A new book explores how J Dilla forever changed hip-hop

Author Dan Charnas explains how a young Detroiter from the East Side moved people across many different categories of music to appreciate melody in a new way.  

James Dewitt Yancey, the Detroit producer famously known as J Dilla, died at just age of 32, but he changed the shape of hip-hop and music forever. He weaved together a variety of artists — from Q-Tip and A Tribe Called Quest, to Common and Erykah Badu — in a unique way that solidified his legacy in the industry.

“They recognize the level of craft, they recognize the willingness to try new things and to experiment, and also a sense of play,” — Dan Charnas, author of “Dilla Time,” says of why artists appreciated J Dilla.


Listen: How James Dewitt Yancey altered the future of music.

 


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Dan Charnas is the author of the book “Dilla Time.” He says his music brought electronic producers and traditional musicians together, influencing them to appreciate a new art form.

“They recognize the level of craft,” says Charnas. “They recognize the willingness to try new things and to experiment, and also a sense of play.”

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