DJ Shadow Interview @ Salon.com
Saracenus
671 Posts
DJ Shadow interview talking about his new efforts, the internet, as well as Afrika Bambaataa and his collection of vinyl (40,000+) archived at Cornell University.
???It???s more difficult for a song to become a lightning rod???: DJ Shadow on the future of music (Salon.com)
???It???s more difficult for a song to become a lightning rod???: DJ Shadow on the future of music (Salon.com)
Comments
OK...
From that, if the writer isn't counting vocals, then there are probably 100s of all sample albums prior to endtroducing.
Been my experience that a lot of "reporters" don't get it right. They are on a deadline and are relying on other folk's expertise. And those are the "serious" ones.
You take that environment and you got someone writing a puff piece you are not likely to get something properly fact checked. Unless the guy or gal doing the work is vested deeply in the subject they are covering or have an ax to grind with the subject of their piece it just isn't going to happen.
I will bet that the claim of an all sampled album came from DJ Shadows PR folks and/or sloppy research. It was on the internet, so it must be true!
I hear so many music myths taken as truth and repeated.
FUCK YOU RACIST!!!
OK, just kidding. But as a reporter, I resent that. I also resent the implication that there was anything approaching "deadline pressure" on an article about DJ Shadow on Salon.com. I don't know, but I'd be surprised. "Yo, b, where's that 500-word on Josh? We trying to get that on the 10 a.m. biz sked - FOX Business might want it for their lunchtime seg!"
Also too, if there was any question about Entroducing being the first sample-based album, they could have just added an ", according to Shadow's representatives" rather than representing it in copy as like a fact.
Well, the Guinness Book of World Records has it listed as the first album made completely from samples, which I imagine would pass muster as fact-checking these days.
This is the most sad thing about this thread. Guinness World Records... is an authoritative source in todays media climate.
ps I still ride for Endtroducing. Maybe not as hard as my 17 year old self. But still. If you never got into blazing downtempo, I understand. It's pretty much the album that made me realize I could make music by myself and have it sound cool. Can't turn my back on it lol
"Some of my best friends are reporters..."
There are good reporters out there that get their shit done right. You notice that I said a lot, not all.
Unfortunately, it has been my experience that journalism today is rushed. We live in a 24 hour news world and we have more content providers than ever before (and countless content aggregator/regurgitaters). I constantly see errors in reporting in my areas of interest ranging from the small to the ridiculous. It does not give me confidence in those reporters that are writing/talking about stuff I really don't know about.
DJ Shadow is not someone that I know much of anything about so reading that Salon.com article is mostly taken on faith that it is accurate by me. Had it been someone like Nasurat Fatah Ali Khan or the Tallis Scholars I would have more background to judge.
If you are one of the reporters that get there shit done right, right on brother. We need more people like you out there.
Yeah, I was just messing around. Of course, the 24-hour news cycle. At my job, we get graded against the competition in seconds and being ahead by several minutes qualifies as a "major beat." Luckily, few algorithmic dudes are putting on a trade timed to, say, Salon.com mentioning Paul's Boutique, which could have caused a major headache - or at least an angry email - from homeboy writing the Shadow article. Still, in that environment, if you are not sure about something but want to include it in an article, it never hurts to just attribute it to whomever is making the claim. And, likewise, I still enjoy Entroducing on the once or twice I year and I listen to it on my iPod.
It heard that it could be the money, but my source is unreliable.
I would say PE'S 'Yo! Bum Rush the Show'. However, I remember reading how Flav played the hi-hats live in the studio on a track in order to get it right. So, I guess, technically it doesn't count.
Paul's Boutique: Ad-Rock played guitar and MCA played bass on 'Looking Down the Barrel', so I guess technically, if we want to be super serious about it, it doesn't count?
3 Feet High: Strong candidate as well, although I think Prince Paul played the kazoo on there (not joking) so. . .
'It Takes A Nation of Millions' might be it.
Entroducing is still a landmark accomplishment IMHO. Not sure why people here are so eager to bring the hatt on DJ Shadow when you know you rode hard back in 1996
It's a Soul Strut tradition! Anything Shadow related is put under a microscope for minute errors, which are then gloated about!
Just kidding.
Lyrics Born says "it's the money." I believe it was recorded for the album. The girl who talks about coming to America and watching Xanadu, Shadow said in some interview that it was a recording of someone he knew. Someone who was on the cover of URB at one point, but he kept it secret. I forget where he said this.
I like the album and it was a game changer for me back in the day. I'm not discrediting that at all. I'm just saying, the Lyrics Born thing cancels it out, assuming that recording vocals is now no longer sampling. I mean, there's probably tons of 88-89 rap records that are all samples and vocals.
Technically any recording is a sample. They're just long samples. The White Noise Electric Storm album might be the first all sample album, but I get it, we're talking about all samples from preexisitng stuff and chopped on a sampler or computer.
Crazy that it's almost 20 years old and still debated and discussed with such intensity.
It's plausible Shadow was the first but you know how it goes with these things, somebody unknown will have done it before him.
I've never put on Shadow (though I respect him as a craftsman). Saw him live at a festival in about 2004 with his Hyphy (?) and crazy lights thing going on.
No idea why I'm responding here
Their is a bit of live instruments on that LP including Vernon Reid on Sophisticated Bitch.