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Topic ClosedGentle Giant HAS BEEN HIP-HOP SAMPLED!!!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 21 2006 at 13:37
Originally posted by Manunkind Manunkind wrote:

Jethro Tull to some folk fans, or you will get head-butted.

 

Most folk musicians I know tend to have a very open mind to all things except synthesizers.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 21 2006 at 16:06

Originally posted by RoboVampire RoboVampire wrote:

Speaking of sampling, didn't Gentle Giant put a sampling archive on one of their recent boxsets.

Sure did.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: February 21 2006 at 16:23

madvillian is mf doom and madlib.

 

i love mf doom. samplings not that bad

 

 

all i have to say

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 17 2006 at 10:06
(For interest's sake only, not stirring the pot here) Looks like Madlib is a GG fan, here's an interview from June 1, 2005:

http://remixmag.com/artists/remix_phantom_menace/

A quote:

"I'm a record lover,” he says proudly. “Actually, I'm about to go buy records right now. [Laughs.] Basically, records are my teacher; that's how I get my influences. Everything I know, my records taught me. I mean, you take a Sun Ra record like Lanquidity; that changed my views on him. I always knew he was funky, but I didn't know he would come straight with funk and disco like that. That surprised me. That got me into listening to old disco. Right now, I'm listening mostly to psychedelic rock and s**t or even just crazy hard rock, like Nektar, Soft Machine, Gentle Giant, down to — man, I could name a gang of motherf*****s.”
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 17 2006 at 13:43
Nothing is sacred anymore, That`s all I have to say.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 17 2006 at 14:22
Damn straight.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 17 2006 at 15:59
Madvillian
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 17 2006 at 18:41
What about the verge's yes remixes?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2006 at 21:43
Man, some of you staunch purists need to step down from behind the
guilded hangman and crucify your own hangups rather than directing all
the diligent, clever, biased range of your egos to things you know
nothing about. its so easy to judge what is 'high' and 'low' in art isnt it? i
says sod all the hierarchies and just inspire yourself to love and expand
your radius to encompass valuable human mirth in EVERY genre.

I am a young man of 22 coming up in an age dominated by the mass
marketing genius which glorifies misoginy, violence towards familial
structures, baseless angst, boredom and objectifying lust in vacuum
packed, shiny little bundles. I would just hope that fans of self
consciously progressive music would see its true brothers in ANY genre,
the mentality of whom combat these monolithic corporate anti-art forms.
it just so happens that madlib (the heretic in question during this witch
trial) is an amazingly adroit musician who not only works with lyricists
and spoken word artists from all over the world as a producer and dj but
releases albums under the moniker 'yesterday's new quintet' which
embody a soulful yet cerebral fusion jazz style that is painfully lacking
from young minds of this age. and did i mention he plays every
instrument on these albums? including wurlitzer, arp, fender rhodes,
upright bass, afro cuban percussion and drum kit?

prog rock fans can be just as susceptible to the narrow minded
conception of other forms of expression as catholics are in condemning
protestants and vice versa. the so called claus of universality in prog (how
it's attempted to subsume other genres to create an expansive new
whole) does not alone save one of its adherents from the grave trap of
becoming culturally obsolete. get out of your towers of rarified air and
see what your heroes (the musicians themselves) actually see for a
change: an endearing, stimulating thread of almost pre-cognitive
strength passing through every people and existing in any style. live
music purists are duped and illiterate when dreaming electronic music
will bring about the matrix. here come the robots to maraud your lute
and burn your gryphon vinyls! its not like that! sod it all!!!! take off your
purple heart of valour and realize humanity is deeper than that. dare I say
that there is music too 'young' and 'synthetic' for some of you being made
today, entirely on machines which itself channels a more imaginative,
warm and tribal essence into its sum then the whole legion of chug-a-
chug rock bands stumbling over the same outdated formulas in an
attempt to stay afloat.

the are no formulas. there is no 'real music' just as there is no 'master
race.' it requires a profound deal of intellect to tune a piano, but i'd rather
listen to the unconscious, sloppy willowy notes of a nightingale on some
distant bough. if only some more of us had the restraint and compassion
to allow our minds to utterly murder our comfort zones and experience
the new as well as the old. i'm not your spiritual tyrant, be as you will. i
can say with all of my being though that those of us who claim to
understand progressive music but refuse to hear what that means today
and how the true carriers of its torch may not have long hair or look like
dukes of rivendell, we'd see that chopan is miles is hackett is jam master
jay is jeff buckley is confucious.

