So much fun recognising the tracks-before you play them-from the originals! Stuff like Barry White to Rock DJ, Steal My Sunshine, etc. Thanks for this great vid!
Watched a few of these on this channel and still waiting to see the Gorrilaz using the score from "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly" for "Clint Eastwood"
I find it shocking how from 2010 onwards the sampling became more and more grotesque to the point of just adding some minimal sound gimmick on top of it or just plainly speeding up the original to create a new song (which incredibly became a hit). Certainly mainstream music became crappier year after year since the 2000's.
I thought it was from 2008 because I searched it up and it said 2008 until when I saw another video of it and it's said its from 1973 (this is my other account)
Here are some Suggestions for the Next Collection: Boney M - Rasputin samples Üsküdara Giderken (Kâtip) by Safiye Aylâ Boney M - Rasputin samples Cozy Powell - Dance with the devil (Beggining Drum) Ini Kamoze - Here comes the Hotstepper samples Cannibal & the Headhunters - Land Of 1000 Dances 1965 Mel & Kim - Showing out samples Herbie Hancock Rockit Apollo 440 - Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Dub samples Van Halen Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love The Immortals - Mortal Kombat 1995 Samples 2 Unlimited - Twilight Zone Tomcraft - Loneliness samples Share the Love by Andrea Martin (1998) Shaggy - Boombastic samples King Floyd - Baby Let Me Kiss Yo Gwen Stefani - Rich Girl samples Fiddler on the roof - If I were a rich man Freddie Mercury - Living On My Own (1993 Remix) samples Lil Louis - French Kiss Gabrielle - Dreams samples samples Tracy Chapman - Fast Car Fine Young Cannibals - Good thing samples Gloria Jones - Tainted Love Elvis Presley - its now or never samples Enrico Caruso - O Sole Mio Aaliyah - More Than a Woman samples Mayada El-Hennawy - Alouli Ansa Rod Stewart Da Ya Think I'm Sexy? samples Jorge Ben - Taj Mahal White Town - your woman samples Al Bowlly Lew Stone Monseigneur Band - My Woman 1932 Nirvana - Come As You Are samples Killing Joke - Eighties The Offspring - Why Dont You Get A Job samples The Beatles - Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da Nelly - Dilemma ft. Kelly Rowland samples Patti LaBelle - Love, Need and Want You Madonna - Express Yourself samples The Staple Singers - Respect Yourself Green Day - Warning samples The Kinks - Picture Book MIKA - Relax, Take It Easy samples Cutting Crew - (I Just) Died In Your Arms
It is always a matter of view i guess and of course of the base of what you see as a sample. But you made me curious which ones do you think are wrong i will check them again.
@@htdmc2010 Come as you are for example. Sure the riffs are very similar but if Kurt Cobain is to be believed (which I do), he didn't even hear the song back then. Sure Offspring sounds like Why Don't you get a job but its not a sample either. While intentional, a sample is literally taking an original song unchanged and putting it into a song. The way the song is is similar (if not identical) but the song has new words, new instruments etc. So inspired maybe but not sampled.
I was a Fan of Nirvana specially and the unplugged is unforgettable. But i was shocked when i heard the Killing Joke song because the riff is unfortunately exactly the same only the killing joke one is faster. What you mean is a direct sample but there are also interpolation samples mimicking the same rhythm/Vocal/Melody/Riff... The Offspring one has the same generic Melody so that doesn`t count and technically seen you are right i checked it again the Vocal part does not fit to the Beatles one. If one thing is similar then it goes off as coincidental but besides the Melody & Vocal Part the singing style and even the lyrics are similar to the Beatles Song. But i know what you mean it is probably not Counted as a Sample.
Originally done by Merrilee Rush & The Turnabouts back in the 60s, and it's basically the base for the whole song. It was also written by Angelina Jolie's uncle lol!
