I Tried Remaking Q-Tip’s “Illmatic” Pause Tape | NEVER AGAIN

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  • Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
  • Get 15 tracks to sample on Tracklib for free: www.tracklib.co...
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    Today we’re diving into the Nas song “One Love”, which was produced by Q Tip, recreating the beat entirely from scratch - seriously I’ve got the vinyl and I’m gonna try my hand at pause taping it - and seeing how this roster of incredible producers influenced each other to make their own songs better.
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    SOURCES
    Q-Tip's Red Bull Academy where he plays the alternate version of "Memory Lane" - www.redbullmus...
    Some history on the Pause Tape: hiphopdx.com/e...
    The Public Enemy Pause Tape: www.npr.org/se...
    DJ Premier talking about the Q-Tip Pause Tape: • Exclusive: DJ Premier ...
    More:
    www.xxlmag.com/...
    • Nas - VEVO News Interv...
    • Nas - The story behind...
    DJ Premier breaking down "Represent" on his channel: • So Wassup? Episode 6 |...
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    TOPICS COVERED
    Nas
    Illmatic
    Q-Tip
    One Love
    Represent
    DJ Premier
    Pete Rock
    Memory Lane
    Pause Tape
    Beat Tape
    Cassette Tape
    Heath Brothers
    Music Production
    Hip Hop
    Music history
    #qtip #nas #hiphop

Комментарии • 905

  • @15twoe
    @15twoe Год назад +711

    I'm a 50 year old " tape loop mechanic" and there's a very easy way to loop the sample! You first have to record the complete song on a tape and then break out the plugs! You then take that tape as the original source and sample from that tape onto another blank tape to record the loops. There are some recording tricks that can be done including overdubs that sound more authentic than using todays technology. This method is the same as using reel to reel without the splicing. If you have a great dual cassette tape recorder you have some added effects like stab, echo and reverse. I still use this method to make beats and mixes today. Other producers like California's BinGrim uses this method as well! It's not hard it just takes patience, practice and progression on counting to stay on tempo.

    • @Joe90Production
      @Joe90Production Год назад +67

      I assumed that's what he was actually gonna do. Retriggering it from the exact same spot on the vinyl at the exact right time seems like a nightmare, whereas recording the sample from one tape deck to an identical tape deck in the same machine makes way more sense, especially if it's good quality tape recorder that spins up instantly.

    • @keenkingjames
      @keenkingjames Год назад +45

      Doesn’t seem like he knows the proper equipment. You gotta have a studio quality tape deck. The speed off the pause is the key.

    • @RinostarGames
      @RinostarGames Год назад +55

      I had a tape deck for awhile where you could sync up the master tape and then hit pause and record on the other tape and when you hit play on the master tape it would start recording immediately. I made a ton of beat tapes that way.

    • @Joe90Production
      @Joe90Production Год назад +31

      @@RinostarGames there you go. I'd bet money Q-Tip was using something very similar.

    • @clintpartie7369
      @clintpartie7369 Год назад +15

      Yeah, for one, ya can't do it on a digital cassette deck.

  • @GPow69
    @GPow69 Год назад +331

    Q-Tip is a legend man, untouchable. I dunno what the original beat for represent sounded like, but I'm glad Preemo landed on what we've got now cause that's one of the hardest tracks EVER

    • @diggingthegreats
      @diggingthegreats  Год назад +28

      Go check Premier's channel! Link in the description for his Represent breakdown - incredible

    • @xoloitsquintli
      @xoloitsquintli Год назад +9

      @@diggingthegreats I think I discovered your channel because I was watching Preemo's breakdowns. The algorithm know what's up lol

    • @GPow69
      @GPow69 Год назад

      @@diggingthegreats I watch so wassup religiously but somehow missed that one, thank you for spreading the word brother!

    • @KardiFan2000
      @KardiFan2000 Год назад

      ​@@GPow69 The original version of represent is available here on youtube

    • @mfnuke7839
      @mfnuke7839 Год назад

      ​@@KardiFan2000heard it on so wassup episode but it's not full

  • @mpelle15
    @mpelle15 Год назад +58

    I used to make these back in the day. The key is that you need a dual tape deck with mechanical pause switches. The tape deck you’re using has electronically controlled switches which create an undesired lag.
    All tape decks in the 80s used to be mechanical, but in the 90s they got fancy and started making electronically controlled buttons, which inserted unwanted gaps when using this technique.
    Damn, i wish i still had my old pause tapes, the little kid version of me made some creative magic.

    • @northerncup
      @northerncup Год назад +5

      Brother you hit it on the nail the mechanical ones are the ones that are very accurate the cassette deck he's using those powerconnect backstage you're not good for it soon as I seen the video and I seen the deck he was using I knew right then and there I knew he wasn't going to get it right he's better off doing with those old-school double tape deck radios the portable ones record the first one on a high-quality TDK tape you know the TDK Chrome cassettes 4 sound quality and use the other one for the pause dub

    • @skeezix8156
      @skeezix8156 11 месяцев назад

      Also used to use headphones in the mic jack for intros

    • @roderickmcintosh5641
      @roderickmcintosh5641 10 месяцев назад +1

      This just explained my reply. I know I'm late! 🤪

  • @officialonyxobsidian
    @officialonyxobsidian Год назад +1271

    All of this should be taught in classes. Hip Hop would be more appreciated by young people if they saw what my generations producers and artists went through to create artistry.

    • @diggingthegreats
      @diggingthegreats  Год назад +128

      Agreed - It truly is an art form, and needs to be taught - so much respect for methods like this

    • @kadu51044
      @kadu51044 Год назад +7

      Couldn't have said it better myself.