IT'S A CONTINUUM, YOU LAZY SITTERS! STAND UP AND APPLAUD OR STAY
INSIDE YOUR HOUSE AND TELL NO ONE OF THE UNCHANGING STATE OF
YOUR STALE INTELLECTS.

i'm really sorry, this post isnt intended for this entire community. just a
certain faction within its ranks that almost makes me believe the punks
had valid reason to overturn the rigidness and high brow perfumed
powdered wigged eloquence of arrogant proggers. if it was just about the
music, just about humbly expressing one self and not subscribing to
these dogmas of 'high' and 'low' I really doubt people would demonize us
so much. and this is coming from someone who listens to yes, genesis,
king crimson, can, happy the man, tull, floyd, gentle giant, univers zero,
henry cow, elp and all your other 'golden era' giants with religious fervor.

i thought i'd finally found a scene that embraced every shade of the
rainbow. allegedly poor people arent allowed to be resourceful in creating
their own art either. they should be ostracized and sued into dirtier
ghettoes. better stamp that flower out before it disgraces the crack in the
pavement it adapted to live in any longer. get over yourselves before the
world forgets about you altogether.

Edited by dojonane

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I Wait neath the skin

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2006 at 22:22
This isn't the first time our favorite Rabelaisians have had their musical masterpieces purloined- Insane Clown Posse snatched some riffs from Spooky Boogie a few years ago- Imitation is still the sincerest form of flattery.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2006 at 22:31
Originally posted by dojonane dojonane wrote:



i'm really sorry, this post isnt intended for this entire community. just a
certain faction within its ranks that almost makes me believe the punks
had valid reason to overturn the rigidness and high brow perfumed
powdered wigged eloquence of arrogant proggers. if it was just about the
music, just about humbly expressing one self and not subscribing to
these dogmas of 'high' and 'low' I really doubt people would demonize us
so much. and this is coming from someone who listens to yes, genesis,
king crimson, can, happy the man, tull, floyd, gentle giant, univers zero,
henry cow, elp and all your other 'golden era' giants with religious fervor.

i thought i'd finally found a scene that embraced every shade of the
rainbow. allegedly poor people arent allowed to be resourceful in creating
their own art either. they should be ostracized and sued into dirtier
ghettoes. better stamp that flower out before it disgraces the crack in the
pavement it adapted to live in any longer. get over yourselves before the
world forgets about you altogether.


Coming from the part of the faction,

Like you said, music is about humbly expressing one self and not subscribing to dogmas of high and low.  It seems you agree with me because if music is about "expressing one self," sampling a track fails to be what "music is about."  Also, I'm not arguing with the validity of rap music and seeking to place it on a heirarchy of "high and low"  Art is in the eye of the beholder, but when art is copied, it fails to even be placed on a high/low dichotomy, it just simply fails to be art at all. 

And about your comment about this being an attack on poor people and an attempt to put them into the ghettoes.  That is such a hypersensitive, unrealistic hyperpolitically-correct view that I find it quite humorous.  Being "resourceful" does not include stealing.   You implying that they have to be resourceful at all implies that you believe they need some sort of help in creating art because they are incapable of doing it themselves.  Creating true art does not require resourcefulness whatsoever.  Your message really seems to imply that people involved with hip-hop need help in creating their own art and even though it is masked in political correctness I think it's truly racist.  I would be as vehement in exposing ANY form of music that completely sampled a piece of music, INCLUDING my most FAVORITE forms of music. 

