Can you figure out which Scott Brown song in this video is my favorite? Comment with your answer, and tell me which Scott Brown song (in this video or not) is your favorite!
And here it is, the middle of February, when I said I'd give me answer at the end of January haha. My favorite among these is Rock You Softly (with Make the Beat Drop a close second). The hint was that I let Rock You Softly play for the longest portion of this video compared to other Scott Brown songs (I didn't edit it shorter). I did let Sheila Chandra play for a while cuz it's amazing but also Scott samples quite a bit and it was hard to edit it down and still sound good.
How else can I say it; these samples videos are a true treasure trove! Thank you so much for continuing this series. I am looking forward to Brisk samples part 1! If I had to choose, my favorite Scott Brown song is maybe "Fade Away". Do you know what the sample used in that is? As for RandomEffekt's favorite out of these songs here, I'd guess "Make the Beat Drop" as it has such a nice duality of the calm and serene of Sheila Chandra and the hard feel of Klubbheads.
Correct but only on the Intro Mix which first appeared on his 10 Years Of Hardcore (Vol 2) compilation - the Intro Mix was later part of the digital release of Evolution Plus #14 (but not the original vinyl release in 2004)
@@randomeffekt5013 There are a few indeed. It's not Art of Trance, although it could have been in the same genre. I just remember the vocal in the track being sampled like: "Ever so lone, lone, lone, lone, lone, lonely" If that makes any sense?
I never for a second thought he'd got them cleared, but I am wondering how tf he got them so *clean*! Out of curiosity I decided to have a look for the acapella for Getcha Groove On and don't seem to be able to find it anywhere.
Can you figure out which Scott Brown song in this video is my favorite? Comment with your answer, and tell me which Scott Brown song (in this video or not) is your favorite!
make the beat drop?
Yeah I am betting on make the beat drop as well
I guess my fav would be I became hardcore i’ve listened to it the most when I discovered it I think. It was even my alarm at some point
I'll give me answer at the end of January.
And here it is, the middle of February, when I said I'd give me answer at the end of January haha. My favorite among these is Rock You Softly (with Make the Beat Drop a close second). The hint was that I let Rock You Softly play for the longest portion of this video compared to other Scott Brown songs (I didn't edit it shorter). I did let Sheila Chandra play for a while cuz it's amazing but also Scott samples quite a bit and it was hard to edit it down and still sound good.
DJ scott brown's music will stand the test of time.
Facts
I find it cool that scott sampled Limp Bizkit! Shows how varied his music taste must be!
Scott Brown was on fire in early 2000s
"You're No Good For Me" was also of course used by The Prodigy in "No Good (Start The Dance)".
Yup!
Hidden Gem, what a great channel man !
Best live act I've ever seen... Enchanted forest some year.
Ravers choice, whole bottle of Jack Daniels, posing for photos, too drunk for the DVD extras!
Quite mental hearing where the early ones came from 👌👍 well done the originals justice 👍transformed them from complete average to anthems of an era .!
Ура! Продолжение!!!
This is amazing
So excited to see part 2! Love this series
How else can I say it; these samples videos are a true treasure trove! Thank you so much for continuing this series. I am looking forward to Brisk samples part 1!
If I had to choose, my favorite Scott Brown song is maybe "Fade Away". Do you know what the sample used in that is?
As for RandomEffekt's favorite out of these songs here, I'd guess "Make the Beat Drop" as it has such a nice duality of the calm and serene of Sheila Chandra and the hard feel of Klubbheads.
Thanks and glad you enjoy! I believe "Fade Away" used original lyrics by DMO, so no sampling was done for that song as far as I can tell.
@@randomeffekt5013 Really thankful man
Great video master of the samples
On this is how we do it they also sample Ash from army of darkness
Correct but only on the Intro Mix which first appeared on his 10 Years Of Hardcore (Vol 2) compilation - the Intro Mix was later part of the digital release of Evolution Plus #14 (but not the original vinyl release in 2004)
What other track was it that sampled Shelia Chandras Ever So Lonely?
There are a few, but you may be thinking of Art of Trance - Monsoon? That samples it.
@@randomeffekt5013 There are a few indeed. It's not Art of Trance, although it could have been in the same genre. I just remember the vocal in the track being sampled like: "Ever so lone, lone, lone, lone, lone, lonely" If that makes any sense?
@@Scott-M1 Sorry, I don't think I know it without more information.
@@randomeffekt5013 No probs, thanks anyway.
DJs unite vol 1 sampled for kore recs. Scott due seduction a few pints
Is there any videos on you tube that show how you make 90s hardcore from start to finish ?
I like this guy's videos, he does recreation of all sorts of genres: th-cam.com/video/kIXVbWx06fU/w-d-xo.html
They are not "in depth" videos though...not sure what are the best videos for that depth you may be wanting.
@RandomEffekt yeah his vids are great that tune with the street fighter part was mint
Tbh the second one I thought was sampled from. The Prodigy No Good Start the dance
Scott may have sampled directly from No Good Start, but I like to show the original song that was sampled regardless.
You wonder how Scott got away with it using all these samples, wonder if he got all them cleared
Most likely not. And the owners were/are prob not too concerned with going after such a low-profit niche use.
@@randomeffekt5013 ye man, even if you look at Mylo, he sampled a ton of tracks on his Album Destroy Rock & Roll, great vids btw, kudos….
I never for a second thought he'd got them cleared, but I am wondering how tf he got them so *clean*! Out of curiosity I decided to have a look for the acapella for Getcha Groove On and don't seem to be able to find it anywhere.
@@DJChrisNeon Limp Bizkit tune?
@@TonyOldskool aye, the one for This Is How We Do It. Actually surprised I never clocked that was Fred Durst when I first heard Scott's track 😅
It looks like Scott only listened to rap, or it's easy to cut a voice out of it)
It's the latter. A lot of rap songs have an acapella version easily circulated.
I think he was an hiphop fan too.