JPeg said:You could get a cart full of records but 95% might be wackness and not usable whereas on comps u know ur gonna get alot of the types of sounds that are useful in a hip hop sampling context.
zone said:i cant bring myself to spend $15-20 for a comp. i could get a cart full of records at goodwill for that.
zone said:if i wanted samples that fit dustykid or soulman's narrow views of what's useful in a hip-hop sampling context, i would buy a drum kit at a record store and loosen the heads.
to bring home 95% whackness, you would have to be completely ignorant of the musicians and labels of the era. seperating the wheat from the chaff can be done fairly successfully with even superficial knowledge of the music.
if you can't be bothered to dig, why bother with vinyl at all? i don't get this attitude. why not just buy some zips from banginbeats? it would be much less expensive and time consuming than dealing with crates of records and all of the rituals that come along with sampling from wax.
zone said:if i wanted samples that fit dustykid or soulman's narrow views of what's useful in a hip-hop sampling context, i would buy a drum kit at a record store and loosen the heads.
Dusty Kid said:We look for extremely hard to find Funky ass joints. If it’s funky and is not too common we consider it. But if it’s Funky and Obscure then most likely it ends up on one of our records. We search by a Variety of things including Composers, Musicians, Years, Label, Gender, etc. When we are listening to Records, if we hear something that catches our ear we record it straight into the Computer to archive so we don't forget about it later on. We archive Thousands and Thousands of raw Obscure songs that are Future Dusty Tracks and when free time is available we restore as many as possible.
I feel everything we select for our comps is Dope in one way or another.
There are so many comps out today and 85% of them are really wack to me. They are probably nice to other people but most of them are just too Happy & Poppy for me to comprehend. A big part of our Job is listening to other people’s comps and making sure we are not releasing something someone else released recently.
We know we did a good job when we drop something on a Dusty and everyone is trying to find the original.
Soulman said:For my Soulman CDs, I just played stuff that I thought was dope and also different from what others were putting on their cds. Hard to do when so many people are doing comps and mix cds nowadays. I tried to mix it up with a variety of stuf that's been sampled and also stuff that hasn't been touched yet.
My main focus, though, wasn't as much the records I played but the way I put the whole thing together. As I've stated in interviews before, I viewed each cd I did as if I was recording an original album. I always tried to do stuff that most people weren't doing, like coming up with themes to tie the whole cd together. "Drugs" featured bits taken from old drug awareness records, in which the dialogue was about actual drug abuse but also could've been about records depending on how you look at it. "Philladelphia Beat Mission" had sound bites from a radio interview I did as interludes between each track. I just always tried to do some different things to seperate my cds from all the others out there.
Ultimately, though, every cd I have ever made has always been for my own listening enjoyment first.