YouTube diggers - RR

parallaxparallax no-style-having mf'er 1,266 Posts
edited March 2014 in Strut Central
Forget mp3s...dudes are sampling straight from YouTube videos...

http://m.noisey.vice.com/blog/dusty-but-digital-how-producers-went-from-crate-digging-to-youtube-surfing

Hip hop production was built on having to get up and go somewhere???record stores, yard sales, church basements, record conventions. Taking a shot on a scratched piece of vinyl because the cover was cinematic might yield the next loop for ???T.R.O.Y (They Reminisce Over You)???. It was a crusade for horn stabs, basslines, and James Brown drum breaks. Groups of beatmakers in the early ???90s like Q-Tip, Large Professor, Pete Rock, and the Beatnuts formed twenty-year friendships not from pick-up basketball or quizzo or college, but by meeting up to go diggin???. The pursuit for the crate digger was just as important as the reward.

But how can you dig when your favorite record store closes? The Death of the Retail Record Store during the mid-2000???s put a hurting on the consoles of beatmakers. The old school rites of passage were permanently disfigured; how can you mine gold when iTunes forced the vinyl stewards into early retirement? Where???s the joy in being an MP3 collector? There???s no adrenaline rush attached to ninety-nine cent remastered, high bitrate piece of binary code.

The need for discovery outweighed the limitations of the marketplace. Hip hop producers began evolving in response to the shuttered windows of record stores, because as one door closed, two more opened. In 2005, the birth of YouTube and the widespread access of free obscure music via blogs changed the process for traditional hip hop sampling forever. This began the separation of ???Collection??? and ???Tools???; a crate digger???s vinyl collection stalled as their online tools for the trade of making beats expanded exponentially. And with the lack of record stores, the demand became higher for vinyl, phasing out producers who wouldn???t be gouged for a sample source that was now available somewhere online for free.

Following the Jim Jarmusch Rule of Two out of Three, things can be good, fast, or cheap. If it???s good and cheap, it won???t be completed quickly. If it???s good and done quickly, it will cost more. The MP3 is fast and cheap, sacrificing the unmatched sound quality of vinyl. The feel of vinyl, and its traditional place as the primary ingredient for classic rap songs, slowly became secondary to availability and convenience.

???I started off being mainly vinyl because you can physically touch it and hold sections you want to sample,??? says Paul White, a producer from the UK who made his bones contributing to Danny Brown???s full length albums. ???I've been sampling off YouTube, MP3s, cassettes, everything at the same time too. It really doesn't matter. Too much thinking can be damaging to the purity of a feeling. That includes where [the sample is] from. Sometimes you spend ages trying to dirty something up, when an MP3 off YouTube is dirty as shit already. You'd be surprised how much material released has come from YouTube.???

???When you find something on vinyl it has a more magical feel for potential than when you find it on the internet,???says Quelle Chris, the lo-fi loop dreamer from Detroit who has crafted classics with Danny Brown, Roc Marciano, The Alchemist, and more. ???When I first started sampling off the ???net, I honestly didn???t think other folks were doing it. I thought I had stumbled onto some sort of goldmine.???

He was not alone in his assumption. Producers began digging less through crates and more through URLs. ???I was never a fan of buying a record that I only planned on sampling for like 50 bucks. I could give a shit about paying the guy who decided this rare but ultimately half assed record is worth what it was,??? says Blockhead, producer of Aesop Rock, Billy Woods, and several instrumental albums for Ninja Tune. ???I'm not in the habit of giving money to greedy collectors. So I find shit online. It's enabled me to find samples I would never have been able to afford to even hear otherwise. My record player doesn't even work anymore. The fact I haven't fixed it speaks volumes of how much more simple and rewarding the blog digging has been for me.???

J-Zone has been making beats since the early ???90s using the most unorthodox techniques, from sampling forgotten black and white films off of his VCR to playing live drums on his new album Peter Pan Syndrome. He has incorporated MP3s into his repertoire while keeping an analog sensibility. ???I try to minimize staring at a computer monitor as much as I can during the process. I'll catch a YouTube thing here and there or an MP3 I find somewhere. My sound is naturally lo-fi and I usually chop things up into smaller pieces, so it's not like I have an 8 bar loop where you notice whether the source was a FLAC file or 128 kbps MP3. I never gave a shit about the quality because I use a ???wall of sound??? approach to beats - the sample gets ruined once I pile it into the beat anyway.???