    • @Bati_
      @Bati_ Год назад +22

      When they tried to teach methods in jazz in conservatoires, it faced the risk of instituionalization. These are oral traditions so I have complicated feelings towards this.

    • @beatsbeercigarettes
      @beatsbeercigarettes Год назад +5

      I think you’re on a different page of the book.

    • @yotaiji012
      @yotaiji012 Год назад +2

      It is! Right here. Who goes to classes? Haha

  • @Drrolfski
    @Drrolfski Год назад +140

    As a teenager in the mid-eighties, I played around with pause taping. What I found out then is that you need a 2-head cassette deck with old-fashioned mechanical pause switches, otherwise, your timing will be off and you will hear a pause between two recordings. Judging from your video you might have used the wrong cassette deck as the transport buttons look electronically controlled., not mechanical.

    • @diggingthegreats
      @diggingthegreats  Год назад +28

      Seems like it, yeah haha - definitely a big pause in between each loop

    • @MLHunt
      @MLHunt Год назад +17

      Yeah has to be the really basic purely mechanical pause mechanism, not the technically more advanced electromechanical type that used a solenoid. Impossible to time those lol

    • @dusteddevilapparel
      @dusteddevilapparel Год назад +10

      Exactly. We found a way to make a way. My deck was my grandfather's throwaway. It worked perfectly.

    • @dogsandyoga1743
      @dogsandyoga1743 Год назад +5

      ​@@dusteddevilapparel My VERY first couple of pause tapes were boombox to boombox 😂

    • @vap8978
      @vap8978 Год назад +1

      this 💯

  • @williamgeorge2580
    @williamgeorge2580 Год назад +88

    Tip is such a good MC everyone forgets his producing skills. Quite a talent.

    • @ri067953
      @ri067953 Год назад +10

      His drums sound so big. Crooklyn Dodgers is my favorite track that he did

    • @Nelson_Swamp
      @Nelson_Swamp Год назад

      @@ri067953 Word up. One of the illest instrumentals ever.

  • @bagelssmellgreat
    @bagelssmellgreat Год назад +163

    The amount of sheer WORK and finesse pause tapes required should inspire anyone with the tools we have today to go make something, anything, and put it out there.

    • @diggingthegreats
      @diggingthegreats  Год назад +7

      🔥🔥

    • @79Glitch
      @79Glitch Год назад +13

      It wasn’t nearly as hard as this video portrays it-this guy is comical in how hard he tries to represent the authentic methods while sometimes being clueless.
      We made pause tapes off dual cassette tape decks, the kind that were found on most consumer boom boxes and home stereo units.
      When CD’s became popular, it made it even easier because you could pause the exact second of the break you want on the CD, while the pause and record function on tape machine were already pressed down, simultaneously.
      There was no lag on any standard tape machine. Even the cheapest of cheap tape recorders didn’t lag, from Fischer Price to those flat one deck joints with built-in speaker from the 70’s and 80’s. I don’t know where he got the tape machine he’s using in this video, but I’ve never heard of a “lag” while making a pause tape, unless he’s actually pressing the record button every time as well? This ish is ridiculous!
      Most hip hop heads made their own customized mixtapes with cool edits back in the day, like splicing the remix and original version of a song together, or mixing bpm’s like you would with vinyl. There was some skill and timing involved, but it wasn’t that hard for people who had some basic musical inclination?

    • @legendsflashback
      @legendsflashback Год назад

      @@diggingthegreats great video

    • @gurpaful
      @gurpaful Год назад +1

      ⁠​⁠@@79Glitchthis tripped me up because he looks like he'd be the age where he had analog cassette decks to play around with as a kid and would know the immediacy of analog buttons vs the laggy hifi stuff with digital buttons that's being used here. like that looks impossible and no one for sure succesfully did this using those

    • @phat-kid
      @phat-kid Год назад

      yeah this made me feel old. im only 41 but this guy made me feel like i'm from another eon.@@79Glitch

  • @BuiltbyF
    @BuiltbyF Год назад +176

    His needle drop technique is crazy shit too. Q managed to innovate mad shit out of pure necessity, and nobody does that quite like he does

    • @anon-guy-dude
      @anon-guy-dude Год назад +4

      He's so good at needle dropping, I bet that is what he was doing

    • @user_unknown1488
      @user_unknown1488 Год назад +7

      @@anon-guy-dude you are over thinking what he done. it's just tools, timing and tenacity! its how things could only happen back in the day.

    • @kidgrebo1
      @kidgrebo1 Год назад +6

      That's the essence of hip hop, no money for instruments so the turntable became the instrument.

    • @shasevere
      @shasevere Год назад +1

      im thinking thats how he made that original loop not the pause tape method.. Ive seen qtip loop a record needle droppin before

    • @torrancenorwood1349
      @torrancenorwood1349 Год назад

      Crazy!!!

  • @make1thappen267
    @make1thappen267 Год назад +144

    Illmatic wasn’t just an album, it was a producer’s seminar💯

    • @creechmixtapes-ux7dh
      @creechmixtapes-ux7dh Год назад

      I sold the album for a dollar a few days ago. It was somewhere in my closet, collecting dust...

    • @regret9423
      @regret9423 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@creechmixtapes-ux7dhokay?

  • @Raucey
    @Raucey Год назад +102

    "It works, that was terrible!"
    Great video, really enjoyed this one. Nice job showing the process of these old school methods.