And your comment about "ostracizing" rappers who sample music is simply unrealistic.  Do you really think that Puff Daddy and Machiaveli don't have oodles and oodles of cash, ill gotten by the way, because their parts of their songs weren't created by themselves.  Most rappers are quite well off, and I dont think you have to worry about them going into "dirtier ghettos"  It is my opinion that it is these rappers who are exploiting their communities  by proliferating  bad morals,  giving them false ideas of what one should pursue in life, and making it seem like one can become rich with no education.  If anyone is putting anyone in a worse situation it is these rappers who charge their "friends" in their communities exhorbatant prices on their CDs, while making them believe that the work on it is actually theirs.  Also the production of clothes which are presented in music videos, and images of expensive cars make their community want these expensive items, and the rappers are taking that all the way to the bank.  I guess it doesn't matter to them anymore since they've made it, but the fact that they express solidarity with their communities is an absolutely ridiculous notion.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2006 at 23:54
Originally posted by robertplantowns robertplantowns wrote:

You implying that they have to be resourceful
at all implies that you believe they need some sort of help in creating art
because they are incapable of doing it themselves.  Creating true art does
not require resourcefulness whatsoever.  Your message really seems to
imply that people involved with hip-hop need help in creating their own
art and even though it is masked in political correctness I think it's truly
racist.
Yes, I love hip hop, bossa nova, jazz, and Tibetan throat
singing and yet I break out in splotchy hives all the live long day because
I fail to live up to my true spiritual designation as a racist who believes
rappers need 'help' creating their art. I'll dispense with how dirty and base
of you it is to assume that because my sense of myself is strong enough
to be untarnished in the face of such ill informed hysterics. You are a fine
chap, I'm sure, and our differences are nominal. I'm certain if I met you in
a pub we'd get on just fine. So leave those code red buzz words out of it.
However heated my little rant may have been, I didnt point any fingers at
you for holding down an entire people with well seeming ideals. We're all
shiny on that, okay?

I can only gently remind you that your conception of the culture which
created hip hop music must be dim and sorted if you think someone
stating the economic and social context into which the media of sampling
was born should be both celebrated and vindicated as resourceful
amounts to "these people are cows of lesser creative stuff and can only
steal in order to express anything" betrays a dangerous imposition of
middle class values upon people who were at that time as remote from
the tools (both materially and situationally) which to you qualify as
essential in the creation of 'real music' as mozambique is from gary,
indiana. It would be an entirely different matter if the nouveau riche in
London were doing it, that is everything to my mind! Ask grandmaster
flash or any of the vangaurds of the first wave of hip hop if 'your kind
were resourceful and I respect that' is an underhanded way of saying 'you
can only steal to make music, therefore what you making isnt music...so
tell me, do you even have the power to express yourself at all?" and
behold the look he'd give you. Those people didnt have conservatories,
they had a hungry ambition to do 'something.'

I won't call you names. I will say your judging hip hop outside of its
cultural context (how it started, not the opulent monster that commercial
rap has become, which, by the way, is a reaction to how destitute and
urgent its original survivalist aesthetic was.) To sit back and label a song
based on samples as unoriginal is well and fine and I'm not asking you to
seek personal enjoyment from a kind of music you deem to be 'recycled.'
In purely musical terms, you are absolutely right. But, like most
movements in art, nothing can be viewed in purely formal terms, divorced
from its fertile bed of blanketing surroundings. I would suggest, then,
that a step outside your own perspective, upbringing, and even values
momentarily might allow you to realize the people who birthed hip hop
music had no assistance to LIVE governmentally, this being at a time
when welfare was far from the 'all you can eat handout' some claim it to
be today. its hard to take piano lessons, or study the classic works of the
italian renaissance in painting when you can't post rent and you have 3
kids with empty bellies crying their eyes out. You can call that hyper-
sensitive or politically-correct all you want. I would call you self-
possessed and heartless if its not something your at least momentarily
willing to consider. It may not be about that for you, and that is fine. Just
know you can't dance across the vast wilderness of conceptual meatspace
without stepping on someone's toes eventually. What is just a matter of
idle debate for you was a matter of life and death for your conceptual
querry, i.e. 'the big bad wolfy rappers'

