Sampling (music)

American producer "DJ Premier" Looking through his vinyl record collection for potential samples
DJ Premier looking for samples he can use

In music, sampling is the act of taking a portion, or sample, of one sound recording and reusing it as an instrument or a sound recording in a different song or piece. Sampling was originally developed by experimental musicians working with musique concrète and electroacoustic music, who physically manipulated tape loops or vinyl records on a phonograph. By the late 1960s, the use of tape loop sampling influenced the development of minimalist music and the production of psychedelic rock and jazz fusion. Hip hop music was the first popular music genre based on the art of sampling – being born from 1970s DJs who experimented with manipulating vinyl on two turntables and an audio mixer.[1]

The use of sampling in popular music spread with the rise of electronic music and disco in the mid-1970s to early 1980s, the development of electronic dance music and industrial music in the 1980s, and the worldwide influence of hip hop since the 1980s on genres ranging from contemporary R&B to indie rock. Historically, sampling was most often done with a sampler — a specialized piece of hardware — but today, a computer program is more commonly used. However, vinyl emulation software may also be used, and turntablists continue to sample using traditional methods. The inclusion of sampling tools in modern digital production methods increasingly introduced sampling into many genres of popular music, as well as genres predating the invention of sampling, such as classical music, jazz and various forms of traditional music.

Often "samples" consist of one part of a song, such as a rhythm break, which is then used to construct the beat for another song. For instance, hip hop music developed from DJs looping the breaks from songs to enable continuous dancing.[2] The "Funky Drummer" break and the Amen break, both brief fragments taken from soul and funk music recordings of the late 1960s, have been among the most common samples used in dance music and hip hop of recent decades, with some entire subgenres like breakbeat being based largely on complex permutations of a single one of these samples. Samples from rock recordings have also been the basis of new songs; for example, the drum introduction from Led Zeppelin's "When the Levee Breaks" was sampled by artists such as the Beastie Boys, Dr. Dre, Eminem, Mike Oldfield, Rob Dougan, Coldcut, Depeche Mode and Erasure. Samples can also consist of spoken words and phrases, including those in non-musical media such as movies, TV shows and advertising.

Sampling does not necessarily mean using pre-existing recordings. A number of composers and musicians have constructed pieces or songs by sampling field recordings they made themselves, and others have sampled their own original recordings. The musicians in the trip hop band Portishead, for example, made some use of existing samples, but also scratched, manipulated and sampled musical parts they themselves had originally played in order to construct their songs.

The use of sampling is controversial legally and musically. Experimental musicians who pioneered the technique in the 1940s to the 1960s sometimes did not inform or receive permission from the subjects of their field recordings or from copyright owners before constructing a musical piece out of these samples. In the 1970s, when hip hop was confined to local dance parties, it was unnecessary to obtain copyright clearance in order to sample recorded music at these parties. As the genre became a recorded form centred on rapping in the 1980s and subsequently went mainstream, it became necessary to pay to obtain legal clearance for samples, which was difficult for all but the most successful DJs, producers and rappers. As a result, a number of recording artists ran into legal trouble for uncredited samples, while the restrictiveness of current US copyright laws and their global impact on creativity also came under increased scrutiny. Aside from legal issues, sampling has been both championed and criticized. Hip-hop DJs today take different approaches to sampling, with some critical of its obvious use. Some critics, particularly those with a rockist outlook, have expressed the belief all sampling is lacking in creativity, while others say sampling has been innovative and revolutionary. Those whose own work has been sampled have also voiced a wide variety of opinions about the practice, both for and against sampling.

Types

Once recorded, samples can be edited, played back, or looped (i.e. played back continuously). Types of samples include:

Loops

The drums and percussion parts of many modern recordings are really a variety of short samples of beats strung together. Many libraries of such beats exist and are licensed so that the user incorporating the samples can distribute their recording without paying royalties. Such libraries can be loaded into samplers. Though percussion is a typical application of looping, many kinds of samples can be looped. A piece of music may have an ostinato which is created by sampling a phrase played on any kind of instrument. There is software which specializes in creating loops.

