"The president of Interscope Records saw the feature done on me in The New York Times and he asked his A&R people to find me," Lenky told Splash. It’s given riddims credit outside of the speciality market.” Bolstered by the inclusion of a remix of Rihanna’s “Pon de Replay,” the tracks from the compilation began to spread to the US and Lenky started to get name-checked in major North America music publications about this strange, new crossover of sounds. Greensleeves A&R Director Cracknell believes that “Diwali Riddim” remains “a hard one to follow.
Get busy sean paul hindi series#
When “Diwali Riddim” was released as part of the series in ’02 it sold roughly 40,000 copies in four months: four times the average sales in comparison to the instalments before (and since). Versions of “Diwali Riddim” began to emerge on Jamaican radio in ’01-02 as a handful of lesser-known artists jumped on it, the most popular of which was Danny English and Egg Nog's "Meet Me at the Party” and Buju Banton’s “Sha La La.” Its radio play was in large part thanks to Jamaican label Greensleeves Records, whose Rhythm Album compilation series had been enjoying success in the admittedly small, homegrown music market. I was trying to give it to and they say it was too ‘noisy-sounding,’ so I put it back in my drawer." Not for long, though. Initially, noted Lenky, "no one wanted because no one knew what it was. Both desi diasporic and Jamaican artists directly benefited from the making and popularising of “Diwali Riddim”: a positive view of cross-collaboration, rather than of appropriation as the riddim spread from Jamaica to the rest of the world, starting with Lenky. Though the Punjabi influence is in the distinctive handclaps, the digitally programmed drums and synth stab components make the beat distinctively dancehall. This is what arguably separates “Diwali Riddim” from other, similar riddims up until the point of its release. Things become clearer, though, when the original, musical pattern – when superimposed using different instruments – is distinctly there, but far enough away to become something else entirely. Where positive collaboration and cultural appropriation begin and end exists in a sandstorm of situational bias and questions of artistic authenticity.
![get busy sean paul hindi get busy sean paul hindi](http://i.ytimg.com/vi/3jQHC2LusF4/hqdefault.jpg)
(Erick Sermon’s “React,” Method Man and Redman’s “What’s Happenin’” and Jay Z and Kanye West’s “The Bounce” had incorporated Bollywood samples, and were released within a year of each other.) Perhaps this was in order to ride a wave of growing interest in desi instrumentalism. His ’03 hit “Indian Flute” initially sampled Colombian artist Totó La Momposina’s ’92 track “Curura,” but in adding a Hindi vocal from Mumbai-born singer Rajeshwari Sachdev, he would effectively erase the South American connection.
![get busy sean paul hindi get busy sean paul hindi](https://www.thefamouspeople.com/profiles/images/sean-paul-1.jpg)
Intrigued by South Asian-sounding beats, US producer Timbaland looked to Punjabi music to create signature templates for Aaliyah and Missy Elliott, among others. By the early ’00s, this cross-cultural inspiration had evolved in the pop world with complex consequences. The deceptive simplicity of its polyrhythmic patterns remained popular well into the late ’90s, prompting artists such as Punjabi MC to elaborate upon and draw people’s attention to the style (notable examples include his collaboration with Jay-Z, “Beware”) by concentrating heavily on the Dhol and Tumbi elements of their tracks. By taking instruments like the Dhol and the Tumbi and experimenting with UK-centric electronic music genres such as garage, the UK desi diaspora created bhangra. Like other cultural groups before them, a generation of Punjabi migrants were searching for a sound that spoke to their experience. To find out how the traditional instrumentation of the Punjabi region of pre-partition India and Pakistan came to be the blueprint for some of dancehall’s biggest crossover hits, we need to rewind to the ’80s. Short of the 180 listed entries of the track on the Riddimbase archive, there are hundreds that use its infectious framework still waiting to be categorized.
![get busy sean paul hindi get busy sean paul hindi](https://resamusic.ir/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Sean-Paul-Get-Busy.jpg)
Though it’s formed the foundation of hits such as Sean Paul’s “Get Busy,” Wayne Wonder’s “No Letting Go,” Lumidee’s “Uh Oh” and Brick & Lace’s “Love is Wicked,” the true and lasting influence is both far reaching and difficult to ascertain. Fast-forward hundreds of years and “Diwali Riddim” has looped back on itself, with collaborations with ’00s UK desi diasporic musicians as well as US and Caribbean hip hop, dancehall and R&B artists.