    • @diggingthegreats
      @diggingthegreats  Год назад +5

      This was a really fun one for me. Took a very long time, but man... new appreciation after doing it myself 😂

  • @esahm373
    @esahm373 Год назад +75

    I used this technique in the 90s as a 11 year old looping a sequence without vocals from the first Jazzy Jeff & Fresh Prince LP. The loop I created was pretty flawless. Very proud of my 11yo self.

    • @Sajid_A829
      @Sajid_A829 Год назад +4

      Care to share? I'm real intrigued.

    • @phat-kid
      @phat-kid Год назад

      lol yeah let's all go back to 1991 and find those old tapes from middle school. will get right on that.@@Sajid_A829

  • @B-Nice
    @B-Nice Год назад +38

    you need a tape deck that has buttons that push down like piano keys. it's damn near impossible with those tactile type buttons on the deck you have. you eventually figure out the rhythm of your tape deck as you get into making pause tapes more.

    • @TheRealNativeSun
      @TheRealNativeSun Год назад +6

      I was about to say that. Not the soft solenoid deck that he used but a old solid state tape deck with the vu meters and spring diving board looking transport buttons. Lol. The old Teac and Panasonic decks were good got pause tape loops.

    • @maccagrabme
      @maccagrabme Год назад +8

      Yes that's the difference, its the piano key buttons that felt like you were stretching the tape when pushing them down and the tape started recording immediately once you took your finger off pause, it was easy getting it on beat with the right tape deck. Those new decks have a delay, its like using a belt drive turntable, useless for pause tapes.

    • @CT-ho6si
      @CT-ho6si Год назад +5

      100% this, came to the comments to say the same thing. No way you can make a pause tape on one of those tactile button tape decks -- or at least I've not met anyone who could or even wanted to try lol.

    • @Trizzy4shizzy
      @Trizzy4shizzy Год назад +3

      I kept watching as if something differently would've happened 😆. I knew those decks couldn't handle it

    • @xavierramos1270
      @xavierramos1270 10 месяцев назад +1

      Exactly

  • @leofranken7225
    @leofranken7225 Год назад +34

    I really respect how you treat hip hop like art - your reverence shines through in your videos - I watch every one of them, keep up the great work (Could you do a video on how the Pharcyde made their first album with J-Swift)

  • @ThatsMistaTwistToYou
    @ThatsMistaTwistToYou Год назад +42

    I remember making mixtapes like this, end making re-edits of tracks - so frustrating, but if you messed it up, you could always rewind a little, play it back until you got to the error, pause again, then record silence to erase it if you didn't want to overdub and risk the dreaded double hit. The slowest "undo" ever lol. You know, at one point there were tape decks with pitch control and crossfaders built onto the front? discovered one at a party once and sat there most of the time mixing up music from people's tape collections haha :)
    BTW, pause tapes were way easer to make on the older models, as the buttons were spring-mounted, so you could hold down the pause button, play the record, then release on the "1" of the sample. I promise you it's easier than I make it sound!

  • @manatarmsslaps
    @manatarmsslaps Год назад +29

    man crazy part is that I never knew what a "pause tape" was and lived in the midwest (St. Louis) but also used to do this.. I knew what i wanted to hear and so I made what I wanted to hear.. I used to call them comedy tapes because mixed this with comedy from richard prior, eddie murphy, mixed with beat cuts and snippets from hiphop songs and skits.. I have no idea what I was on back then man.. was like in 8th grade, and in HS.. was trippin lol.

  • @dogsandyoga1743
    @dogsandyoga1743 Год назад +65

    The crazy thing to me, is that I was pause mixing as far back as 1985. 9 years old, without being taught. It was just one of those things that logically made sense.. it was a trip when you meet other folks who we at home doing the exact same thing....

    • @maccagrabme
      @maccagrabme Год назад

      Surely you hit play/rec and pause then drop the beat in sync with taking your finger off pause. This guy doesn't seem to be doing that or maybe doesn't have a suitable tape deck so is getting random results, that's how I remember doing pause tapes in the 80s and they were in time.

    • @dogsandyoga1743
      @dogsandyoga1743 Год назад

      @@maccagrabme I think he had an automatic tapedeck, I'm familiar with those, there was a bit of a gap before the mechanism started. But yeah, there were even workarounds, for some of them at least.

    • @peterpiper0815
      @peterpiper0815 Год назад

      @@dogsandyoga1743 Yes, with the mechanism on 80s tape decks looping was much easier because the pause was a right-at-your-fingertip-instant-pause-control. I loved tape looping back then. Funny thing: At that time I didn't even know any hip hip tracks. My intension was to make extra long versions of the (pop/rock) songs I liked. Like the extended versions on 12" vinyls. I took different parts of the song, put it together in different order/looped some parts etc. Genesis - Tonight tonight and Billy Ocean - Get outta my dreams are two songs I remember. I think I'll go thru my old tapes tomorrow. Hope to find some of this extended stuff 😄

    • @PuffinPass
      @PuffinPass Год назад +1

      Same here except I got into splicing tape which I couldn't do today if I tried. I think I saw it in a movie where they were splicing a tape for some nefarious purpose or other and I remember asking my mom what they were doing and she gave me a general idea of the process. Armed with a razor blade and a roll of scotch tape I locked myself in my room for a few months. Not sure I made anything of note but for the time it wasn't bad.

    • @dogsandyoga1743
      @dogsandyoga1743 Год назад +1

      @@PuffinPass Yeah, I wasn't nearly that advanced. At most, I was fixing tapes that broke with scotch tape 😂

  • @TimWrightDJ
    @TimWrightDJ Год назад +17

    Talking about pause taping, my old man only told me after I'd been making music on our family PC for about 2 years that he used to edit and loop his favourite tracks using reel to reel, slicing the tape and sellotaping it in. I was amazed! I have my father to thank for a lot!

