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Ohio State fight song remix!!!

Well, this is the not the main OSU remix I did. The original one I did about a week before the National Championship game in 2002. A good friend of mine, that lived in Columbus at the time, asked me to do it for something different to play during his gameday party. The lyrics to that one were much more relevant to the Buckeyes. I'd like to post that one up but I'm having issues with my FTP for some reason. If I get that resolved, I'll post a link to the original remix on this thread.

Still, judging from the reaction my friend got to these remixes...and the reaction I saw when I've been in Columbus (which will include this Saturday's mauling of Michigan) at bars, clubs, and tailgates...you guys are probably in the minority of opinions. I was at a huge bar/club in downtown Columbus last time I was there, don't remember the name of it, but they played the remix and the whole place stood still for a second then there was a mad dash for the DJ booth to find out what it was he was playing. And I didn't even ask the guy to play it or anything, we were just in there and the guy played it.

Anyway, these remixes obviously do cater to a select audience...if you're older you're not gonna like it...if you don't at least like hip hop a little bit you're not gonna like it, etc. So, if you don't like it then oh well...no big deal, ya know. But there are alot of people that enjoy it and it gives them something different to blare out their stereos on gameday. Different strokes for different folks I guess.

GO BUCKEYES!

dj erb
 
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Well...most hardcore Buckeye fans like the tradition and the way things are at Ohio State. The fight song is awesome the way it is...but there are a lot of other people that would probably love this. Those people aren't a part of BP. I don't think your song has a chance at a place like this. Maybe a dance club though. Good luck.
 
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djerb said:
Anyway, these remixes obviously do cater to a select audience...if you're older you're not gonna like it...if you don't at least like hip hop a little bit you're not gonna like it, etc. So, if you don't like it then oh well...no big deal, ya know. But there are alot of people that enjoy it and it gives them something different to blare out their stereos on gameday. Different strokes for different folks I guess.

GO BUCKEYES!

dj erb


Hate to put you down on this becuase you obviously meant well, but I am young and I don't like it. I like Hip Hop and I don't like it. I think this is for the "club" crowd specifically and not the Buckeye fans you see here.
 
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djerb said:
Just in time for the Michigan game, download a remix of the Ohio State fight song :

http://www.djerb.net/djerb-OhioState-YeahRemix.mp3

Play it loud and play it proud on Saturday!


dj erb
You are obviously talented. An instrumental would be AWESOME. Throwing "Yeah!" on it kind of detracts from the unique sound that you created.

The best option would have been if Luda had done an original hook over that beat, but you can't exactly do that yourself.

Good job though!
 
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djerb said:
...if you're older you're not gonna like it...

dj erb

Fuck you. I'm 47, white, and yet I like several hip hop artists ("old school" Snoop, some older 'Dre stuff, Das EFX, etc.), so don't even come off with that arrogant "catering to an exclusive audience" shit and imply that folks over 30 are clueless about current music. Some of your other work may actually be good, but what you posted flat out sucks. And if you think I'm saying that because I'm some "old white guy", just check out all the negative previous posts from folks who are into rap and HH. My age has nothing to do without liking anything...it's the content that counts.
 
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yeah im 23 and i like rap & hip hop. I actually dont mind that usher song. its not good, but i could leave it on the radio if it came on.

your song isnt good. its annoying, the same part of the song over and over and over and over. it was like a night rider remix, in a bad way. i kept waiting for the band to finish and it wouldnt.
 
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MililaniBuckeye said:
Fuck you. I'm 47, white, and yet I like several hip hop artists ("old school" Snoop, some older 'Dre stuff, Das EFX, etc.)
Snoop isn't "old school."

"Old School" refers to a distinct period in rap history. It is not a word used to refer to music from an earlier period in someone's career.

"Old School" came into being when "New School" did. There wouldn't have been such a thing as "Old School" unless the "New School" came along and referred to themselves as new school.

Leaders of the New School (featuring a young Busta Rhymes) were just that...the leaders of the "new school." Others were acts such as Young MC, Heavy D, Rob Base and DJ EZ Rock, and to a much lesser extent, Tone Loc. Basically, think any shitty rap music from 1988-93, and that was "new school."

The popularity of "new school" was short lived, as "gangster" quickly took hold. NWA spawned Easy E, Ice Cube and Dr Dre, who in turn spawned Snoop, Nate Dogg and Warren G, (and much later Eminem who spawned D12 and 50 Cent, who spawned G-Unit). Ice T was another prominent gangster rapper, along with MC Eiht, and Too Short, while not gangster, was considered part of that genre.

In the early 90's, when these "new school" groups came out and used the term "new school" to differentiate themselves from "old school" acts such as Run DMC, Slick Rick, Big Daddy Kane and LL Cool J, that is when the term "old school" came into being.

It's a particular genre of music, not a blanket term for anything older than new.

Not trying to be a contrarian, but the misuse of the term "new school" is a peeve of mine.
 
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I liked the "Yeah" song when it first came out (a while back). It was completely over-played (even over here in Korea). I do not have the skills to put together a remix like yours (you do have skills). However, if I did have those skills, I would have went "back to the drawing board" after listening to the finished product in this case.
 
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TheyCallMeAssassin said:
Snoop isn't "old school."

"Old School" refers to a distinct period in rap history. It is not a word used to refer to music from an earlier period in someone's career.

"Old School" came into being when "New School" did. There wouldn't have been such a thing as "Old School" unless the "New School" came along and referred to themselves as new school.

Leaders of the New School (featuring a young Busta Rhymes) were just that...the leaders of the "new school." Others were acts such as Young MC, Heavy D, Rob Base and DJ EZ Rock, and to a much lesser extent, Tone Loc. Basically, think any shitty rap music from 1988-93, and that was "new school."

The popularity of "new school" was short lived, as "gangster" quickly took hold. NWA spawned Easy E, Ice Cube and Dr Dre, who in turn spawned Snoop, Nate Dogg and Warren G, (and much later Eminem who spawned D12 and 50 Cent, who spawned G-Unit). Ice T was another prominent gangster rapper, along with MC Eiht, and Too Short, while not gangster, was considered part of that genre.

In the early 90's, when these "new school" groups came out and used the term "new school" to differentiate themselves from "old school" acts such as Run DMC, Slick Rick, Big Daddy Kane and LL Cool J, that is when the term "old school" came into being.

It's a particular genre of music, not a blanket term for anything older than new.

Not trying to be a contrarian, but the misuse of the term "new school" is a peeve of mine.

Umm... I think he was saying 'old school' snoop as in the older snoop stuff (doggystyle, etc) and not the new crap he is doing... and not throwing snoop into a new school vs. old school label.
 
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