Younger producers like Small Professor who started in the early 00s recognize the lineage of sampling off vinyl but didn???t have to make the slow transition to MP3. ???I started making beats ten years ago. I've been almost strictly sampling from MP3 for my entire beatmaking existence. I think MP3s definitely lack that special something that vinyl has, so I've always tried to compensate by layering different samples in my beats, mostly static sampled from vinyl, to achieve that 'full' feel.???

The search for enigmatic grooves now tend to be plucked from search engines rather than bugged out album covers excavated from a lost era. ???[On]YouTube you can just type in something crazy and see what comes up. I use the word 'trippy' quite a lot in my searches: ???trippy 70's cartoon??? or something like that. You find something, crack up to yourself, have a load of fun, and 15 minutes later you got a beat done!??? says Paul White.

Blockhead does his digging based on anonymity, looking for genres and obscurity???he never wants to know an artist existed prior to finding them. Quelle Chris looks for cable access casualties???commercials and under-the-radar movies. J-Zone still blends the old with the new. ???Sometimes if I find something on YouTube and the song is really dope, I'll try to hunt down the original record and sample the record. But if it costs a fortune, I'll sample it off YouTube. Shit, why not????

Small Professor is the RIAA???s worst nightmare. ???When it comes to online 'digging', I use a couple different methods. The first one is the easiest: find out what such-and-such sampled, and download [the sampled artist???s] entire discography. The second one is searching by category: 'OST', '1974', or 'Ahmad Jamal'. The third method takes a little more time, as it involves using Wikipedia/AllMusic.com/Discogs.com: I can type in an artist and see not only their most popular, most downloaded works, but also the rarer stuff that a general search might not yield.???

With vinyl sales hitting a twenty-year record spike in 2013, wax has never been more available and collectable. But will beatmakers go back to the traditional methods for better fidelity, or at least to stay retro-contemporary? Quelle Chris finds it necessary for his process. "I hit the vinyls, even when I don't have any money. I raid friends' record collections. I've even left albums at the shop and listened to them later on the internet, and suddenly didn't feel it anymore."

Paul White has changed his mind after discovering gems on YouTube. "I used to [be] critical of people not digging, but now I feel differently. The musicians themselves would want as many people to hear their music as possible."

Blockhead is honest about his approach that might rattle production purists. "I think most producers are still only rocking vinyl. That's why those of us who don't care about that shit get frowned upon so quickly. I'm not mad at those dudes but they definitely have a different value system than me, both in the sense of how they view music and how they value vinyl. I can't front though -- it does feel like cheating compared to how I used to make beats."

J-Zone recognizes the advantage of vinyl for live crowds. "Playing out as a DJ is different because you're dealing with sound quality of an entire song in a loud venue, and MP3's never sound as good as a 45. But for sampling, you can doctor it up. Nobody knows whether you used an OG, a repress, a file, or whatever. It's about skill."

But regardless of the format chosen, it still comes down to the art of the sample. Small Professor might use MP3s exclusively, but doesn't look at vinyl as Jurassic. "There is still nothing like finding a good groove on record, because unlike a .WAV form on your computer screen, you can't see what's about to happen with the music. You have to rely on your instincts to them breaks."
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  Comments


  • Big_StacksBig_Stacks "I don't worry about hittin' power, cause I don't give 'em nuttin' to hit." 4,670 Posts
    Hey Parallax,

    Wow, these cats are on some ole' other shit. :shitty: I guess the 'de-contexutalization' of music rolls toward its eventual goal: Pure musical commoditization. Who cares about a recording's origin or creators? I guess it's all about profiting from it. Get that money!!! ;-) In that regard, maybe we should remove all the labels from food products too. Just eat it for who cares about what it is, right? Pardon my old man rantings.

    Peace,

    Big Stacks from Kakalak

  • HorseleechHorseleech 3,830 Posts
    In related news, there are a number of comps and 'reissues' that are sourced from youtube/blog mp3s.

  • parallaxparallax no-style-having mf'er 1,266 Posts
    I hear you, Stacks!

    Horseleech said:
    In related news, there are a number of comps and 'reissues' that are sourced from youtube/blog mp3s.

    Do you know which ones, or can you name a few?

  • HorseleechHorseleech 3,830 Posts
    parallax said:
    I hear you, Stacks!