  • @dusteddevilapparel
    @dusteddevilapparel Год назад +11

    Old School DJ here... I'm going back to 1989 fresh out of high school. Pause tapes weren't always made from tape to tape. Sometimes we had one deck and only the vinyl. I made some of my first loops using one Technics 1200 and a tape deck. The trick was not hitting the pause button early or you would have to replay the previous pass. But... the beauty was having a few minor, barely noticeable glitches here and there. Most of the time the vocals covered any slightly early or late sections. Once I got my hands on a Tascam 4-Track it made everything much easier... I could alternate tracks for the loop and get each take perfect. Also some early Ibanez digital delays had enough time to be able to do an indefinite loop of a beat.

  • @BeatsByRouph
    @BeatsByRouph Год назад +20

    Q-Tip is and will always be my favourite producer oat. The things he did for the rap game is insane

    • @lowlowseesee
      @lowlowseesee Год назад

      OAT. yes. particularly when he didnt even take credit for tribe beats til waaaay later lol

  • @mresilient1641
    @mresilient1641 Год назад +54

    You were using a more modern tape deck. We used to do this with the lever button tape players. Your finger is in control of the actual tape, that's how he was able to do the chops in the pause tape.

    • @diggingthegreats
      @diggingthegreats  Год назад +17

      I gotta retry 🔥

    • @ObsydyanInkTV
      @ObsydyanInkTV Год назад +8

      This is the key. We were too broke for that tape deck he’s using. 😅

    • @dreskills2k
      @dreskills2k Год назад +17

      Exactly there was no delay when unpausing the tape on the old tape decks. Plus he keeps trying to start the record right where the sample starts he needs to start the record before the sample

    • @Counterpoint
      @Counterpoint Год назад +7

      Yeah came to say this when I saw the tape deck he was using. Because the lever activated ones were all mechanical you could press in the pause button to 'unlatch' it, as such, and then you're holding the mechanism with your finger, in total control of when it releases.

    • @djgarybmixesit
      @djgarybmixesit Год назад +3

      You had to use your ear to know when to unpause the tape, and you couldn't release the button on the one you had to listen back to the tape before the actual edit and as soon as you heard the part coming up then you released the pause button on the one to catch the part, you also had to do the same with the tape you're recording on rewind it listen back to it and pause it just before the one so when you're ready to record you would catch the one and get the loop perfect, haven't done this since the 70's so now I'm showing my age lol

  • @danwg3368
    @danwg3368 Год назад +34

    Love seeing a new video from you pop up in my notifications. You make some of the highest-quality music content on RUclips, and your enthusiasm makes it 10x better. It's obvious that you love what you're talking about. Thanks for all the great content man 🤘

  • @steve_santiago
    @steve_santiago Год назад +12

    Q-tip’s signature banging drums and super crisp snares are an underrated part of this beat

  • @juniornlondock
    @juniornlondock Год назад +12

    Dopest channel on YT for producers & music enthusiasts

  • @djdrwatson
    @djdrwatson Год назад +7

    I know all about pause tape editing as I used to do this on a Sharp SG-280E music centre from about 1982 onwards ( *OVER* 40 years ago!! 😱). I was a kid about 12 or 13 just messing about. This is how I started mixing, editing and DJing.
    8:57 Yes, you're right. There are two types of cassette decks - manual/mechanical ones (with piano keys) and logic control ones with touch buttons. The manual/mechanical ones are the best for pause tape editing as they react the fastest. Logic controlled cassette decks just aren't fast enough. They take too long to react and start recording, as you've found out.
    When using a manual/mechanical cassette deck, the trick is to push the pause button down and *HOLD* it down (armed and ready) then release it precisely at the right time. Then press the pause button again exactly in time at the end of the piece you want to record. With practice it's possible to chop beats and samples exactly in time accurately, capturing samples even as short as a secord.
    Lots of happy accidents happen using this method. I had lots of fun making pause tape edits mixes back in the day. It's primitive but I learned a lot just messing about and experimenting when I was a kid all those years ago.

  • @AKiEM.
    @AKiEM. Год назад +3

    Couple other people mentioned. But you absolutely need a deck with mechanical pause rather than an electronic servo mechanism.
    The way to do it is record further than the edit. Then listen back and find the new pause location and hit pause. You always have to record further than the edit, rewind and pause on the one. The good thing is the mechanics will always pause slightly after 1 so its not messing up the bass drum on the 1.
    Chances One Love was actually a pause mix is slim for various reasons, the demo with no drums - sure.

  • @camronstudenka9377
    @camronstudenka9377 Год назад +3

    dude your seriously one of the best youtubers for a young producer to start watching. you actually care about the subject matter and actually teaching hip hop history. Keep going bro …. 🤞🏼

  • @igloososa
    @igloososa Год назад +6

    Bruh, my brother and I used to pause tape only the coolest instrumental parts on every rap cassette we owned so we could spit our own verses. Dad had that same Pioneer double cassette deck too HAHA! Thanks for reviving those great memories!
    Love your content and share it with friends frequently. Keep up the stellar work!🏆

  • @steve_santiago
    @steve_santiago Год назад +11

    Yes! Q-tip is as good as any producer of any genre ever. I know you would struggle trying to do the pause tape beat like he did. lol. He’s such a genius is unfair. Have you ever seen him needle drop?!?