And yes, when I look at a time and a place in this country (the US) where
masses that are all but left to perish in their own filth by an indoctrinated
state only hellbent on maintaining its own comfortable status quo, I feel
an intense and prolific joy when reflecting on what some of those
unfortunate ones did to uplift their minds and their bodies out of the
squalor. That is what hip hop, sampling, grafitti, breakdancing, the whole
culture originated to supply. A sense of empowerment and self worth.
"You took from us, now were taking something back and making it our
own, and speaking our truths no matter how unpopular they are, just to
maintain our f*cking sanity." They had no concert halls, no harpsichords,
no hammond organs, no classical music instructors intrepid enough to
risk their life just to penetrate into the murk to teach them major from
minor scales. Hell, there were barely even libraries in brooklyn at the end
of the 70s.

This is not a crisis you may have had the resevoir of experience to
understand, but to some of us, it is a wonderful and bright thing which
only became perverted from its core values (as did punk music) when the
record industry infiltrated and made blind commodities of its most
desperate truths. You don't have to agree, just know its a touchy matter
that transcends your qualification for 'what art is' and seems doubly
callous of you to deem it has no validity when it, in a sense, was all that
was available to them. Turntables were rotting in the attic alongside old
soul records. Suddenly they became the vital cultural epoch of a
movement that sought to uplift and invigorate rather than fetter and
constrain the community (as a good bit of the modern sh*t masquerading
as hip hop does, only to cement industry farmed trends, mind you.) That
being said, Madlib (the producer that sparked this whole debacle) is one
of the good ones, okay? This dude can play his ass off, in addition to
being a phenomenal producer and arranger. He surrounds himself with
quality and produces quality that stands for something and his love for a
band like Gentle Giant is no small surprise. I've heard him mention them
on several instances, and your rightcheous indignation barely applies as
I'm fully aware he both contacted and cleared the sample with them. He is
educated and a scholar of all forms of expression. Something I might
suggest. For you to demonize him with your pet theories about the rest
of the industry or the stale state of rap music in general is about as
relevant as accusing Joan of Arc or Ghandi of being an imperialist.
Just try and think of it from a 'non-musical' standpoint, and youll see that
this media, this mode of expression, while being nowhere near prog or
classical in terms of its technical or even operational capacity, is
nontheless completely necessary to a different kind of person in this
world of ours and no amount of rationalizing or wishing it away on an
obscure prog rock message board can change that.

Would it be so inherently destructive for you to envision a world in which
prog and hip hop arent quarantined and over-proud of their own time
encrusted dogmas? Didnt prog itself result from the marriage of already
well trodden ground to something more modern and fresh. I know, its a
sample, I get it. But do you?

Edited by dojonane

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2006 at 00:34
Isn't this topic over with yet? Damn.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2006 at 06:32

ladies and gentlemen, the first sampler:


                           the Mellotron

 

PS-- BIG UPS to dojonane, who is my HERO!!!!

 



Edited by nobody
"Some of you are going to die... martyrs, of course, to the Freedom I will provide!"
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2006 at 08:36
Dojonane. I'm glad you came along with your open mind, intelligence and humanist values. Very impressive. I'd been wanting to write somehing myself since I saw this embarrassing thread. But I don't have the english skills, or knowledge to write something as convincing as you did.

Madlib is is a true progressive hip-hop artist, and hearing that he sampled Gentle Giant made respect him even more. I've been to two hip-hop concerts the last couple of months (Talib Kweli and Saul Williams). They were both filled with intelligence, love and lots of musicality. Both of they're DJ's were awsome. like modern Wakemans or Emersons

Those of you who think you can judge hip-hop, and hip-hop values through what is played on radio/tv are mistaking. Try and do the same with rock music. Think you would like the rock genre?

