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St. Louis Bounce


St. Louis ("Blues") Bounce is a hip-hop music sound made popular by a number of St. Louis, Missouri hip-hop artists and musical production teams, which include Basement Beats (Jason "Jay-E" Epperson, Waiel "Wally Beamin" Yaghnam, Lavelle "City Spud" Webb and Jayson "Koko" Bridges), The Trak Starz (Alonzo "Zo" Lee Jr. & Shamar “Sham” Daugherty), The Trackboyz (Mark Williams and Joe Kent) production teams and Steve “Blast” Wills, who claims to be the originator of "St. Louis Bounce". The sound was popular throughout the first decade of the 2000s. However, not all track productions created by St. Louis production teams were St. Louis Bounce.

The hip-hop sound was most prominent on rapper Nelly's debut album, Country Grammar, which was released June 27, 2000, which was then followed by Nellyville released on June 25, 2002, and the album, Free City, released by the St. Lunatics on June 5, 2001. The sound can also be heard on rapper Pretty Willie's (Willie Moore, Jr.), Enter The Life of Suella album, released on March 26, 2002, which was produced by Willie "JL" Woods and Alex "Big Al" Henry - both of St. Louis. And the sound was heard prominently on the albums, Jackpot, Powerballin', and Hoodstar which were performed and released by St. Louis-based rapper, Chingy, in the early 2000s. Chingy was largely produced by The Trak Starz.

Not to be confused with alternative rap (ex. Arrested Development) or country rap, St. Louis Bounce is described primarily as melodic sing-song rapping over rhythmic bouncy beats laced with strictly-incorporated “bluesy” (or “country”) guitar-tinged riffs and chords. A St. Louis Bounce production can be up-tempo, mid-tempo or down-tempo; and can sometimes sound borderline to R&B because of melodic sing-song rapping. Other instruments - particularly the presence of piano or keyboard - can play a role in production, but guitar riffs and chords are usually more noticeable throughout.


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