Nice series, 1 request though, could you please put all the songs that have used a sample, eg. the Diana Ross song 'Im coming out' was used by The Notorious B.I.G. for "Mo Money Mo Problems" which I think is defo where I thought that link was going.... also The Mighty Show-Stoppers and Bobby Byrd were used by The Prodigy, those are the 3 I remember. But cheers for the great vids :) Edit: Haha I just watched the Part 1 and saw the Diana Ross/Biggy song on there...... I will shhhh now, im not worthy *bows*
I have a series called ‘Who Sampled’ which looked at 1 specific sample and lists a bunch of songs that used that sample. There’s only 2 or 3 in the series at the moment though. But it’s an idea I’ve already started working on.
For the next "Hit songs samples" you could add Rihanna - Red Lipstick. Chase & Status produced it, and they have a Metallica - Wherever I May Roam sample in the track Red Lipstick is based on, Saxon. So Metallica credits on a Rihanna song... I've always found that funny. :-D This one is purely speculative, as there aren't any credits to back it up. Rob Swire worked with Stargate to produce Rihanna's Rude Boy. Check out the melody from Pendulum - Watercolour (Rob Swires group) and compare it to Rihanna - Te Amo. Te Amo and Rude Boy are from the same Rihanna album, so my theory is that Rob got a little too inspired when he heard Te Amo while producing Rude Boy.. :)
@gnu_andrew Yeah, but I believe this talks about international hits, not just UK national hits. But it's good to know that they had a #1 spot. Well deserved.
@@RinJackson Not necessarily. There are literally thousands of options of songs that could be picked and yet the ones that were picked here were also picked in some of the most popular content on the subject.
You missed a few on your list. Shaggy's "Angel" also sampled "Angel" by Juice Newton. Sugarhill Gang's "Rapper's Delight" was sampled by Las Ketchup's "Asereje"
Learn what "sampled" means. None of these are samples. Asereje is an interpretation of how a Spanish person who can't speak English very well, would have attempted to "sing" Rapper's Delight. It isn't even _remotely_ a "sample".
5:36 Two to the one to the one to the HEEEEEEE I like good crackers and I like good cheese Drink so much tea, you wouldn't believe HEEEEEEE to the one to the one to the HEEEEEEE Of all the women I've met You're the baddest bitch, I bet. Let me tell you how you're gonna leave with me Porridge, crackers and stinking cheese Built a whole motherfuckin' rocket ship Been to the moon on an acid trip If I ain't got no cheddar I'll just shake my hips When I've eaten the cheese, I'm back in the ship Get off my cheese! It's mine to eat, It's real easy, just follow the beat; Just let Charles Laughton pass you by, Head for the sun that's Stephen Fry Give me all the cheese, give me all the cheese Give me all the cheese, give me all the cheese Watch out, May! I'm the next PM. Don't believe me? I'll jump Big Ben This is my dog, his name's Gromit Together we rule West Wallaby Street Now just look at me, sexy as can be Now just look at me, sexy as can be Give me all the cheese, Give me all the cheese Give me all the cheese, give me all the cheese
Yeah even though some sampling was done with some finesse back then in hte 90s... now it's just copy/paste, total lack of creativity, fast-food style mass produced hits for the mainstream. Music is not produced to last or transcend, it's just done like the clothes or the food and electronics with planned obsolescence in order to suit the consumerism lifestyle from this society we live in.
@@BocaNejra MC Hammer - U Can't Touch This, 1991, blatant rip of Super Freak by Rick James Vanilla Ice - Ice Ice Baby, same year, blatant rip of Under Pressure by Queen Puff Daddy - I'll Be Missing You, 1997, blatant rip of Every Breath You Take by The Police Will Smith, Freakin' It, Gettin Jiggy Wit It, Just Cruisin', Miami, Willennium 2k, all released before 2000, blatant rips of Love Hangover - Diana Ross, He's the Greatest Dancer - Sister Sledge, I'm Back for More - Al Johnson & Jean Carne, The Beat Goes On - The Whispers, and Rock the Casbah - The Clash respectively The Notorious B.I.G. - Big Poppa, 1994, blatant rip of Between the Sheets by the Isley Brothers Tupac - Changes, 1996, blatant rip of That's Just the Way It Is by Bruce Hornsby Tupac and Dr. Dre - California Love, rip of Woman to Woman - Joe Cocker *and* West Cast Pop Lock - Ronnie Hudson (1982), which in turn is a rip of So Ruff, So Tuff by Roger Troutman Odyssey - Inside Out, 1982, literally just Watching You - Slave with different lyrics Evasions - Wikka Wrap, 1981, blatant rips of Thighs Highs *and* Funkin' For Jamaica, both by Tom Browne Sugar Hill Gang - Apache, same year, blatant rip of Apache by Incredible Bongo Band (same name even) Sugar Hill Gang, Rapper's Delight - 1980, literally just Good Times by Chic with different lyrics (actually in the video! how about that?) Sugar Hill Gang - 8th Wonder, 1982, blatant rip of Daisy Lady by 7th Wonder The collective consciousness' selective memory at work. People wanna whine about how "oh music today is so uncreative, it's all just samples and ripoffs" when all this shit from years past is conveniently forgotten out or ignored. Fuck outta here.