Musical instruments

Whereas loops are usually a phrase played on a musical instrument, this type of sample is usually a single note. Music workstations and samplers use samples of musical instruments as the basis of their own sounds, and are capable of playing a sample back at any pitch. Many modern synthesizers and drum machines also use samples as the basis of their sounds. (See sample-based synthesis for more information.) Most such samples are created in professional recording studios using world-class instruments played by accomplished musicians. These are usually developed by the manufacturer of the instrument or by a subcontractor who specializes in creating such samples. There are businesses and individuals who create libraries of samples of musical instruments. Of course, a sampler allows anyone to create such samples. Possibly the earliest equipment used to sample recorded instrument sounds are the Chamberlin, which was developed in the 1940s, and its better-known cousin, the Mellotron, marketed in England in the 1960s. Both are tape replay keyboards, in which each key pressed triggers a prerecorded tape recording of a single note.

Musicians can reproduce the same samples of break beats like the "Amen" break which was composed, produced and mastered by the Winston Brothers in 1960s. Producers in the early 1990s have used the whole 5.66 second sample, but music workstations like the Korg Electribe Series (EM-1, ES-1; EMX-1 and the ESX-1) have used the "Amen" kick, hi hat and snare in their sound wave libraries for free use. Sampler production companies have managed to use these samples for pitch, attack and decay and DSP effects to each drum sound. These features allow producers to manipulate samples to match other parts of the composition. Most sample sets consist of multiple samples at different pitches. These are combined into keymaps, that associate each sample with a particular pitch or pitch range. Often, these sample maps may have different layers as well, so that different velocities can trigger a different sample.

Samples used in musical instruments sometimes have a looped component. An instrument with indefinite sustain, such as a pipe organ, does not need to be represented by a very long sample because the sustained portion of the timbre is looped. The sampler (or other sample playback instrument) plays the attack and decay portion of the sample followed by the looped sustain portion for as long as the note is held, then plays the release portion of the sample.

Resampled layers of sounds generated by a music workstation

To conserve polyphony, a workstation may allow the user to sample a layer of sounds (piano, strings, and voices, for example) so they can be played together as one sound instead of three. This leaves more of the instruments' resources available to generate additional sounds.

Multi-samples

To create a melody on software synthesizer or a sampler, the original sound is manipulated by changing its pitch. In some cases this is the cause of unnatural sound which doesn't meet the sound realism requirements for human perception. To reproduce sound as close as possible to the sound of original instrument, along with its specific character and to help with Musical_tuning (finetuning), multi-sampling technique has been developed. This kind of samples are in form of complex libraries containing several octaves or even all the sounds recorded from the instrument, note-by-note. This method of sample playback is to construct a playable instrument, or emulation of another instrument, from a sampler or computer.

American Electronic Producer known for heavy sampling performing and producing
Girl Talk Producing Sample-Based Music Live

Sampling is now commonplace across a wide variety of musical genres. The use of sampling in popular music dates back to Jamaican dub music in the 1960s, when dub producers such as King Tubby and Lee "Scratch" Perry began using pre-recorded samples of reggae rhythms to produce new riddim tracks, which were then deejayed over.[3][4] Jamaican immigrants later introduced dub sampling techniques to American hip hop music in the 1970s.[4]

The related technique of interpolation, where melodies and lyrics are re-performed and re-recorded, rather than using pre-recorded samples, dates back to pop music in the late 1960s. A well-known early example of interpolation is "All You Need Is Love" by The Beatles, in 1967, which begins with the intro to the French national anthem and ends with them interpolating their own 1963 hit "She Loves You".[5]

The use of digital sampling and looping in popular music was pioneered by Japanese electronic music band Yellow Magic Orchestra (YMO).[6][7][8][9] Their approach to sampling was a precursor to the contemporary approach of constructing music by cutting fragments of sounds and looping them using computer technology.[8] "Computer Game/Firecracker" (1978) interpolated a Martin Denny melody,[10] and sampled Space Invaders[11] video game sounds.[10] Technodelic (1981) introduced the use of digital sampling in popular music, as the first album consisting of mostly samples and loops.[7][9] The album was produced using Toshiba-EMI's LMD-649 digital PCM sampler, which engineer Kenji Murata custom-built for YMO.[9] The LMD-649 was also used for sampling by other Japanese synthpop artists in the early 1980s, including YMO-associated acts such as Chiemi Manabe[12] and Logic System.[13]

Big Audio Dynamite introduced the use of sampling to alternative dance beginning with their 1985 debut album This Is Big Audio Dynamite.[14] A well known example in hip hop music is the sample of Queen/David Bowie's "Under Pressure" (1981) in Vanilla Ice's "Ice Ice Baby" (1990).

