Original Post: https://www.complex.com/music/2018/10/best-hip-hop-producers
CREDENTIALS: Life After Death (The Notorious B.I.G.); No Way Out (Puff Daddy & the Family)
While the untimely murder of the Notorious B.I.G. could have signaled the end of Sean Combs’ Bad Boy imprint, the mogul instead turned up the dial and soared to new heights. Much of that success was due to the sounds coming from the Hitmen—a conglomerate of producers Combs worked with (and effectively took over rap and R&B radio with) in 1997. The squad featured the likes of Stevie J (pre-reality TV), Mario Winans, Chucky Thompson, and Nashiem Myrick, but it also included heavy hitters (no pun intended) like Deric "D-Dot" Angelettie and Ron “Amen-Ra” Lawrence, who were monstrously important in shaping the Hitmen’s sound.
If there’s a definitive example of that sound from this time period, it’s “Hypnotize.” Take a classic groove like Herb Alpert’s “Rise,” beef up the bass and make the drums knock, then get someone like Biggie to spit some Cristal-soaked lavish fantasies over it, and you have a certified hit. Sure, it was a formula, but it worked perfectly. Its legacy was surely heightened by the fact that B.I.G. was murdered a little over a week after the single’s release, but the D-Dot-and-Amen-Ra-produced song was already crushing it.
Their impressive strategy was employed on hits like Puff Daddy’s Mase-assisted “Been Around the World,” the massive posse cut “It's All About The Benjamins (Remix),” Mase’s “Feel so Good,” and the Lox’s “If You Think I’m Jiggy.” The Hitmen also got love outside of the Bad Boy imprint, with the likes of LL Cool J, Brian McKnight, Tracey Lee, LSG, and SWV linking with the group. The sound may have caused a rift in the scene (“jiggy” vs. boom-bap-y “real hip-hop”), but the Hitmen proved that rap could explode into the mainstream and they helped set Bad Boy (Combs, specifically) onto the path to greatness.
If you were around in the mid-to-late ’90s, it’s likely that your life was soundtracked by Ron “Amen-Ra” Lawrence. The producer was a key part of Bad Boy Records’ crew of beatmakers, known as the Hitmen. Ron, along with his partner Deric “D-Dot” Angelettie, was behind some of the biggest records of the era, including Biggie’s “Hypnotize,” “Money, Power & Respect” by the Lox, and JAY-Z’s unforgettable tale of life in the Marcy projects, “Where I’m From.” He also helmed hits by Mase, Brian McKnight, Faith Evans, and many more.
Lawrence, who recently beat cancer and is now back to making music with a whole new batch of artists, sat down with Complex to share the real story of how he came up with Bad Boy’s classics. From emergency last-minute trips to the studio to negotiating with David Bowie, watch the video above to get the inside scoop on how the sound of an era was made.
Jay-Z and Ron "Amen-Ra" Lawrence, photographed together in 1997. At the time they were in the Quad Recording Studios in Midtown Manhattan, working on In My Lifetime, Vol. 1's standout track "Where I'm From," and also "I Know What Girls Like." Born in Dominica in 1968, Lawrence's family immigrated to the United States when he was two years old and settled in the East Elmhurst neighborhood of Queens. He showed artistic talent early, and would be accepted into Manhattan's specialized High School of Art and Design.
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