Travis Scott & Quavo's Producer Buddah Bless Details Creation Of "Modern Slavery"

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Producer Buddha Bless describes his style as "your grandmother's music mixed with Gucci Mane."

Travis Scott and Quavo released their much-anticipated collaborative album Huncho Jack, Jack Huncho last December, with one of the most notable cuts being the opener, "Modern Slavery." The track, produced by Buddah Bless, starts off with an unaltered Otis Redding sample, leading into a lyrical juxtaposition of the history of American slavery and a modern sense of consumerism. The point was driven home via a comparison of shackles worn by slaves and jewelry, as mentioned in Quavo's lyric "All these damn chains, modern slavery." Buddah Bless went in-depth on the making of the album standout, going over each element to fully deconstruct the beat.

Having been raised in Atlanta and born in New York, Buddah describes his music as a combination of the two cities, calling his production style a blend of "your grandmother's music mixed with Gucci Mane." Going step-by-step, Buddah explains everything from how he came across the Otis sample in the intro, the samples he used and how drums can tell a lot about when a track was made. To his final point, Buddah elaborates that there used to be a prominence of boom-bap style drums, whereas today's music is riddled with 808's and trap beats.

It is always captivating to see a producer or artist's method of creation as everybody has a different approach to making music. Watch the video below and listen to one of the game's hottest producers right now describe how "Modern Slavery" was crafted.


Buddah Bless, Quavo & Travis Scott

Travis Scott & Quavo's Producer Buddah Bless Details Creation Of "Modern Slavery"
About The Author
<b>Managing Editor</b> <!--BR--> Alex Zidel began working at HotNewHipHop as a Staff Writer in February 2018 before becoming the Managing Editor in June 2019. <strong>Favorite Hip Hop Artists:</strong> Kid Cudi, Kanye West, Young Thug, Frank Ocean.
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