On MC Hammer's album Please Hammer, Don't Hurt 'Em (1990), the successful single "U Can't Touch This" sampled Rick James' 1981 "Super Freak". "Have You Seen Her" was a cover of the Chi-Lites and "Pray" sampled Prince's "When Doves Cry" as well as Faith No More's "We Care a Lot".[15] "Dancin' Machine" sampled The Jackson 5 song of the same name, "Help the Children" interpolates Marvin Gaye's "Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)", and "She's Soft and Wet" sampled Prince's "Soft and Wet".[16] Hammer's previous album and future albums would continue to sample music, although not as notably as this album did. The Isley Brothers' song "Between the Sheets" is a song heavily sampled by many different artists, most notably Notorious BIG's "Big Poppa", and Gwen Stefani's "Luxurious".

In many cases, artists even join the original artist or receive permission to sample songs such as Coolio did for "Gangsta's Paradise". It sampled the chorus and music of the song "Pastime Paradise" by Stevie Wonder (1976). Wonder performed the song with Coolio and L.V. at the 1995 Billboard Awards. Notably, much of Coolio's album excessively sampled other artists; including "Too Hot" (contains an interpolation of "Too Hot", originally performed by Kool & The Gang), "Cruisin'" (contains an interpolation of "Cruisin'", originally performed by Smokey Robinson & the Miracles), "Sumpin' New" (which contains samples of both "Thighs High (Grip Your Hips More)" performed by Tom Browne and "Wikka Wrap" performed by The Evasions), "Smilin'" (contains an interpolation of "You Caught Me Smiling", originally performed by Sly & The Family Stone), "Kinda High, Kinda Drunk" (contains interpolations of "Saturday Night" and "The Boyz in Da Hood"), "For My Sistas" (contains an interpolation of "Make Me Say It Again Girl", originally performed by The Isley Brothers), "A Thing Goin' On" (contains an interpolation of "Me & Mrs. Jones"), "The Revolution" (contains an interpolation of "Magic Night"), "Get Up, Get Down" (contains an interpolation of "Chameleon", originally performed by Herbie Hancock),[17] and the first line of "Gangster's Paradise" is taken from Psalm 23.[18]

Another example is in 1997, when Sean Combs collaborated with Jimmy Page of Led Zeppelin on the song "Come with Me" for the Godzilla film. The track sampled the Led Zeppelin song "Kashmir" (approved by Jimmy Page). "I'll Be Missing You" sampled the melody and some of the lyrics from The Police's "Every Breath You Take" from 1983. The single also borrows the melody from the well-known American spiritual "I'll Fly Away." Combs went on to perform it with Sting and Faith Evans on the MTV Video Music Awards. By the late 1990s, "Puffy" was receiving criticism for watering down and overly commercializing hip-hop and overusing guest appearances by other artists, samples and interpolations of past hits in his own hit songs.[19][20] The Onion parodied this phenomenon in a 1997 article titled "New Rap Song samples "Billie Jean" In Its Entirety, Adds Nothing."[21]

Artists can often sample their own songs in other songs they have recorded, often in differently titled remixes. The Chemical Brothers sampled their own song "The Sunshine Underground" in their later song "We Are the Night". In the late 1980s, then-N.W.A producer Dr. Dre was already experimenting the use of samples from 1970s Moog synthesizer–based funk songs, such as "Funky Worm" by the Ohio Players, which he first sampled on N.W.A's "Dopeman" in 1987. Later on, he mastered that sound creating a whole subgenre of hip-hop, G-funk, based on high-pitched synthesizer solos and sampling whole parts of one song to create another, creating a simple sound, rather than the dense sound of many samples in one song, then used by The Bomb Squad. The "G-funk" style dominated hip-hop from 1992 to 1996, through multi-platinum album releases such as Dr. Dre's "The Chronic" (which contained the global hit "Nuthin' But a "G" Thang", that samples "I Wanna Do Somethin' Freaky to You" by Leon Haywood), Snoop Doggy Dogg's "Doggystyle" and 2Pac's "All Eyez on Me". After 1996, Dr. Dre took a whole new direction away from sampling, moving to interpolating songs with the use of live instrumentation, and changing his sound to a much different style, which dominated his second multi-platinum album, 1999's 2001.