Using Eminem or Puff Daddy as examples is no good. It would be similar to using U2 and Maroon Five to explain why rock is sometimes ok, but mostly boring and that they're all fithy rich. It proves you have no idea what you are talking about.

I Just discovered the 'Deep Puddle Dynamics' outing from the Anticon collective. Smart, complex hip-hop, with a multipart suite(!). Almost as dark as Magma.


Over land and under ashes
In the sunlight, see - it flashes
Find a fly and eat his eye
But don't believe in me
Don't believe in me
Don't believe in me
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2006 at 09:03
I noticed it was funny ways immediately.  They didn't even do a good job sampling it, it's all sped up and sounds pretty dodgy.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2006 at 16:55
Originally posted by Rocktopus Rocktopus wrote:

<span style="font-weight: bold;">Dojonane</
span>. I'm glad you came along with your open mind, intelligence and
humanist values.
Very impressive. I'd been wanting to write somehing myself since I saw
this embarrassing thread. But I don't have the english skills, or
knowledge to write something as convincing as you did.

Madlib is is a true progressive hip-hop artist, and hearing that he
sampled Gentle Giant made respect him even more. I've been to two
hip-hop concerts the last couple of months (Talib Kweli and Saul
Williams). They were both filled with intelligence, love and lots of
musicality. Both of they're DJ's were awsome. like modern Wakemans or
Emersons

Those of you who think you can judge hip-hop, and hip-hop values
through what is played on radio/tv are mistaking. Try and do the same
with rock music. Think you would like the rock genre?

Using Eminem or Puff Daddy as examples is no good. It would be similar
to using U2 and Maroon Five to explain why rock is sometimes ok, but
mostly boring and that they're all fithy rich. It proves you have no
idea what you are talking about.

I Just discovered the 'Deep Puddle Dynamics' outing from the Anticon
collective. Smart, complex hip-hop, with a multipart suite(!). Almost
as dark as Magma.


Pheww... Thank you so much for also containing multitudes friend. Here I
was expecting to sign on today and have some other witch-burner
accusing me of being somehow racist!?!?!? for seeing the culture of
sampling within its cultural climate. What most of them don't get is that
sampling has spurred unbelievably rich, lush, and abstract muse in so
many artists in the underground and unbelievably so few of us who listen
to THIS variety of weirdo quirk symphonics have penetrated the veil to
that other world containing such similarly deep and profound narratives
(Amon Tobin or Fila Brazilia anyone?)

Saul WIlliams is a true visionary. Amen to that. You know he opened up
for and even performed onstage with the Mars Volta during their North
American tour 2 years ago. I barely missed it and I still think I'll go bald
prematurely because of it.

Deep Puddle Dynamics is a fascinating project. Those beats sound like
Tony Williams meets a freaking nuclear Tank, so abstract, so non linear,
yet the MC's command of the odd meter stuff just destroys me everytime.
I saw 'Why' from Anticon perform recently. You want to talk about multi-
instrumentals and Gentle Giant. Everyone in that band played
EVERYTHING. Including theramin and flute. I feel I can rest assured once
more that there is a tribe out there who sees true spirit in all styles.

Thank you sir, I can be proud again.

Edited by dojonane

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I Wait neath the skin

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 23 2006 at 17:24
That's so wrong. I feel the same way that the day I realised Randy Rhodes' 2nd solo of Mr.Crowly is a part of the Croatian Rhapsody...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 24 2006 at 05:59

I see a lot of over-generalizing of hip-hop here.

I actually don't listen to it much, but the genre goes way deeper than the mainstream crap on TV, just like every other genre.  I wouldn't think classical was very good based on those crappy mixed cds, and wouldn't think rock was good based on what gets played on MTV.  I've been listening to Tricky and its actually very intelligent music, despite not being my cup of tea.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 24 2006 at 06:06

The result is pretty nice!

Really funny! I don't mind hip-hoppers sampling prog at all!

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