    • @diggingthegreats
      @diggingthegreats  Год назад +1

      Yes! He's absolutely insane

    • @lowlowseesee
      @lowlowseesee Год назад +1

      dude plays bass for nas, he definitely has seen q tip needle drop lol

  • @TranzparentMethods
    @TranzparentMethods Год назад +5

    I might sound like an old-head, but the 90's was the best time for music. Several different genres reaching their peak, new production being introduced, Grunge, Horrorcore... Just a crazy time for music!

  • @grittyshaker
    @grittyshaker Год назад +5

    The knowledge you bring and the production of your vids is incredible. I watch every time you drop something. Thank you and keep doing what you’re doing

  • @PrAnG2000
    @PrAnG2000 Год назад +4

    I was an expert at pause button looping back in the day. My Mum's 80s Amstrad Tower hi-fi was superb for that. It had an instant stop so wouldn't move forward a bit when paused. I used to even do double notes to delay the start of the next loop. Used this formula to put together my ideas before booking a recording studio.
    Those were the days

  • @Steely_Fran
    @Steely_Fran Год назад +4

    My grandfather's stereo was excellent for making pause tapes. It would start recording instantly when unpaused. What's funny is that I didn't even know that pause tapes were a thing until years later. I had a few ideas for beats when I was in high school, tried it, and it worked. I also used to add things by playing my loop on one stereo, playing what I wanted to add on another, and recording it all on a third. I used to double track vocals like that too. This brings back so many memories.

  • @BBMP7
    @BBMP7 Год назад +2

    A golden nugget. There is a special type of tape player used for pausing back in the day. Its portable player and the release on the pause button makes it a lot easier to catch the loop. I'm sure Q Tip probably used one of those.

  • @CDMESD
    @CDMESD Год назад +7

    A plus content. Phenomenal! This is so cool. I still have my pause button tapes. This is how we made music in college back in 93 and 94.

  • @eddiethetruhead
    @eddiethetruhead Год назад +3

    I have the same Technics dual tape deck. For all of us who grew up making tapes thank you for demonstrating this lost art.
    Q Tip is master craftsman. Definitely one of the greatest beatsmiths ever.
    Peace to anyone who is still showing love to cassette tapes.
    One Love.☝️🔊

  • @clementinelives
    @clementinelives Год назад +14

    the process of 'Pause-Tape' seems so infuriating

    • @diggingthegreats
      @diggingthegreats  Год назад +5

      Compared to today's methods, it's definitely not efficient - but this actually was a ton of fun

    • @diggingthegreats
      @diggingthegreats  Год назад +5

      Though maybe I should publish the unedited footage of me pause taping 😂

    • @advaittdeshmukh3023
      @advaittdeshmukh3023 Год назад +3

      ​@@diggingthegreats pls do it

    • @RobertoGinsburg
      @RobertoGinsburg 5 месяцев назад +1

      Is because don't use the appropiate Tape recorder: Instead the digital recorder with "Logical buttons", *must be use "one with Mechanical/Manual buttons* 😊, and pre recorded the part on another casette.

  • @VACAYJAYTV
    @VACAYJAYTV Год назад +2

    I can appreciate you breaking this down and giving pause break recording a shot. I was doing it in the 80’s. Takes a lot of patience and timing. It was the bootcamp of sampling. Then after the sample and looping for at least 5 minutes then try dropping a beat on it live with no sequencer like a SP or Akai. This took all day to do… today Producers have no idea of the pain agony and patience you had to have with pause breaking. It was fun especially getting the results you want then having an emcee rap over it. Much appreciation to you on this one. Salute 🫡

  • @Earlyterrorhead
    @Earlyterrorhead Год назад +3

    Bro,,,the patience Q had for pause sampe is crazy,,,i could just imagine him being up all night for just one sample,,,it goes to show the ocd that goes into making gems ❤

  • @sharptrickster
    @sharptrickster Год назад +2

    From the awesome research and captivating presentation, to the hands-on aproach of recreating the things you talk about to demo the techinique, you are a legend, Sir.
    Thank you for everything.

  • @Sgtgee
    @Sgtgee Год назад +3

    For those Hiphop enthusiasts, fans and connoisseurs who are old enough to remember when Illmatic debuted and dropped in the spring of 94’ and had to either cop the vinyl album at Record Explosion here in the NYC or the cassette & CD at Nobody beats the wiz or HMV …..I salute you! 👊🏽 the best memories of Pause taping for me was doing this off of the Marley Marl and mister magic rap attack show, the Future flavors show and Stretch and Bobito shows on my moms Kenwood twin cassette deck floor model stereo system. It was a great time to be a young hiphop disciple in the golden era of Hip Hop history. Salute to all the producers rappers and DJs! rapper Nas on top, it seems we gonna rock it, queens represent buy the album when I drop it. - Extra P keep it rollin.

  • @theDutton
    @theDutton Год назад +2

    Your videos are a masterclass in writing, editing and communication. A phenom! Love the topics so far, keep making videos about what you're passionate about and we'll all keep watching. But I know us nerds would love some insight into how Madlib made/makes beats!

  • @zoppe_5062
    @zoppe_5062 Год назад +3

    Thanks for everything you do, I'm a big hip hop fan from Italy and I'm learning a lot with your videos. Keep it real!!

  • @georgeclark5813
    @georgeclark5813 Год назад +1

    The beauty of making music The beautiful headaches Keep doing what you doing this is awesome

  • @cratesdeep
    @cratesdeep Год назад +3

    In the TV mini series Station Eleven, there is a episode that includes a tip of the hat (pun intended) to Q-Tip and A Tribe Called Quest. One of the characters makes a sort of a pause tape and it all culminates in a great scene later in the episode. It's episode 7, Goodbye My Damaged Home. Highly recommended! (Hint: includes upright bass) Also, great episode, Brandon! Respect!