The nine-piece nu metal band Slipknot has used samples. A notable song where a sample is used is "(sic)": the song begins with some drumming, and it then leads to an actual sample from the film Carlito's Way. White Zombie frequently use samples in their songs from films as well as TV shows including Hellraiser, Café Flesh, and Star Trek: The Original Series.[22] The beginning of the Cannibal Corpse song, "Addicted to Vaginal Skin", samples what is speculated to be the taped confession of "Genesee River Killer" Arthur Shawcross. The song,"Foreclosure of a Dream" from Megadeth's fifth studio album sampled U.S. President George H. W. Bush's infamous "Read my lips" speech, making a statement about taxation endangering the "American Dream". The band also used sampling on the song, "I Know Jack", which features Texas Senator Lloyd Bentsen's famous response to former Indiana Senator Dan Quayle during a 1988 vice-presidential debate.[23]

Other examples from the 2000s include Rihanna's 2007 hit "Don't Stop The Music", which famously samples the ending part of Michael Jackson's "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'" (1983), and in 2009, Jason Derulo's debut song "Whatcha Say" samples part of Imogen Heap's "Hide and Seek" (2005), and Flo Rida/Ke$ha's "Right Round" samples lyrics from Dead or Alive's "You Spin Me Round (Like a Record)" (1984). Sampled songs from the 2010s include the 2014 hits; Ariana Grande's "Problem" samples the red alert sound effect from the TV series Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987), and Nicki Minaj's "Anaconda" samples beat and lyrics from Sir Mix A Lot's "Baby Got Back" (1991).

Sampler

Spoken word

Usually taken from movies, television, or other non-musical media, spoken word samples are often used to create atmosphere, to set a mood, or even comic effect. The American composer Steve Reich used samples from interviews with Holocaust survivors as a source for the melodies on the 1988 album Different Trains, performed by the Kronos Quartet.

Many genres utilize sampling of spoken word to induce a mood, and Goa trance often employs samples of people speaking about the use of psychoactives, spirituality, or science fiction themes. Industrial is known for samples from horror/sci-fi movies, news broadcasts, propaganda reels, and speeches by political figures. The band Ministry frequently samples George W. Bush. Paul Hardcastle used recordings of a news reporter, as well as a soldier and ambient noise of a protest, in his single "Nineteen," a song about Vietnam war veterans and Posttraumatic stress disorder. The band Negativland samples from practically every form of popular media, ranging from infomercials to children's records. In the song "Civil War", Guns N' Roses samples from the 1967 film Cool Hand Luke, on the album Use Your Illusion II. Sludge band Dystopia make frequent use of samples, including news clips and recordings of junkies to create a bleak and nihilistic atmosphere.

Other bands that frequently used samples in their work are noise rockers Steel Pole Bath Tub and death metal band Skinless. The extreme metal band Mortician makes extensive usage of horror movie samples,[24] which can sometimes be longer than the actual song itself. The American rapper and producer MF Doom frequently uses spoken word samples, taken from anything from old Spider-Man and Fantastic Four cartoons to Charles Bukowski's "Dinosauria, We" poem. Oasis used a clip from a John Lennon interview for their song "I'm Outta Time". Living Colour samples Malcolm X, John F. Kennedy, and Franklin D. Roosevelt in "Cult of Personality".

Unconventional sounds

These are not musical in the conventional sense – that is, neither percussive nor melodic – but which are musically useful for their interesting timbres or emotional associations, in the spirit of musique concrète. Some common examples include sirens and klaxons, locomotive whistles, natural sounds such as whale song, and cooing babies. It is common in theatrical sound design to use this type of sampling to store sound effects that can then be triggered from a musical keyboard or other software. This is very useful for high precision or nonlinear requirements. For example, the English composer Jonathan Harvey sampled a thunderclap for use in his opera, Wagner Dream.[25]

Sampling has been an area of contention from a legal perspective. Early sampling artists simply used portions of other artists' recordings, without permission; once rap and other music incorporating samples began to make significant money, the original artists began to take legal action, claiming copyright infringement. Some sampling artists fought back, claiming their samples were fair use (a legal doctrine in the USA that is not universal).

