☕☕☕ SAY THANKS?! BUY ME A COFFEE: www.buymeacoffee.com/djfurio ☕☕☕ Beginning and end tracks are my own productions. Download my albums at djfurio.bandcamp.com All my music is now available on Apple, Amazon & Spotify. Just click the link or search for DJ Furio open.spotify.com/artist/4o2WAHZpLMQsDqGLMYo3r7?si=t0tQBB7JTEycUX-AS4h4uQ
I'll be honest, by the mid 2000s, I was not happy with the state of hip hop and I found myself buying less and less new albums, but I started buying and listening to more world music and jazz from the 70s and 60s. I soon realized that the jazz I was listening to- Bob James, Earl Klugh, Bobbi Humphrey, Grover Washington, Ronnie Foster, Jack McDuff etc.- they were all artists sampled by my favorite hip hop artists from the 90s!
So many attempts to get a hit from other peoples creativity; and yet so few adding creativity enough to both honor the original and producing a real contribution. Those few make it worthwhile!
Yep. It’s such a popular track that’s been covered well over 100 times. My fav version is by Isaac Hayes and his version has been sampled hundreds of times.
I grew up on 90s/00s hip-hop and rock, I was always drawn to the jazz samples and harmonies in both genres and wasn't even aware that it was because it was "jazzy". I feel like jazz is the peak point of consciousness and creativity, if you're seeking "more" it will find you...
there was one sample I was looking for here, it was one from Big L, it sounds like a 40’s or 50’s sample, but it’s at the intro to no ends no skins. that was a dope flip.
@@DJFurio @DJ Furio Haha, forgive my cheeky persistence but I have listened to that version so many times it's etched in my brain. Dizzy Gillespie definitely wrote the tune but that version you showed was recorded in 1946 for the label Dial with a young Miles Davis and the incomparable Charlie Parker. He plays a legendary 4 break before his solo. The recording's timbre is 100% the same sound as the 1946 recording, as is the instrumentation. The sound is also very reminiscent of a 1940s recording.
You are correct. I should have listed the date of the original single, rather than the date it first appeared on an album. It was released as a single in 1946 as you said 👍
It’s one of my own tracks but I don’t think I’ve actually released it on any of my albums so far. You can grab all my other beats at djfurio.bandcamp.com
Nah I’m definitely not too young. I’m 45 and I bought it when it was first released. They released it in 94 on a promo before the album dropped www.discogs.com/release/1908134-Mobb-Deep-Shook-Ones-Pt-II
☕☕☕ SAY THANKS?! BUY ME A COFFEE: www.buymeacoffee.com/djfurio ☕☕☕
Beginning and end tracks are my own productions. Download my albums at djfurio.bandcamp.com
All my music is now available on Apple, Amazon & Spotify. Just click the link or search for DJ Furio open.spotify.com/artist/4o2WAHZpLMQsDqGLMYo3r7?si=t0tQBB7JTEycUX-AS4h4uQ
your beat is what the hip hop needs now
Appreciate it. Thanks
"Rap is an art you can't own no loops. It's how you hook'em up and the rhyme style troop" - Gang Starr
You better believe it 👍🏿🙏🏿
So don't even think you could say someone bit
Off your weak beat come on you need to quit
I'll be honest, by the mid 2000s, I was not happy with the state of hip hop and I found myself buying less and less new albums, but I started buying and listening to more world music and jazz from the 70s and 60s. I soon realized that the jazz I was listening to- Bob James, Earl Klugh, Bobbi Humphrey, Grover Washington, Ronnie Foster, Jack McDuff etc.- they were all artists sampled by my favorite hip hop artists from the 90s!
🔥🔥
I'm an old head been listening since the early 80s and I say that Hip Hop got me into Jazz. So now I added vinyl Jazz to my vinyl Hip Hop collection.
I’m exactly the same. I listen to so much older music now and I live digging through used records to see what I can find.
So many attempts to get a hit from other peoples creativity; and yet so few adding creativity enough to both honor the original and producing a real contribution. Those few make it worthwhile!
Jazz and hip hop is such a musical consummate marriage! Thanks DJ!
👍
The jazz hip hop fusion era of the early 90's will always be my favorite. Tribe, Gang Starr/Guru, Pete Rock & CL Smooth, Digable Planets etc.
5:19 is actually "All The Things You Are" by Charlie Parker.
The song "Capricorn" was previously sampled by Pete Rock for his song "In the house", I knew it. Excellent video by the way. Greetings from Hungary. 🙂
Thanks for watching
Lou Donaldson - Pot Belly Sample was also used for Tribe Called Quest “If The Papes Came”
The Look of Love was originally sung by Dusty Springfield and released in 1967 prior to the Barney Kessel song from 1971.
Yep. It’s such a popular track that’s been covered well over 100 times. My fav version is by Isaac Hayes and his version has been sampled hundreds of times.