  • @evangilmore3964
    @evangilmore3964 Год назад +2

    we need a video about all the jazz samples on The Infamous

  • @OperationSmoke
    @OperationSmoke Год назад +3

    It's a lot easier if you record the beat, then record to tape from your recording. Then double it up that way. The original copy paste using a record as source and then tapes as the ctrl p

  • @moresnqp
    @moresnqp Год назад +1

    thanks, i really never heard of pause taping before now. i knew of using two vinyls at once, and of course samplers. never heard the inbetween though.
    incredibly skilled, insanely respectable since these days even i could recreate this in ableton in a minute flat

  • @The.ARCHIT3CT
    @The.ARCHIT3CT Год назад +4

    wouldn't it have just been easier to have a DJ loop the sample live, and just record it on the tape? basically like a live show.

    • @diggingthegreats
      @diggingthegreats  Год назад +4

      Definitely. This only uses one turntable, and I guess Q Tip liked pause taping because he'd done it a lot, or liked the creative limitations of it. Also, as I mention in the video, the actual One Love beat is chopped a little more than what I'm doing. I'm simplifying it a bit 😂

    • @carlweston4808
      @carlweston4808 Год назад +2

      In the early 80s i and my friends made pause tapes....We had to make pause tapes because we couldn't afford turntables...Most pause tape pros didn't have dj equipment back in the days...But I lusted for the Technics SL-D1's or the SL-B1s....

    • @The.ARCHIT3CT
      @The.ARCHIT3CT Год назад

      @@diggingthegreats ah yeah I totally forgot about the multiple sample factor. I was thinking in terms of block parties how DJ’s would just loop breaks back to back and rock a crowd. We would record those on tape and essentially make our own tracks. But if we had to layer samples etc, that wouldn’t have worked. Great video bro! #MuchSuccess

    • @The.ARCHIT3CT
      @The.ARCHIT3CT Год назад

      @@carlweston4808 true. Budget def plays a factor as well. I grew up in Brooklyn in the 80’s/90’s so there were literally 5 DJ’s on every block. Finding one wasnt hard at all, but for most, i could see how that would be an issue.

    • @carlweston4808
      @carlweston4808 Год назад

      @@The.ARCHIT3CT I knew mad DJs it’s not the same as being able to work on something in the privacy of your own home… yeah, you can ask someone to loop something but that’s not really the point you wanna be able to work on your own stuff when you want

  • @alexsim225
    @alexsim225 Год назад +1

    insane stuff - and i feel like the "simplicity" in the beauty of Tip's early productions make it all the more impressive. the pause tapes don't have much to hide behind, but they STILL sound immaculate

  • @BobbyFischerQc
    @BobbyFischerQc Год назад +1

    Fresh new video from my Professeur Hip-Hop

  • @robinkwakman9934
    @robinkwakman9934 Год назад +2

    Thank you for this. Very cool to watch. I was just reading the “Dilla Time” book this morning where Dilla described to Amp Fiddler that he uses tape loops to make beats; I was wondering if I should look it up on RUclips how that process would go. And BAM, without even searching for it this video popped up. Love your content bro! Biggup.

  • @deadlyninja112
    @deadlyninja112 Год назад +2

    This is dope

  • @jaschakutzky3169
    @jaschakutzky3169 Год назад +1

    I simply love how much respect you’re giving, by showing how hard this technique is in reality…

  • @elbjornbjorn
    @elbjornbjorn Год назад +3

    This seems just as annoying as I always imagined.
    Must've been quite useful back in the day though, even after samplers were introduced, considering the memory limitations. We've got it easy nowadays.

    • @diggingthegreats
      @diggingthegreats  Год назад +2

      If you're trying to get it done quickly, yeah it would be annoying. All jokes aside I enjoyed it and would do consider doing it again just for the fun of it. Take a night, pour a drink, and pause tape something else 😂

  • @elijahconstantinescu1995
    @elijahconstantinescu1995 Год назад +1

    Dude this video is amazingly well done! Respect!!!

  • @albertm9298
    @albertm9298 Год назад +1

    Loving what you’re doing,
    I used to pause tape sample back in the day. The best way to do it from tape to tape. Tape decks with soft buttons with a lot of travel are best.

  • @tempeff8670
    @tempeff8670 Год назад +2

    I used to make pause tape intros for my mix tapes back in the day. It was super fun.

    • @diggingthegreats
      @diggingthegreats  Год назад +1

      This process was incredibly fun for me, especially since I've never done it before. Ableton would be faster, but not as fun

  • @osmaniqbal8354
    @osmaniqbal8354 11 месяцев назад +1

    I knew there was an original version of "Represent" but had no idea that was the case for "Memory Lane" as well. So glad that Preemo remixed those OG versions as the album tracks are much much better.

  • @MobileMagic-e1x
    @MobileMagic-e1x Год назад +2

    All this time, I had no idea that any *legitimate* music was made using "pause mix" beats. When I was in early high school, I would make beats using pause mixes, and didn't even know it was a real thing until The Nonce "Mixtapes" and Dred Scott "Back in the Day" mentioned it. Two, in particular, that I remember (and I can tell ya EXACTLY why I remember): I had a whole song worked out using the breakdown and the horns from Average White Band "I'm The One" and another whole song worked out with the opening bars of Kool & The Gang "Too Hot." I had to scrap both when I heard Brand Nubian "Word is Bond" and Miilkbone "Where'z Da' Party At?" because they used the same samples.
    Thanks for the videos! I'm enjoying the content!