When groups started sampling songs that wouldn't pertain to black music, the art form of sampling began to receive criticism.[26] In Hip Hop America, Nelson George explains the case between singer-songwriter Gilbert O'Sullivan and rapper Biz Markie. Considered to be the "most damaging example of anti-hip hop vindictiveness," O'Sullivan had sued Biz Markie after he sampled O'Sullivan's "Alone Again (Naturally)." After O'Sullivan's signers, Grand Upright Music, applied the Copyright Act of 1976, O'Sullivan held power. Instead of demanding any sort of royalty, O'Sullivan managed to force Biz Markie's signer, Warner Bros., to recall Biz Markie's album, and to prohibit any sales of the album until the song in question was removed.[26] When the court ruled that sampling another artist's song without permission could be considered copyright infringement, the hip hop music industry was changed.[27] George explains how this resulted in substantial damage to Biz Markie's career, and how the case "sent a chill through the industry that is still felt." [26]

Despite the legal troubles faced in the 1991 case between Grand Upright Music and Warner Bros., hip hop artists have often sampled, but their freedom to do so has decreased. Nelson George claims that "there is an evident racial aspect to this," while others claim that the Copyright Act of 1976 protects them.[26]

See also

Frequently sampled songs

Sampling in other contexts

Footnotes

  1. Lott, Ryan. "History of Sampling". Joyful Noise Recordings. Retrieved 27 September 2013.
  2. Schloss, Joseph G. (2004). Making Beats: The Art of Sample-Based Hip Hop, p.36. Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press. ISBN 0-8195-6696-9.
  3. "Reggae Wisdom: Proverbs in Jamaican Music". Univ. Press of Mississippi via Google Books.
  4. 1 2 Bryan J. McCann, The Mark of Criminality: Rhetoric, Race, and Gangsta Rap in the War-On-Crime ERA, pages 41-42, University of Alabama Press
  5. Edwards, Gavin (28 August 2014). "The Beatles Make History With 'All You Need Is Love': A Minute-by-Minute Breakdown". rollingstone.com. Retrieved 27 December 2015.
  6. Mayumi Yoshida Barakan & Judith Connor Greer (1996). Tokyo city guide. Tuttle Publishing. p. 144. ISBN 0-8048-1964-5. Retrieved 2011-06-06.
  7. 1 2 Carter, Monica (June 30, 2011). "It's Easy When You’re Big In Japan: Yellow Magic Orchestra at The Hollywood Bowl". The Vinyl District. Retrieved 22 July 2011.
  8. 1 2 Condry, Ian (2006). Hip-hop Japan: rap and the paths of cultural globalization. Duke University Press. p. 60. ISBN 0-8223-3892-0.
  9. 1 2 3 Rockin'f, March 1982, pages 140-141
  10. 1 2 Lewis, John (4 July 2008). "Back to the future: Yellow Magic Orchestra helped usher in electronica – and they may just have invented hip-hop, too". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 25 May 2011.
  11. "The Wire, Issues 221-226", The Wire, p. 44, 2002, retrieved 2011-05-25
  12. "Chiemi Manabe - 不思議・少女". Discogs.
  13. "Logic System - Orient Express". Discogs.
  14. Myers, Ben (2011-01-20). "Big Audio Dynamite: more pioneering than the Clash?". The Guardian. London.
  15. (Posted: May 17, 1990) (1990-05-17). "MC Hammer: Please Hammer, Don't Hurt 'Em : Music Reviews". Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 2007-11-21. Retrieved 2010-03-31.
  16. "Artist Search Results for "mc hammer" - WhoSampled". www.whosampled.com.
  17. "Dangerous Minds (1995)".
  18. "Coolio on WhoSampled". WhoSampled.
  19. Keith Farley. "Forever" – Overview. Allmusic: 1999.
  20. Jason Birchmeier. "The Saga Continues" – Overview. Allmusic: 2001.
  21. New Rap Song Samples 'Billie Jean' In Its Entirety, Adds Nothing. (September 1997) The Onion. Retrieved 2008-01-01.
  22. "White Zombie Samples Sources". homepages.gac.edu.
  23. "Megadeth on WhoSampled". WhoSampled.
  24. "Mortician - Encyclopaedia Metallum: The Metal Archives". www.metal-archives.com.
  25. Harvey, Jonathan, (2008) "How do I compose? (Reflections on Wagner Dream)", in Circuit: musiques contemporaines, vol. 18, no. 1, p. 43
  26. 1 2 3 4 George, Nelson (2005-04-26). Hip Hop America. Penguin. ISBN 9781101007303.
  27. Music Sampling and Copyright Law. (PDF), p. 21

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.