@@thapoint09 I'm not speaking about commercial music but the classic old school hip hop pioneers, they actually invented the amazing art of sampling and the whole genre as well as modern DJing, it's part of the game. It's fundamented on extracting dope samples from classic funk/soul/disco hits and creating a brand new and original song from it... same were doing the pioneer DJs like Kool Herc, Grandmaster Flash and so on when they stared to cut and mix breaks and samples. They all made history and had mad originality, they changed music somehow (while they all had great music culture and respect for real soul and funk musicians). Most were poor guys who just wanted to stand out and so something really cool, not success. Times have changed though. Same did the house music pioneers in their own style with classic disco tunes. Can't even make comparisons with what the mainstream, EDC crap and pop artists nowadays do. They can imitate but never replicate. Sampling became a norm but it used to be fresh back then, producers had taste and a vast knowledge of the music. Now producers won't hunt for dope or new samples on old vinyls like hiphop and house pioneers did, they would just sample what others already did without even giving credit to the original artists. It's ridiculous. Art is strongly based on imitating or getting inspired and giving a new twist to what others have been doing already... that's where the difference between real artists or mediocres is, some just imitate and follow the trends while others set their own trends. Peace
@@BocaNejra Don't try to move the goalposts on me now, your claim was sampling was more creative in the 90s (the 90s, not the 80s or mid-late 70s, when all of the pioneers were most active), I listed several examples that proved otherwise. (Besides, what they were doing was new *at the time*, but today you realize they were just looping disco breaks. Sampling didn't really take off until the mid 80s, e.g. South Bronx using one James Brown brass hit as the basis. Also your exact words were "mass-produced hits for the *mainstream*", so... yeah.) You claim sampling these days isn't creative? What about WondaGurl pitching down and chopping up 3 seconds of an obscure Bollywood song to make Travis Scott's Uptown. What about YAH. by Kendrick Lamar reversing and slowing down two seconds of a Billy Paul song? The Alchemist flipping Poverty's Paradise for FEAR. off the same album? Kanye West pitching down and reversing a riff from a Persian disco song on "Feedback"? Just Blaze chopping up Super Freak on Jay-Z's Kingdom Come (one of the highlights of JB's career IMO)? Reazy Renegade turning the Psycho sample on its head in Phone Jumpin' by Dave East? Ronny J chopping up *four* slowed down notes from some other Bollywood song to make Ultimate by Denzel Curry? araabMUZIK chopping up the intro to some 50s pop hit for The Hope by Fabolous? Death Grips speeding up a snippet of a Jimi Hendrix song past the point of recognizability and using it as a _sound effect_ in their track Punk Weight? And I haven't even talked about all the old producers like Premo and Pete Rock that are still active today. Do they not count? What about No I.D.'s Jay-Z's 4:44? That whole album had some of the best sampling of 2017. Furthermore, you can't claim people aren't hunting for new samples when the genre pool form which people sample is wider than ever. Gone are the days when all anyone took from was jazz, soul, funk, and R&B. Now, more than ever, people are looking towards world music, ambient electronic pieces, and cartoon/anime soundtracks, things only a handful of producers sampled, and fewer still on a regular basis. People like to cherrypick to make their point. Hell, I cherrypicked in my original comment (I didn't mention tracks like The World is Yours, You Can't Stop the Prophet, etc.) But just like I can't claim sampling in the 90s sucked too because MC Hammer, you can't point to a few huge chart-topping hits and go "that's what sampling is like now". I'm tired of people looking at past eras with rose-tinted glasses and acting like there was some kind of renaissance happening.
