Re: Real Jazz -The masters

mark givens (markeg@hotmail.com)
Sat, 04 Oct 1997 08:55:55 PDT


dear ashwin:
You are quite right the best drums do often come from Rock. I like 60's
pop myself. I have touted Tommy Roe often on this list "hide
mothers whiskey, Dizzy, Sweetpea(as used by attica blues on 3ree) so
you'll get no argument from me. His stuff is still in print on vinyl
7" By the way what Can albums/songs
are particularly Sample-ready?Soft machine? any others
you might name esp. Little feat as I cant imagine given that Ive never
liked them.
>

As far as drums go, a lot of Tribe, Premier type stuff - actually a
great chunk of
rap songs - use classic rock drums - bands like Rare Earth, Power of
Zuess, Little
Feat, Bretheren, Area Code 615, SteppenWolf, LightHouse, Ballin' Jack,
The Soft Machine,
Can, Rastus are a few that come to mind. There's probably a tonne of
obscure rock breaks that
have yet to be dug up - a dude from a record show was once playing a CD
for me from some
obscure Turkish prog-rock band from 1971 where every song started off
with a clean
drum break (I forget the band's name, dude was selling the CD for $50).
I've been collecting
ish but I've barely scratched the surface. All I know is, you can't
sleep on anything.
My favourite break though is for Tribe's "Get a hold", a sample from a
Turtles-kinda
band called The Cyrkle where they sample and splice together the last 3
sylables of the
last two verses to get "Drifting Back...Suddenly...". Even the theme to
the movie
Grease has a drum break. For horns, basslines and keyboard riffs - if
your're sampling,
any album that lists horns, bass, and electric piano/rhodes is game I
guess. How you use
a sample is just as important as where you sampled it from (album,
genre, etc.) - like
KRS-One's cover of Hey Jude - "We take the wackest song..." (headz can
finish that line).

A dope song will remain a dope song.

shanti,

ashwin

ashwin@visgen.com

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