2:03 - Busta Rhymes - Woo-Hah!! Got You All in Check (The Jay-Dee Bounce Remix) Jay-Dee as in J. Dilla (RIP)
I grew up on 90s/00s hip-hop and rock, I was always drawn to the jazz samples and harmonies in both genres and wasn't even aware that it was because it was "jazzy". I feel like jazz is the peak point of consciousness and creativity, if you're seeking "more" it will find you...
Definitely. Some of the best hip hop ever made has been made from jazz music.
This is great! Can’t forget the history of this and to keep this art alive🔥
Thanks for watching
Thank you for allowing us to learn our history reference where the beats came from! ✊🏾✊🏾🔥🔥🍻
I just discovered 80s rap.....so good!
Wow, all I knew was George Duke's version of 'Capricorn', then you revealed Nate 'Cannonball' Adderley's version!! 👏🏿💯
It’s an interesting cover version as George Duke plays the piano and it was produced by David Axelrod.
Les mcCann - go on and cry also sampled by Warreng on " runnin' with no breaks " .
Good job DJ.
True. Think it’s been replayed to sound like the original. Dre often does that too.
Making beats was simply art. It involves dissecting the puzzle (record) to make it align with your emotion. History is created
The Barney Kessel joint was also sampled on the remix to Busta Rhymes “Woo Ha…..Got You All In Check”
Great video, Furio. Many thanks.
👍
there was one sample I was looking for here, it was one from Big L, it sounds like a 40’s or 50’s sample, but it’s at the intro to no ends no skins. that was a dope flip.
It’s a track called 4 Aces by Paul Humphrey and others. It came out in the 70’s.
This is splendor, thank you for your hard work, you definitely deserve more in terms of feedback and more. All the world.
I appreciate that. Thanks for watching
Buenísimo!!
The Barney Kessel joint was also sampled on the remix to Busta Rhymes “Got You All In Check”
Yeah it’s been used a few times. It’s a great album I picked up recently. Full of samples.
Fantastic work again..... phenomenal intro beat as a bonus! 👌
Thanks 👍
Brilliant.. just brilliant!
👍
Uoooo amazing video thank you ¡
Thanks for watching
FANTASTIC!
Lovely stuff. My kinda beats.
There is no surprise there’s a few a tribe called quest tracks
Yep they are classic jazzy hip hop creators.
Premier is a deity.
Great channel
Perlentaucher!
3:50, i was waiting for Pete Rock and CL Smooth tho :(
I’m just trying to throw a few more recent tracks into the mix
keep em comin bro
Thanks. I will do
The Awaking album has been sampled so many times in Hip Hop
It really has. I just showed a few here
@@DJFurio My favourite isn’t on here (Change by Shadez of Brooklyn) but as you said, can only show so many
Such a great track. I always the of New York Reality Check 101 mixtape when I think of it.
please do a lonnie liston smith video
I’m not doing any more sample videos right now sorry
let’s gooo🔥
Charlie Parker's A Night In Tunisia is also a 40s track. Unless he came back from his death in 1955 to make that 1961 session ;)
This is a cover version. The original was by Dizzy Gillespie made in the 1940’s
@@DJFurio @DJ Furio Haha, forgive my cheeky persistence but I have listened to that version so many times it's etched in my brain. Dizzy Gillespie definitely wrote the tune but that version you showed was recorded in 1946 for the label Dial with a young Miles Davis and the incomparable Charlie Parker. He plays a legendary 4 break before his solo. The recording's timbre is 100% the same sound as the 1946 recording, as is the instrumentation. The sound is also very reminiscent of a 1940s recording.
You are correct. I should have listed the date of the original single, rather than the date it first appeared on an album. It was released as a single in 1946 as you said 👍
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Do Horn Samples In 90s Hip Hop In The Future
1:48
Can you do the next video with samples from 80s new wave/synth pop artist/band?
Maybe. I have so many requests
@@DJFurio gotcha.
1930s samples next :)
Might be pretty tough that one
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰👍👍👍👍👍
Thanks for watching.
What is the video's intro bgm?
It’s one of my own tracks but I don’t think I’ve actually released it on any of my albums so far. You can grab all my other beats at djfurio.bandcamp.com
👏👏👏
Great job...Have you ever considered doing a DJ. Honda vid?
I will look into it
Does hiphop today sample? I wouldn't know because my kind of hiphop died in 2009.
Yup, drill and trap definitely uses samples!
Dope on the throwbacks but you were a year off on Mobb Deep Shook Ones . That was 1995. I don't know if you're too young to remember but yeah
Nah I’m definitely not too young. I’m 45 and I bought it when it was first released. They released it in 94 on a promo before the album dropped www.discogs.com/release/1908134-Mobb-Deep-Shook-Ones-Pt-II
@@DJFurio 😂😂. Everyone knows it came out before the album. 💪🏾
I’m not gonna have a go as he didn’t know about the promo release and he has followed me for a long time.
Hi furio! Who's the sample of beat at 08:40??
I will have to check tomorrow as I’m not on the computer at the moment.
@@DJFurio ok thanks
I found it. It’s from an old KPM Library record. Frontier Of Knowledge by Brian Hodgson
@@DJFurio thanks again, i love this dark atmosphere sample
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