Does everyone who makes these sample anthology videos just copy each other so they don't have to do much work digging up sampled music? I wish people had the desire to expose underground music and foundational producers instead of mainstream bullshit. Especially with techno and house it's like they don't know Chicago and Detroit existed and only know about Daft Punk or some other nonsense.
Judy Apelsin No one would watch a video series about artists and bands they have no clue who they are. If you don’t appreciate the videos I make, go watch something else. I’m sorry they don’t satisfy you, but plenty of other people seem to enjoy them.
@@8mu- People would watch videos with music and artists other than just top 40 pop acts. I do enjoy the videos and I subscribed but I was hoping to learn something new not already in other videos I've watched already. Plus there's such a thing as being an educator. Most people don't know the sampled records but they're all here for those details because it's interesting. Anyhow don't get mad, I'm just expressing an opinion. Would be cool to see a video on the originators who acts like Daft Punk copied. I'm glad though in the Michael Jackson video you included Jeff Mills.
5:36 You reposted in the wrong neighbourhood
To be fair, Mirwais WROTE AND PRODUCED Madonna's Music. He gets to sample himself.
Kenneth Kourt my thoughts too, proper re-use of his previous work tho ;)
@@Remigiuskeyyjn
So much fun recognising the tracks-before you play them-from the originals! Stuff like Barry White to Rock DJ, Steal My Sunshine, etc. Thanks for this great vid!
John cena
i cant stop playing both more more more and steal my sunshine
The Cypress Hill one killed me. Awesome!
I always loved that Cypress Hill used "Son of a Preacher Man" for "Hits from the Bong"
Watched a few of these on this channel and still waiting to see the Gorrilaz using the score from "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly" for "Clint Eastwood"
I find it shocking how from 2010 onwards the sampling became more and more grotesque to the point of just adding some minimal sound gimmick on top of it or just plainly speeding up the original to create a new song (which incredibly became a hit). Certainly mainstream music became crappier year after year since the 2000's.
1972 - hot butter - popcorn (original)
2008 - Jiri Korn - jako mandle prazene (sample)
Jiri Korn song is from 1972. Hot Butter also made in 1972. Both of them re-recorded from Gershon Kingsley 1969.
I thought it was from 2008 because I searched it up and it said 2008 until when I saw another video of it and it's said its from 1973 (this is my other account)
And the album was released on 2008
Nero - Reaching Out also sample from Kano - Another Life!
Really nice to see that electronic music uses some really neat samples, or been used for some new sound to music!
Here are some Suggestions for the Next Collection:
Boney M - Rasputin samples Üsküdara Giderken (Kâtip) by Safiye Aylâ
Boney M - Rasputin samples Cozy Powell - Dance with the devil (Beggining Drum)
Ini Kamoze - Here comes the Hotstepper samples Cannibal & the Headhunters - Land Of 1000 Dances 1965
Mel & Kim - Showing out samples Herbie Hancock Rockit
Apollo 440 - Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Dub samples Van Halen Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love
The Immortals - Mortal Kombat 1995 Samples 2 Unlimited - Twilight Zone
Tomcraft - Loneliness samples Share the Love by Andrea Martin (1998)
Shaggy - Boombastic samples King Floyd - Baby Let Me Kiss Yo
Gwen Stefani - Rich Girl samples Fiddler on the roof - If I were a rich man
Freddie Mercury - Living On My Own (1993 Remix) samples Lil Louis - French Kiss
Gabrielle - Dreams samples samples Tracy Chapman - Fast Car
Fine Young Cannibals - Good thing samples Gloria Jones - Tainted Love
Elvis Presley - its now or never samples Enrico Caruso - O Sole Mio
Aaliyah - More Than a Woman samples Mayada El-Hennawy - Alouli Ansa
Rod Stewart Da Ya Think I'm Sexy? samples Jorge Ben - Taj Mahal
White Town - your woman samples Al Bowlly Lew Stone Monseigneur Band - My Woman 1932
Nirvana - Come As You Are samples Killing Joke - Eighties
The Offspring - Why Dont You Get A Job samples The Beatles - Ob-La-Di, Ob-La-Da
Nelly - Dilemma ft. Kelly Rowland samples Patti LaBelle - Love, Need and Want You
Madonna - Express Yourself samples The Staple Singers - Respect Yourself
Green Day - Warning samples The Kinks - Picture Book
MIKA - Relax, Take It Easy samples Cutting Crew - (I Just) Died In Your Arms
Some of these aren't samples but based on certain songs. Or even unintentional similarities.
