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mixtape
[ miks-teyp ]
noun
- a recording on a cassette tape, CD, or digital medium, consisting of music or songs selected by a single person:
My boyfriend made me the greatest mixtape for my birthday.
- such a recording consisting of music or songs personally selected by the artist, usually a hip-hop artist:
His mixtape from a live performance helped propel him to stardom.
- a recording consisting of blended or recombined tracks, or a series of tracks with smooth transitions, especially one created by a DJ.
Example Sentences
Among their most notable members is Hussle, who shouted out the gang in the intro to his breakthrough 2013 mixtape, “Crenshaw.”
Since his 2017 mixtape debut, Carti has captivated rap fans for the feral intensity of his sound and his Suicide-riffing album art, facial piercings and occult mystique.
She says the original soundtrack was a big inspiration, and describes the music as "a mixtape of all your favourite 90s bangers".
Tesfaye enlists heavy hitters like Giorgio Moroder, Anitta, Playboi Carti, Lana Del Rey and Travis Scott to aid him to "kill" his pop star persona, a "character" that has lived with Tesfaye since his mysterious and anonymous 2011 debut with the mixtape “House of Balloons,” groaning about drugs, girls and fame.
As racks of graphic tees line each side of the truck, the L.A.-based record label fills its shelves with lowrider mixtape CDs, Latin oldies USB flash drives and rare vinyl box sets — a physical media paradise.
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More About Mixtape
What does mixtape mean?
Unlike an official album, a mixtape is a more casual assortment of songs, organized by a listener or created by an artist.
Where does mixtape come from?
The art of creating mixtapes began in the 1970s, when cassette tape recorders became available in the home market, giving music fans the tools to mix and match songs from different albums, thereby creating their own “album” (a kind of proto-playlist) on a handy, portable cassette.
The phrase mix tape dates back to at least 1974, where it appeared in Robert E. Runstein’s Modern Recording Techniques. The phrase mix tape soon became common enough to become its own, unhyphenated compound noun, mixtape.
By the early 1990s, the term mixtape meant a collection of otherwise unrelated songs that an individual had organized onto one cassette tape. Later in the decade, it became popular for D.J.’s to sell homemade mixtapes, collecting various artists together.
Around the same time, a different type of mixtape became connected with the burgeoning rap scene. Artist 50 Cent, who sometimes claims to have invented the mixtape, popularized a type of music release where he took the songs of other artists sans lyrics, rapped over them, and released these tracks as DIY mixtapes. 50 Cent’s impact here was huge, as according to DJ Drama, “there’s the mixtape game pre-50 Cent and post-50 Cent.”
In recent years, these homemade, lo-fi mixtapes have been largely replaced by polished, clean, studio-quality releases that artists put out between albums. Though the term mixtape traditionally referred to an old-school cassette tape, it now means any assortment of music compiled by an individual, whether that mixtape is on a tape, a CD, an SD card, or even a digital Spotify playlist. Mixtapes tend to have a conceptual or lyrical theme.
How is mixtape used in real life?
Anyone can make a mixtape, just by compiling a playlist of various songs. However, artists can also make their own mixtapes, even featuring original music. In this context, what separates a mixtape from an album is that mixtapes are more casual, homemade assortments of music, put together by the artist themselves, and often free for anyone to listen to.
In contrast, albums are generally official studio creations. Often, an artist might “drop their mixtape” onto the internet in the months leading up to their new album, hoping to generate new fans for a full album’s release.
.'s breakout mixtape "K.I.D.S" continues to live on, securing its first-ever placement on the Billboard 200 charts.
— HotNewHipHop (@HotNewHipHop)
More examples of mixtape:
“Good news for Drake fans: the rapper says he’s working on a new mixtape.”
—Mitchell Peters, Billboard, July, 2016
Note
This content is not meant to be a formal definition of this term. Rather, it is an informal summary that seeks to provide supplemental information and context important to know or keep in mind about the term’s history, meaning, and usage.
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