Showing posts with label Hip Hop. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hip Hop. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

"Angel Of Death" - Slayer/"Chanell Zero" - Public Enemy


This'll wake you all up! It's thrash metal gods Slayer with their anti-holocaust anthem "Angel of Death". What you thought this was all dance music did you? Hah!
It just goes to show how different things are these days. In the old days music had no colour and hip hop artists would sample anything, so long as it made you want to move. And there ain't nobody like Slayer to make you move.

“Angel of Death” – Slayer


Taking that brilliant mosh breakdown and slapping it over James Brown's Funky Drummer, Public Enemy's Channel Zero is a song about the crap that women watch on TV. Something which I can certainly testify to - but even the mighty Flava Flav can't stop my girlfriend watching trash.

“Channel Zero” – Public Enemy






Two badass motherfuckers, one badass motherfuckin guitar riff!

Public Enemy would also collaborate with another heavy metal group, Anthrax, for a cover of Bring The Noise on the album "Attack of the Killer B's" (Note the ubiquitous "Funky Drummer" beat in there too)

Terminator X wasn't the only one to sample Slayer either. British electropop duo the Utah Saints proved that yes you can sample Slayer and get into the top forty. Not only that but you can put a Slayer samples and Kate Bush and Annie Lennox samples on the same album and sell shitloads of copies. The song in question was called "I Want You" and the Slayer song sampled was called "War Ensemble".

Slayer themselves would also appear with the Original Gangster and Body Count frontman Ice T on the soundtrack to the movie Judgement Night and with Atari Teenage Riot on the (decent) soundtrack to the (absolute piece of shit) movie Spawn.


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Monday, December 10, 2007

A game of chess is like a swordfight...

You must think first, before you move.
From the Wu Tang Clan's "Da Mystery of Chessboxin'"

This sample was also used in "Dope Style" - DJ Hype and those of you with a keen ear will recognise the swishing sword sample which was also used in The Prodigy's Breath


Here's a great article from Wired with the RZA where he cites some of the samples used, the movies they come from, what they mean to him. With viewable Kung Fu goodness!


http://www.wired.com/entertainment/music/magazine/15-11/pl_music




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Wednesday, December 5, 2007

"The Message" - Grandmaster Flash /"Check Yo Self" - Ice Cube



Going to kick off this new blog today with a very obvious one.
Two legends of Hip Hop; seminal hiphop superstar Grandmaster Flash (and the Furious Five) with "The Message" and NWA gangsta turned Hollywood hero Ice Cube with "Check Yo Self".

"The Message" - Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five.


Ah the 80s! When you couldn't say piss on TV, but you could call people fags and threaten to hijack planes. Younger kids probably remember if from the Grand Theft Auto Vice City.


- Grandmaster Flash Lyrics

Getting the lyrics for the song is a quick Google away, getting the spoken part towards the end, however, has proven impossibly difficult, so I decided fuck it, played the thing over and over (I'll never get sick of that song, when me and a friend worked in an internet cafe we used to play it daily, it was the cafe anthem)
and wrote it out.

Grandmaster Flash - The Message transcript


"Yo Mel you see that girl there?"
"ooh ooh!"
"Yo that sound like Cowboy man!"
"Yo W’sup fool!"
"Yo w’sup munney?"
"Yo!"
"Where’s (?) and Rahim at man?"
"Dey upstairs coolin’ out."
"So what’s up for t’nite y’awl?"
"Yo we can go down to the fever man."
"Let’s go check out dunebug man."
"Hey you you know that girl betty?"
"Yeah man."
"Her moms got robbed man."
"What?"
"She got hurt."
"When did diss happen? When diss happen?"
(screech!)
"Freeze – don’t nobody move nuthin’ – y’awl know whut this is - geddem up!"
"What?"
"Get ‘em up man!"
"We down with grandmaster flash and the furious five man!"
"What is that a gang?"
"Naaaw!"
"Shuddup! I don’t wanna hear your mouth!"
"Officer officer, what’s the problem?"
"You the problem! …Get in the car, get in the car, get in the gawd-damn car!
I said get in the car!"



Elements of the above spoken word section were also homaged by Newcleus' Jam On Revenge (a.k.a. the Wikki Wikki song) which also uses elements from "Rappers Delight" from Flash's contemporaries the Sugarhill Gang.
On their Journeys By DJ mix album "Sixty Minutes of Madness" Coldcut took what sounds like an acapella of Jam on Revenge, timestretched it, and mashed it over drum and bass beats.
The infectious melody from Jam on Revenge was also nicked by Nightmares on Wax, for their song from the 1995 Album Smokers Delight



So yeah, anyway, I'm getting sidetracked. In 1994 (if memory serves) Ice Cube came out with his "Bootlegs and B-Sides" LP. A mish-mash of EP b-sides, unreleased tracks, remixes and a megamix. With anyone else such an album would generally be bad enough were it not for the sacrilegious sampling of Grandmaster Flash on top of it. But then we're not talking about "anyone else", we're talking about Ice Cube.
In its review for the album Mixmag voiced the same concerns before adding "but Ice Cube is the man." Now that's a fucking understatement and a half!

"Check Yo Self (Remix)" - Ice Cube.



Here are the lyrics with a less-sanitized version of Cube's own public health announcements.


Check Yo Self (Remix) Lyrics




Finally here's the original with Das FX which came from 93's Predator album. Actually now that I write this I realise that both Ice Cube and the Predator movies have massive potential for future posts.

"Check Yo Self" - Ice Cube feat Das FX.



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