It is always a matter of view i guess and of course of the base of what you see as a sample. But you made me curious which ones do you think are wrong i will check them again.
@@htdmc2010 Come as you are for example. Sure the riffs are very similar but if Kurt Cobain is to be believed (which I do), he didn't even hear the song back then. Sure Offspring sounds like Why Don't you get a job but its not a sample either. While intentional, a sample is literally taking an original song unchanged and putting it into a song. The way the song is is similar (if not identical) but the song has new words, new instruments etc. So inspired maybe but not sampled.
I was a Fan of Nirvana specially and the unplugged is unforgettable. But i was shocked when i heard the Killing Joke song because the riff is unfortunately exactly the same only the killing joke one is faster.
What you mean is a direct sample but there are also interpolation samples mimicking the same rhythm/Vocal/Melody/Riff...
The Offspring one has the same generic Melody so that doesn`t count and technically seen you are right i checked it again the Vocal part does not fit to the Beatles one. If one thing is similar then it goes off as coincidental but besides the Melody & Vocal Part the singing style and even the lyrics are similar to the Beatles Song. But i know what you mean it is probably not Counted as a Sample.
You took me by surprise, when I heard I'm Coming Out I was expecting Mo Money, Mo Problems not Ariana Grande
I will be checking out the originals.
Great series! Keep going!‼️
08:32 What about the chorus of "Angel of the morning" by Juice Newton?
Originally done by Merrilee Rush & The Turnabouts back in the 60s, and it's basically the base for the whole song. It was also written by Angelina Jolie's uncle lol!
Yea shaggy sampled it
5:28 - 5:36 *You sampled in the wrong neighborhood*
HSSSSSSSSSSSSS
Always wondered where that Toxic sample came from
bam bam was also sampled in olav basoski's waterman
3:33 Fatboy Slim Right here Right now check out David Guetta Memories it is very similiar. I think he sampled it
You want me to listen to Guetta you pay me bitch
Lmfaooo damn son
Nice series, 1 request though, could you please put all the songs that have used a sample, eg. the Diana Ross song 'Im coming out' was used by The Notorious B.I.G. for "Mo Money Mo Problems" which I think is defo where I thought that link was going.... also The Mighty Show-Stoppers and Bobby Byrd were used by The Prodigy, those are the 3 I remember. But cheers for the great vids :) Edit: Haha I just watched the Part 1 and saw the Diana Ross/Biggy song on there...... I will shhhh now, im not worthy *bows*
I have a series called ‘Who Sampled’ which looked at 1 specific sample and lists a bunch of songs that used that sample. There’s only 2 or 3 in the series at the moment though. But it’s an idea I’ve already started working on.
Big up Sister Nancy; just getting some royalities after 30+ years
Hmm they should really go to Toots and the Maytals. :P
For the next "Hit songs samples" you could add Rihanna - Red Lipstick. Chase & Status produced it, and they have a Metallica - Wherever I May Roam sample in the track Red Lipstick is based on, Saxon. So Metallica credits on a Rihanna song... I've always found that funny. :-D
This one is purely speculative, as there aren't any credits to back it up. Rob Swire worked with Stargate to produce Rihanna's Rude Boy. Check out the melody from Pendulum - Watercolour (Rob Swires group) and compare it to Rihanna - Te Amo. Te Amo and Rude Boy are from the same Rihanna album, so my theory is that Rob got a little too inspired when he heard Te Amo while producing Rude Boy.. :)
Reaching out by Nero also sampled another life by Kano
Also it wasn't a hit. Nero sadly never hit the top 40, or even the hot 100
@gnu_andrew Yeah, but I believe this talks about international hits, not just UK national hits. But it's good to know that they had a #1 spot. Well deserved.
