In New Orleans if bounce music is playing, derrières are in motion. From my experience, it gets the function…let’s leave it at active. From block parties, clubs, cook outs, etc. few gatherings with black people aren’t going to have at least a shuffle of bounce songs played. The music is all a part of what makes New Orleans unique; just like DC and Miami have their unique styles. This subgenre of hiphop perfectly describes the city: bold and different.
Bounce started in the 80s and was heavily inspired by Triggaman from The ShowBoys. Literally every song has at least one instrument that was made famous by that Triggaman beat. The music picked up heavily through the next decade (s/o to my 90s babies) with influencers like Magnolia Shorty (R.I.P.), DJ Jimi, Gotty Boi Chris, Sissy Nobby, and many others as the list goes on forever. These artists set the standard for what and who you hear now borrowing from the subgenre.