  • @paperbagbrown1326
    @paperbagbrown1326 Год назад +2

    This is without a doubt the greatest youtube video I have seen thus far. I am 45 years old. Big hip hop fan. I used to use a dual deck tape recorder to make my own dubs and mixtapes. As I grew older I began to learn how DJs make their beats and do what they do. Never in my wildest imagination did I ever imagine that some of them used the "pause-tape method" to make beats. That is insane and it almost literally blows my mind. I watched this entire video with my mouth agape. I never gush like this about a video. Never. I was hesitant to subscribe to this channel, much less become a fan, but I eventually did do both quite some time ago. But this video... this is crazy. My mind is blown. I'm gone.

  • @alexposilkin9683
    @alexposilkin9683 Год назад +1

    Great video to shine a light on those classic production techniques. I’ve never heard of pause taping before. It also made me think of countless engineers/editors who have had to edit songs with tape cutting/splicing in the pre digital age.

  • @saintdenis11
    @saintdenis11 Год назад +1

    Thank you, RUclips algorithm for this recommendation. I’ve never heard of this channel but sampling is my passion. Amazing video, now I got to see the rest of your catalog!

  • @256k_
    @256k_ 4 месяца назад

    dude ive been binge watching your videos. you got me with the justice one and now im on a hip hop binge. this ia top tier quality stuff! thank you for all the great info and explanations

  • @customjohnny
    @customjohnny Год назад +2

    That tiny pause before the beat comes back in again is actually sooo sick man!! 11:08 Great work.

  • @CEE-ji5rx
    @CEE-ji5rx Год назад +1

    This blew my mind. never knew about pause tape. So rad

  • @camodeano3003
    @camodeano3003 Год назад +1

    Wow man, the difficulty of the execution of all these beats is mind blowing

  • @dugnice
    @dugnice Год назад +1

    I've yet to see anyone else loop a record *by hand,* in real time.

  • @suryasen8046
    @suryasen8046 Год назад

    bro Qtip pause taping one love is one of the best stories ever cant believe u made this vid! 10/10

  • @mikeb3936
    @mikeb3936 Год назад +1

    Man you need to start a hiphop history podcast with this type of content. You have the voice for it.

  • @halasMr245
    @halasMr245 Год назад

    This is how we started making beats in the early 90s my pause mix game was tight. My best friend used to make pause mixtapes it took hours but the creation was totally worth it

  • @nyonsmith6621
    @nyonsmith6621 Год назад

    I've heard pause tapes described numerous times by multiple artists. Thank you for demonstrating the method.

  • @erickmartinez9850
    @erickmartinez9850 Год назад +1

    I never thought this was a technique that any professional producer used. It brought a smile to my face because in the mid 90's that's how I used to sample beats and I had it down to a science with timing. I made two full cassette tapes I called "Pure Beats", I used to dub them about 3 times (1 the beat, 2 the live lyrics & chorus and 3 the sound effects along with the dub in vocals, and if that wasn't crazy enough our budget was so pathetic every verse had to be live no mixing later, with no room for mistakes so we would rehearse and lay the track in, then dub the other two parts live too (timing). Those were my favorite recordings because they sounded professional but were ghetto as hell! 😂 Thank you for making this video, I feel validated. Actually, thank you for all your series they really take a deep dive into music and for real Hip-Hop lovers it gives an in-depth poetic take on the music we grew up with and love.

    • @erickmartinez9850
      @erickmartinez9850 Год назад

      1 last thing you're using the wrong tape deck for this technique. U need the double or single tape deck with the big push-in record, play, rewind, fast forward, eject, pause (button) teeth, those stop and start exactly where you left off. This technique works because you're manually stopping the tape upon pushing the button. Just in case you wanna give it another shot. 🙂👍

  • @kevs8225
    @kevs8225 Год назад

    I've always heard about the concept of pause tapes but never seen it done so props for doing an actual live demonstration !!

  • @Artisin
    @Artisin Год назад

    The tape deck will forever be the staple that help start my production and recording career you can do so much with a tape deck yea it took patience and you had to record the whole somg in one take but when you got nothing all you got is your mind and a Tape deck

  • @Hype2k23
    @Hype2k23 Год назад

    Amazing soo amazing wow those producers back then deserve so much praise

  • @Knick_Fury
    @Knick_Fury Год назад +1

    As someone who was making pause tape back in the late 70s, I just want to point out that the technique was originally a way to "mix" breakbeats when you didn't have two turntables and a mixer. People used one turnable and a cassette deck or portable tape recorder.....It was a budget way to get your DJ vibe on. BTW...back then, you REALLY wanted to perfect your technique and make seamless edits because making pause tapes was actually considered WACK by real DJs...so the aim was to make your edits SO clean that people couldn't tell it was a pause tape.

  • @antoniovazjr6297
    @antoniovazjr6297 Год назад

    I actually like your choice of including more of the chunky melody than what Q-Tip consolidates

  • @WillD0021
    @WillD0021 Год назад +1

    Just want to say thank you man! This channel is a gem🙏🏼

  • @im2dirty4u
    @im2dirty4u Год назад +16

    Like Q-tip, bshaw is on one for doing the pause tape this long LOL. I had no idea this was a thing in hip hop! To know that some of the best beats were made this way is incredible. Great video man keep it up!!