Sister Nancy's Bam bam was done earlier by Toots and the Maytals. =)
Not gonna lie - that Toxic flip is absolutely epic!
Nero didn't score hits with that, my dude.
Thank fuck
I really appreciate these !
REACHING OUT!!!!!
Great work !!!!
Wait..I thought Shaggy's "Angel" sampled/covered "Angel of the Morning" by Juice Newton?
Beat Monkey having listened to them both, Shaggy didn’t ‘sample’ either of them 😂 rather has taken elements of both.
I think from 2000 is the ” Sampling Generation” eeewww that dubstep shit.
Ah fuck you
It appears most if not all of these are taken from Michael Tan’s series of sample videos...
In this channel's defense, that's bound to happen when 2 or more video series cover the same subject
@@RinJackson Not necessarily. There are literally thousands of options of songs that could be picked and yet the ones that were picked here were also picked in some of the most popular content on the subject.
Out of Touch fue sampleada por Uniting Nations en la canción del mismo nombre
When my little brother uses the bathroom for the first time 1:55
Daft Punk also sample Evil Woman in Face To Face
MustacheMan
That song also sampled “silence and I” from the Alan Parsons project.
9:28 Sister Nancy’s Bam Bam is also sampled on Jay-Z and Damian Marley’s “Baml
And also by Chaka Demus & Pliers
When I have Adobe Premiere Pro, I can make my music videos!
You steal my sinshine!
Im doing a little game with myself that I try to guess the song of the sample
And Im going good actually
I wonder how many people watch videos like this and don't do that...
for the diana ross - im coming out, P diddy and mase used it for the song MO Money Mo Problems.
It was debunked that Skrillex sampled White Hinterland, just a coincidence.
5:28 Kool & the Gang Joanna is very similar to wham Last christmas but not sampled
You missed a few on your list.
Shaggy's "Angel" also sampled "Angel" by Juice Newton.
Sugarhill Gang's "Rapper's Delight" was sampled by Las Ketchup's "Asereje"
Learn what "sampled" means.
None of these are samples.
Asereje is an interpretation of how a Spanish person who can't speak English very well, would have attempted to "sing" Rapper's Delight.
It isn't even _remotely_ a "sample".
Bam Bam was "sampled" by Twin Coconuts in every intro ever 😏
Angel was taken from Angel of the morning!!
You realize it's possible for a song to have more than one sample, right?
I was shocked at the fireflies sample. That's one of my favourite songs, why did they have to ruin it?
I see the Twenty One Pilots thing as more of a coincidence if anything :/
They claimed a Hives song sampled a Sonic the Hedgehog 2 OST track, don't worry, these videos get it wrong sometimes lmao
8:33 Shaggy Angel also samples Angel of the Morning by Evie Sands
You're sure it's a sample, and not a remake of the song?
Shaggy Angel also stole melody from Angel of the Morning Evie Sands 😊
Ashes to ashes and dust to dust Bam Bam Krinjah in da house :D
good
Best
5:47 That's Lata Mangeshkar!
Who TF cares? Whoever it is
@@olivertwist6620 Yes, but it's Lata Mangeshkar and also with S. P. Balasubrahmanyam
@@adibmusichq who cares? MF
3:02
2345meia78! Tá na hora de molhar o biscoito! eu to no osso, mas eu n me canso, tá na hora de afogar o ganso!
Two of these you can't call samples when it's the same producer using the same music.
Of course you can. They're using a sample of another song.
Diana Ross - I'm coming out, the song sampling it that is a hit song should have been Mo Money Mo Problems not Ariana Grande imo but love the videos!
5:36
Two to the one to the one to the HEEEEEEE
I like good crackers and I like good cheese
Drink so much tea, you wouldn't believe
HEEEEEEE to the one to the one to the HEEEEEEE
Of all the women I've met
You're the baddest bitch, I bet.
