music) / int_95426db4
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_cd3703a2
type
Genre Mashup
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_cd3703a2
comment
Genre Mashup: The album meshes jazz with rap, New Jack Swing and Doo-wop.
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_cd3703a2
featureApplicability
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_cd3703a2
featureConfidence
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
Doo-Bop (Music) / int_cd3703a2
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_e76525d1
type
Instrumental Hip Hop
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_e76525d1
comment
Instrumental Hip Hop: Zigzagged - While the are pure instrumentals throughout the album, there's also three songs that contain vocals from Easy Mo Bee and his group Rappin' Is Fundamental.
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_e76525d1
featureApplicability
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_e76525d1
featureConfidence
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
Doo-Bop (Music) / int_e76525d1
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_name
type
ItemName
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_name
comment
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_name
featureApplicability
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_name
featureConfidence
1.0
 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
Doo-Bop (Music) / int_name
 Doo-Bop (Music) / int_name
itemName
Doo-Bop (Music)

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
African-American Media / int_7ff1061a
 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
American Music / int_7ff1061a
 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
Contemporary R&B / int_7ff1061a
 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
Jazz / int_7ff1061a
 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
Jazz Rap / int_7ff1061a
 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
New Jack Swing / int_7ff1061a
 Doo-Bop (Music)
hasFeature
R&B / int_7ff1061a