The song blew up in and well beyond both genres, ultimately becoming cultural shorthand for the cartoonishness of the EDM moment itself when it was spoofed on Saturday Night Live’s 2013 EDM parody short “When Will the Bass Drop?” (“Get turned up to death!” Lil Jon exclaims in the clip.
Maybe the work itself doesn't match your company objectives or strengths. Perhaps you've worked with them before and found the relationship difficult.
There are many reasons you might decide to turn down a potential client. What neither artist could have predicted is that “Turn Down For What” would become a worldwide phenomenon and the first major hip-hop/EDM crossover, with the song bringing a hip-hop swagger and sensibility (along with one of the genre’s most recognizable voices) into the burgeoning EDM scene. Why turn down a client Just because a client contacts you with a job, doesn't mean you'll be taking it. “We didn't know how big of a record it was,” he says, “but we both knew this s-t was a smash.” With the lyrics complete, Lil Jon passed the track back to DJ Snake. Turn the Warp switch on to play rhythmically structured samples (such as sample loops, music recordings, complete music pieces, etc.) in sync with the current song tempo.
“Fire up that loud, another round of shots,” he wrote over the next few hours, sealing the song’s hyphy, hard-partying sentiment - an ideal match to the track’s dizzyingly escalating synths and massive drop. This is useful for samples that have no inherent rhythmic structure: percussion hits, atmospheres, sound effects, spoken word and the like. As it turned out, the answer would be nothing.