Let me tell you how you're gonna leave with me
Porridge, crackers and stinking cheese
Built a whole motherfuckin' rocket ship
Been to the moon on an acid trip
If I ain't got no cheddar I'll just shake my hips
When I've eaten the cheese, I'm back in the ship
Get off my cheese! It's mine to eat,
It's real easy, just follow the beat;
Just let Charles Laughton pass you by,
Head for the sun that's Stephen Fry
Give me all the cheese, give me all the cheese
Give me all the cheese, give me all the cheese
Watch out, May! I'm the next PM.
Don't believe me? I'll jump Big Ben
This is my dog, his name's Gromit
Together we rule West Wallaby Street
Now just look at me, sexy as can be
Now just look at me, sexy as can be
Give me all the cheese, Give me all the cheese
Give me all the cheese, give me all the cheese
The original barbara straisand original sample is wrong. The original song is a German one
It's from Nighttrain - Hallo Bimmelbahn 1973 (Boney M "sampled" it in 1979) ruclips.net/video/EcXiMQ0J2So/видео.html
WTF lol 5:44 omg
9:06 I was expecting Biggie Small's wtf
Neos Jordison Too obvious 😛 and I think I already used that example in part 1
It's amazing how few people bother to write music these days
I think you meant to write "shit songs"
did anyone notice how bad and overproduced modern music is?
Yes, it's incredibly wasteful, no tears shed for any record companies who go bust, idiots
modern shit
You really hear real degradation in late 2000s/2010s pop music. Complete reliance on samples.
robertwill23 Thats because sampling technology gets way to easy.
Yeah even though some sampling was done with some finesse back then in hte 90s... now it's just copy/paste, total lack of creativity, fast-food style mass produced hits for the mainstream. Music is not produced to last or transcend, it's just done like the clothes or the food and electronics with planned obsolescence in order to suit the consumerism lifestyle from this society we live in.
@@BocaNejra MC Hammer - U Can't Touch This, 1991, blatant rip of Super Freak by Rick James
Vanilla Ice - Ice Ice Baby, same year, blatant rip of Under Pressure by Queen
Puff Daddy - I'll Be Missing You, 1997, blatant rip of Every Breath You Take by The Police
Will Smith, Freakin' It, Gettin Jiggy Wit It, Just Cruisin', Miami, Willennium 2k, all released before 2000, blatant rips of Love Hangover - Diana Ross, He's the Greatest Dancer - Sister Sledge, I'm Back for More - Al Johnson & Jean Carne, The Beat Goes On - The Whispers, and Rock the Casbah - The Clash respectively
The Notorious B.I.G. - Big Poppa, 1994, blatant rip of Between the Sheets by the Isley Brothers
Tupac - Changes, 1996, blatant rip of That's Just the Way It Is by Bruce Hornsby
Tupac and Dr. Dre - California Love, rip of Woman to Woman - Joe Cocker *and* West Cast Pop Lock - Ronnie Hudson (1982), which in turn is a rip of So Ruff, So Tuff by Roger Troutman
Odyssey - Inside Out, 1982, literally just Watching You - Slave with different lyrics
Evasions - Wikka Wrap, 1981, blatant rips of Thighs Highs *and* Funkin' For Jamaica, both by Tom Browne
Sugar Hill Gang - Apache, same year, blatant rip of Apache by Incredible Bongo Band (same name even)
Sugar Hill Gang, Rapper's Delight - 1980, literally just Good Times by Chic with different lyrics (actually in the video! how about that?)
Sugar Hill Gang - 8th Wonder, 1982, blatant rip of Daisy Lady by 7th Wonder
The collective consciousness' selective memory at work. People wanna whine about how "oh music today is so uncreative, it's all just samples and ripoffs" when all this shit from years past is conveniently forgotten out or ignored. Fuck outta here.
@@thapoint09 I'm not speaking about commercial music but the classic old school hip hop pioneers, they actually invented the amazing art of sampling and the whole genre as well as modern DJing, it's part of the game. It's fundamented on extracting dope samples from classic funk/soul/disco hits and creating a brand new and original song from it... same were doing the pioneer DJs like Kool Herc, Grandmaster Flash and so on when they stared to cut and mix breaks and samples. They all made history and had mad originality, they changed music somehow (while they all had great music culture and respect for real soul and funk musicians). Most were poor guys who just wanted to stand out and so something really cool, not success. Times have changed though.