    Horseleech said:
    In related news, there are a number of comps and 'reissues' that are sourced from youtube/blog mp3s.

    Do you know which ones, or can you name a few?



    I think a few things on this label qualify.

  • Controller_7Controller_7 4,052 Posts
    How is your name gonna be small professor?

  • Download a picture at 200x200 pixels and then blow it up to poster size.

    That is essentially what you are doing when you take your low bitrate mp3 or youtube video audio and throw it in your sampler, maschine etc. You can't get back what is lost when it is converted to these lossy formats. Mp3's were developed to send music files quickly over the internet. The small file size works great for the slower net speeds of 1999-2002.

    a Record on a good turntable and preamp or a WAV/AIFF file recorded through great gear will always sound better. You start with a huge sound and can run it through whatever plugins or hardware to destroy, distort and change it if you desire that sound.

    The "dirty" comment in the article just further points out to me that these guys don't know what the fuck they are talking about. Use the internet for research. Blogs, youtube etc are just fine to figure out what you want to use, then go find the record,cd,vhs,cassette tape. Anything that hasn't been majorly dithered down.

    oh and EVERY ONE of those beats sucked dick other than the j-zone. The sound quality is horrible and you can hear a huge distinction between the vocal tracks and the beats themselves. j-zone is using his live drums mic'd and recorded into a few pieces of gear at his home studio. He isn't converting the drums to mp3's and then using them.

    Yes, coming up with creative and unique ideas are what the rap sound is founded on, but when you choose to be lazy and then can't compete sonically with your peers and competitors, you look like a fool and sound like pure shit.

  • tech12ztech12z 56 Posts
    Unlimitedness can really fuck up the creative process, IMO.

  • Jonny_PaycheckJonny_Paycheck 17,825 Posts
    Tl;dr but nobody cares about sound quality, kids are listening to this shit on YouTube anyway (thru cheap earbuds/comp speakers)

    Save the sound quality shit for people that buy 180g vinyl with FLAC download card. 90% or more of rap listeners do not gaf

  • Jonny_PaycheckJonny_Paycheck 17,825 Posts
    Also should be noted when I interviewed Phill Most a number of years ago and asked this exact question his response was, "that's some hip-hop shit." kids don't have money or time for a record collection, 1200, apogee duet, SP, MPC, ProTools, plug-in bundles...

  • kalakala 3,358 Posts
    kids of the 70's, 80's and early 90's all had stereo systems in they crib
    it was a given
    too bad that has also disappeared

  • DORDOR Two Ron Toe 9,896 Posts

  • El PrezEl Prez NE Ohio 1,141 Posts
    Wait Small Professor?? I am really out of touch....smh

  • dj_cityboydj_cityboy 1,459 Posts
    I have sampled shit from MP3's and from youtube as well in some of my tracks, but NEVER to the level that is being talked about here - small professor is pretty funny name though I must admit..

  • LokoOneLokoOne 1,823 Posts
    I've heard of producers also snatching samples off Ebay auctions music clips... especially with rare/expensive records.

    Don't know how good the quality would be but I can see why they would do.

  • GrafwritahGrafwritah 4,184 Posts
    Big_Stacks said:
    I guess the 'de-contexutalization' of music rolls toward its eventual goal: Pure musical commoditization. Who cares about a recording's origin or creators? I guess it's all about profiting from it. Get that money!!! ;-) In that regard, maybe we should remove all the labels from food products too. Just eat it for who cares about what it is, right? Pardon my old man rantings.

    Can't help but point out the irony in that Parallax lifted the entire article to post on here (at least he threw in the link, but if the whole article is on here, who is going to click on that?) essentially stripping any profit Vice would make from that article from those of us on the forum reading it. Just read it, who cares about who wrote it? ;)

    It's not just music that is getting commoditized.

    End additional old man rant.

  • parallaxparallax no-style-having mf'er 1,266 Posts
    Grafwritah said:
    Big_Stacks said:
    I guess the 'de-contexutalization' of music rolls toward its eventual goal: Pure musical commoditization. Who cares about a recording's origin or creators? I guess it's all about profiting from it. Get that money!!! ;-) In that regard, maybe we should remove all the labels from food products too. Just eat it for who cares about what it is, right? Pardon my old man rantings.

