

“It gave me instructions on some things that maybe I was lacking being such a work machine. Remember DJ Khaled, hes probably the most recognisable DJ Drop that springs. Make sure your spirit stay up.’ I learned self-love ,” Diddy adds. “He’s a constant reminder of, like, ‘I haven’t heard from you lately. He sees the positive energy that I try to put out in the universe.”

You know how you have to practice what you preach? really taught me that,” Diddy says. The toolbar button labeled 'beat' will lock both songs in. This simple mixing style is very much of today, with our modern fashion for short, choppy pop, dance and hip hop singles that start with a bang and end just as abruptly. Transitions has two buttons corresponding to items 1 and 2 that can be used to beatmatch: The toolbar button labeled 'sync' will synchronize the tempos of the two songs when enabled. All you’ve got to do is listen to music radio for long enough to get a decent handle on the end-to-end. “I thought I was an inspirational person. All you’ve got to do is listen to music radio for long enough to get a decent handle on the end-to-end. the rhythmic notes (bass drum, snare drum, etc.) occur at the same times. From hitmaker to businessman, as a hustler, as a father, the drive he has inspires me.”ĭiddy has plenty of good things to say about Khaled as well. “I remember starting as a DJ and turning into a promoter. “I wouldn’t be able to do a lot of the things I’m doing now if it wasn’t for Puff Daddy,” Khaled says. RELATED: DJ Khaled Announced As Apple Music’s First Artist In Residence You can go straight to the consumer, the fans. “Back in the day, it was more word of mouth,” Khaled chimes in. Khaled agrees, noting how music used to be more of a guerilla movement. They can wind up being a Grammy Award-winning, stadium-selling-out star. RELATED: Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Files For A Name Changeĭiddy says that is no longer the case: “You can sneak into the industry now and be the kids playing around, not taking it seriously. “The plaques meant a lot, but it was the impact that your music was having on the streets and in the community. , it was based more on impact than numbers,” he continues. “At the same time, the process is different.” Transition Transition Transition TransitionTransition Transition Transition TransitionTransition TransitionTransition. The transition has made hip-hop the number-one genre of music in the world,” Diddy shares. That has given artists more freedom and made music more global. “Now you could make something and five seconds later. Check out Transitions, Part II by David Grand PhD on Amazon Music. Diddy, 49, and Khaled, 43, both shared their thoughts on what streaming and the digital age mean for music. The two hip-hop stars sit down with Rolling Stone for a special “Musicians on Musicians” edition. Diddy and DJ Khaled have been around long enough to see how streaming has changed the music industry.