Same did the house music pioneers in their own style with classic disco tunes. Can't even make comparisons with what the mainstream, EDC crap and pop artists nowadays do. They can imitate but never replicate. Sampling became a norm but it used to be fresh back then, producers had taste and a vast knowledge of the music. Now producers won't hunt for dope or new samples on old vinyls like hiphop and house pioneers did, they would just sample what others already did without even giving credit to the original artists. It's ridiculous.
Art is strongly based on imitating or getting inspired and giving a new twist to what others have been doing already... that's where the difference between real artists or mediocres is, some just imitate and follow the trends while others set their own trends.
Peace
@@BocaNejra Don't try to move the goalposts on me now, your claim was sampling was more creative in the 90s (the 90s, not the 80s or mid-late 70s, when all of the pioneers were most active), I listed several examples that proved otherwise. (Besides, what they were doing was new *at the time*, but today you realize they were just looping disco breaks. Sampling didn't really take off until the mid 80s, e.g. South Bronx using one James Brown brass hit as the basis. Also your exact words were "mass-produced hits for the *mainstream*", so... yeah.)
You claim sampling these days isn't creative? What about WondaGurl pitching down and chopping up 3 seconds of an obscure Bollywood song to make Travis Scott's Uptown. What about YAH. by Kendrick Lamar reversing and slowing down two seconds of a Billy Paul song? The Alchemist flipping Poverty's Paradise for FEAR. off the same album? Kanye West pitching down and reversing a riff from a Persian disco song on "Feedback"? Just Blaze chopping up Super Freak on Jay-Z's Kingdom Come (one of the highlights of JB's career IMO)? Reazy Renegade turning the Psycho sample on its head in Phone Jumpin' by Dave East? Ronny J chopping up *four* slowed down notes from some other Bollywood song to make Ultimate by Denzel Curry? araabMUZIK chopping up the intro to some 50s pop hit for The Hope by Fabolous? Death Grips speeding up a snippet of a Jimi Hendrix song past the point of recognizability and using it as a _sound effect_ in their track Punk Weight? And I haven't even talked about all the old producers like Premo and Pete Rock that are still active today. Do they not count? What about No I.D.'s Jay-Z's 4:44? That whole album had some of the best sampling of 2017.
Furthermore, you can't claim people aren't hunting for new samples when the genre pool form which people sample is wider than ever. Gone are the days when all anyone took from was jazz, soul, funk, and R&B. Now, more than ever, people are looking towards world music, ambient electronic pieces, and cartoon/anime soundtracks, things only a handful of producers sampled, and fewer still on a regular basis.
People like to cherrypick to make their point. Hell, I cherrypicked in my original comment (I didn't mention tracks like The World is Yours, You Can't Stop the Prophet, etc.) But just like I can't claim sampling in the 90s sucked too because MC Hammer, you can't point to a few huge chart-topping hits and go "that's what sampling is like now". I'm tired of people looking at past eras with rose-tinted glasses and acting like there was some kind of renaissance happening.
Half of this shit could just be called Nightcore
Does everyone who makes these sample anthology videos just copy each other so they don't have to do much work digging up sampled music? I wish people had the desire to expose underground music and foundational producers instead of mainstream bullshit. Especially with techno and house it's like they don't know Chicago and Detroit existed and only know about Daft Punk or some other nonsense.
Judy Apelsin
No one would watch a video series about artists and bands they have no clue who they are.
If you don’t appreciate the videos I make, go watch something else. I’m sorry they don’t satisfy you, but plenty of other people seem to enjoy them.
@@8mu- People would watch videos with music and artists other than just top 40 pop acts. I do enjoy the videos and I subscribed but I was hoping to learn something new not already in other videos I've watched already. Plus there's such a thing as being an educator. Most people don't know the sampled records but they're all here for those details because it's interesting. Anyhow don't get mad, I'm just expressing an opinion. Would be cool to see a video on the originators who acts like Daft Punk copied. I'm glad though in the Michael Jackson video you included Jeff Mills.
why not do it yourself and stop whining like a bitch in the comment section of a well produced video?
You are so soy i can use it for my food
good work guys