    Can't help but point out the irony in that Parallax lifted the entire article to post on here (at least he threw in the link, but if the whole article is on here, who is going to click on that?) essentially stripping any profit Vice would make from that article from those of us on the forum reading it. Just read it, who cares about who wrote it? ;)

    It's not just music that is getting commoditized.

    End additional old man rant.

    Haha! Oh snap. Yes, in retrospect I should've cited the source.

    Still, there is something really, really wrong about sampling YouTube videos, imo. It's lazy, the sound is garbage, and it's theft.

  • Controller_7Controller_7 4,052 Posts
    Just for the sake of conversation, how is any more theft than sampling from vinyl?

  • parallaxparallax no-style-having mf'er 1,266 Posts
    That's a fair point, TÔÇóÔÇómy. What I'm thinking is that dudes who do it the old way at least own the record. For me, the bigger issue is the crappy sound quality of a ripped YouTube video.

  • Jonny_PaycheckJonny_Paycheck 17,825 Posts
    there is absolutely no legal privilege granted by owning the record you sample vs sampling off youtube.

  • LoopDreamsLoopDreams 1,195 Posts
    Jonny_Paycheck said:
    Tl;dr but nobody cares about sound quality, kids are listening to this shit on YouTube anyway (thru cheap earbuds/comp speakers)f

    You can reduce these people to drooling jibberin idiots by sitting them down infront of a good system and have them listen to something they know from a quality source. Kinda like smoking some indoor chronic after years of overfertilized outdoor shwagg.

  • dj_cityboydj_cityboy 1,459 Posts
    you are also assuming that every youtube video is available on vinyl as well? people are sampling more than music on youtube, I have lifted music/TV samples/short vocal samples/music from demo videos/radio samples/crowds, so long as I find the sample I am looking for I really could care less where I find my shit to be honest.

  • parallaxparallax no-style-having mf'er 1,266 Posts
    Jonny_Paycheck said:
    there is absolutely no legal privilege granted by owning the record you sample vs sampling off youtube.

    I never stated anything about legal privilege, Johnny. I said "at least" the person sampling owns the record. To me, that makes it a bit better than straight ripping something off YouTube.

    Again, the bigger issue to me is sound quality. But yeah, I think the original artist should always be credited for their work if it's lifted and incorporated into something else.

  • GaryGary 3,982 Posts
    I have no opinion on this.

    But I did have the urge to post that I have no opinion.

    In 2014 soulstrut is about my urges.

  • I think it's also fair to point out that alot of the 'real heads' were going though their parents record collections and playing them on their parents sound systems. I can't tell you how many interviews I read back in the day where it was basically "I would have to sneak into my pop's record collection and practice scratching on his turntable when he wasn't at home, otherwise he's whup my ass for breaking his needles".

    Whatevs, I kinda agree with JP and Phil Most, it's hip hop yo. And the shit dudes used to do when they would take a sample of a record at 45rpm and then slow it down in the sampler so they could sample a longer section of the record resulted in all kinds of weird digital artifacts - shit that a lot of 'real heads' covet as good because it's 'dirtier'.

  • But then there is a good and bad "dirtier". The problem with mp3 artifacts is that you don't really hear them (that was the point...) unless it┬┤s less than 128kpbs, but nonetheless they suck the life out the music, fuck up reverb tails, blurry the stereo image, takes EQ very badly because phase is fucked up, etc...., etc.....

  • Jonny_PaycheckJonny_Paycheck 17,825 Posts
    nobody cares

  • (Paging thes one)

  • parallaxparallax no-style-having mf'er 1,266 Posts
    Jonny_Paycheck said:
    nobody cares

    Based on some of the responses and the number of views, I'd say that's a slight over-statement.

  • Jonny_PaycheckJonny_Paycheck 17,825 Posts
    parallax said:
    Jonny_Paycheck said:
    nobody cares

    Based on some of the responses and the number of views, I'd say that's a slight over-statement.

    nope

    if people cared, it would be an issue. it's not. the vast majority of rap music with samples that's been released over the last few years did not come from vinyl. even if it's not from youtube, it is often from mp3s.

  • I was just saying that the mp3 dirt isn't desirable as an euphonic artifacts than SP1200 dirt, replying to what prof rockwell was saying.

    But I think rap music has always had a love/hate relationship with "sound quality". There is the super IDGF do what you want mentality, but you also have the Dres, the Quiks, etc, etc....
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