  • @silfrido1768
    @silfrido1768 Год назад

    Chopping parts up to cassette is why that man is a beast. Needle dropping on vinyl to hit exactly where you want it to hit is insane

  • @JJermane
    @JJermane Год назад

    This almost brings tears to my eyes because I was doing pause (tape) recordings back in the day and I never knew a producer such as Q-Tip and others were doing the same thing!! Anytime I heard a hip hop record that had an extended break beat, I rush to my boombox which had a recording option, and do this for hours at a time!!

  • @doupard
    @doupard Год назад +1

    Thank you for being the best content on this app

  • @derr3alex
    @derr3alex Год назад +1

    47 years old, way back when, I'd pause record to have beats to rap to, eventually I started making beats on tapes with the help of a karaoke machine that had speed control on one side. BUT...I will tell you, not all decks can do this, the more expensive the deck most likely the more difficult to accomplish. The cheaper decks react faster in my experience.

  • @shawncharles6077
    @shawncharles6077 Год назад

    Bruh thank you for showing the difficulty of pause tapes. As some one who did them when I was a child, you appreciate modern technology. Salute.

  • @lionelluney3063
    @lionelluney3063 Год назад +2

    The tape deck your using doesn’t stay torqued when paused. It’s one of those decks that loosened up to prevent stretching, breaking and eating of the tape. You actually want to use an older high grade deck from the early 80s I usually had success with the tascam tabletop mastering cassette deck. Or there was an older version of the Sony deck you had

  • @OrganicGreens
    @OrganicGreens Год назад

    this channel is so underrated . my dude is here pause tapering in 2023. love your taste man found you from your earth wind and fire videos. you should do gangster moment of truth . that's my second favorite old school album.

  • @XavierCoolDude
    @XavierCoolDude Год назад

    Awesome video-Nas, Tribe, Pete Rock & CL, Gang Starr all some my favorite artists of all time. Hip hop was my life in 94-Illmatic songs were incredible

  • @joeyvillarreal2803
    @joeyvillarreal2803 Год назад

    And the fact that a pause-beat by Q-Tip made Primo go back into the lab to re-do his track which he probably used a sp1200 or mpc60 to create blows me away too!

  • @enochisreal
    @enochisreal Год назад

    Ayo…that was the way I started remixing and making my own edits of songs in 1983!! Only real heads know the struggle and eagerness with NO REAL GEAR…no looping machine,no sampler….just sheer curiosity and hood ingenuity!!

  • @roberttyson6146
    @roberttyson6146 Год назад

    This brings back sooo many memories... I used to make pause tapes in elementary/jhs and would repeat certain verses as if the dj played the part back.. your "ear" has to be precise💯💪🏾💪🏾

  • @miguelvillagomez3720
    @miguelvillagomez3720 Год назад +2

    Was doing this as a kid, before getting tables and a mixer (tape to tape). A favorite out of many was looping “Put Your Head Out” by House Of Pain ✌🏼🔥

  • @magicspiral3323
    @magicspiral3323 Год назад

    There was a discount GLP cassette I bought in my teens that had this dope beat I wanted to make longer, so I came up with the idea of using my dual cassette deck to inexplicably make a pause tape. It was quite jagged, but a few cuts were seamless. It was years later when I heard Adrock talk about making “pause tapes” that I realized I’d attempted that myself. What a crude and meticulous way of making a loop. I didn’t know some actual tracks were done using that technique. Thanks for highlighting it in such detail! 🔥

  • @tlawrenceware3509
    @tlawrenceware3509 Год назад

    Pause Tape recording was done on a fully manual tape deck. E.G. marantz pmd 430 cassette deck. Like a gun, you would press the pause button until you released the seer but not release the pause button until you were ready to capture the audio. Decks like the marantz pmd 430 cassette deck were best suited because the playhead never removed itself from the tape; and, the pause button was only a cap-stand break and release.

  • @UBZUKki
    @UBZUKki Год назад

    I was AMAZING with the pause tape method back in 84 / 85....
    Didnt have any of the expensive turntables and sampling equipment.
    Was a case making the best of what we had which, in my case was a Sharp home stereo unit which had the built in turntable located on the left side, and the tape recording facility in the middle.
    This piece of stereo hifi was absolutely PERFECT For my pause button AND my early cutting and scratching game - It had up and down fader volume controls so i had a blast perfecting my techniques trying to sound like Flash and Whiz Kid......
    Used to piss my mum off BIG time though...😂😅😅 but i miss them early days..

  • @jalocin
    @jalocin Год назад

    Your best video yet! I really love that song and actually didn’t know about the pause tape technique. Thanks a lot

  • @Oscuros
    @Oscuros Год назад

    Analogue music-making's hard, but you get a feel for it after a while, those were the good old days, doing stuff like that in your bedroom, I remember them well.

  • @turlus0072
    @turlus0072 Год назад

    I used to do this on a small boombox as well and the pause button was instant with no speed up time. Record the full song on the tape, then use that to record on another. Keep looping until you have about a 30 second loop. Loop that and you have 1 minute, then 2, 4, etc. The deck you're using has too much of a lag. But you showed the process. Love you're work brother.

  • @zenupe84
    @zenupe84 Год назад +1

    I used to make pause tapes on an 8 track with no rewind on it in the late 70's i didn't know it had a name to it.

  • @NLDspotter
    @NLDspotter Год назад

    That's an amazing fact! I had a somewhat similar sony digital tape-deck and i remember it's not easy timing pause and record.

  • @Gonzi_Supreme
    @Gonzi_Supreme Год назад

    I remember Q-Tip saying on Jay Smooth’s radio show that he used to layer his drums and that’s what would make them sound like they are coming through the speakers. Nowadays you can just use parallel or NY compression in a DAW and achieve similar results