Meathead Advanced Member
United Kingdom
4,217 posts Joined: Sep, 2006
Posted - 2009/09/16 : 22:43:55
Sounds right to me, but i wanna know what the original re-recycled tune is. The vocal and guitar bit. Sounds like some kind of 80's cheese/rock ballad thing. It's great!
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"Music creates order out of chaos; for rhythm imposes unanimity upon the divergent, melody imposes continuity upon the disjointed, and harmony imposes compatibility upon the incongruous." -Sir Yehudi Menuhin
No need to ask around buddy, you answered your own question in your first post!
With the title as a hint, and listening to both tracks one after the other, it seems pretty obvious that the sample is indeed taken from Phonat - Learn To Recycle.
acidfluxxbass Advanced Member
United Kingdom
5,000 posts Joined: Apr, 2008
Posted - 2009/09/17 : 00:03:38
quote:Originally posted by Meathead:
Sounds right to me, but i wanna know what the original re-recycled tune is. The vocal and guitar bit. Sounds like some kind of 80's cheese/rock ballad thing. It's great!
Well, here's the interesting thing. The vocals are original, but sliced up and thrown into hip hop, house and drum and bass styles all in one track.
I'm really finding this really cool. The guy made the 'Learn to Recycle' tune on a 5 year old laptop in a barn in Italy!! Inspiration, Much??
The vocals were infact made to sound like they were from an 80's record, when infact they were a product of the 'Young Punx / Phonat / MofoHifi' collaboration.
quote:Originally posted by Dr Hal from the above stated link: Well the beauty of it is that it isn’t a sample of anything else. It is original vocals, but recorded in an 80s style then ’sampled’ to sound like it has been taken from a different record. It is the Young Punx / Phonat / MofoHifi way!
quote:Originally posted by the Yong Punx member who ran the Heavy Disco label from the above stated link: “Learn to recycle” is essentially a scientific experiment. To try and find out what happens if you use just one drums kit, one bass sound and one sample, but at hip hop speed, house speed, and drum and bass speed, all in the space of one track. The result is nothing short of amazing and really goes a long way to prove what my manifesto has been all along – that electronic music can be united across the genre barricades, rather than divided into tempo based ghettos. It takes a brave DJ to drop this track into a set. But brave DJs exist and boy does the room kick off if you get it right.
Alert moderatorEdited by - acidfluxxbass on 2009/09/17 00:17:01
Jacco Average Member
Unknown
168 posts Joined: Mar, 2005
Posted - 2009/09/17 : 00:06:06
quote:Originally posted by Meathead: i wanna know what the original re-recycled tune is
quote:phonat: Well the beauty of it is that it isn’t a sample of anything else. It is original vocals, but recorded in an 80s style then ’sampled’ to sound like it has been taken from a different record. It is the Young Punx / Phonat / MofoHifi way!
Meathead Advanced Member
United Kingdom
4,217 posts Joined: Sep, 2006
Posted - 2009/09/17 : 15:29:51
Cool! How would one go about recording something in an 80s style though? I wanna try it, it sounds cool as cheese!
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"Music creates order out of chaos; for rhythm imposes unanimity upon the divergent, melody imposes continuity upon the disjointed, and harmony imposes compatibility upon the incongruous." -Sir Yehudi Menuhin