You all know this tune, right? This version's percussion-heavy, with a 4-on-the-floor kind of vibe.ĭESCRIPTION IN PROGRESS - Chopped due to instrumentation, and features some quiet humming in the background. Nice cowbell on this one, and some latin percussion. High recommendation on this one from Australia.
Just so you get the vibe… It's also got a really deep, full bass drum that the Master Drummers 3 album sorely lacked. Actually, it's almost identical to "God Made Me Funky". This beat sounds like a Mike Clark loop from the Master Drummers v.3 album on Ubiquity, but it's not (duh). The first is the most simple, the second adds a couple more snare hits, and the third has a fill at the end. They're all basically a conga drum and cowbell groove with a nice chill backbeat. This file's got three CUE'd segments for you. I can't say anything more about this PHAT loop right now, because I'm getting too emotional, got a Kleenex, bro? Is it "Tony Avalon" or "Tony Alvon"? PLEASE, anyone with an original, hook up the 411!! SOOPER props and shouts out to Erock for submitting this long, FUNKY-ASS solo, heard in its entirety (slightly chopped) in DJ Shadow's "The Number Song" and elsewhere (Organized Konfusion?). Here's the best beat Shadow ever sampled, and maybe the best beat on this page. Recommended by Phatso with no exceptions. If you listen hard to the hi-hat, it's damn funky, too, I wish someone had mixed this gem a little better, because it's a really good break.
from Doug Organ.īoomy bass and understated snare make this loop a little awkward, but it's funky and very usable nonetheless. Can't relate to the words, though, I got to get me the fuck outta' my job…įile Format: Lo-Res PCM WAV - worst Uploaded: ĭESCRIPTION IN PROGRESS - Love Drops? Is my mind in the gutter or is Barry Allen's? Because that sounds kinda' naaastay! NOTE: This loop was previously credited to Barry Mann but I've corrected it thanks to info. Definitely check this one out, with nice, clear snare and bass drums that add a good kick to the mix. From an icy, raw, rad, fresh-that's right, Dave, rad-song with a tighter-than-hell guitar riff that I sampled (so don't you go doin' it, too!), this beat goes rhythmically with the guitar and bass riffs that come in later. TIGHT! This one's from me, and you know I da man, so get downloadin' and feel this one.
Okay, we're almost through with the white-boy rock beats here, but they're good beats, don't knock 'em! In fact, this one was even good enough for Run DMC, so there! This beat helped to pioneer a beautiful inter-racial musical performance, and.I think I'd better move on, I'm starting to get all teary-eyed. Original Album: Toys In The Attic? Comps: Ultimate Breaks & Beats vol.12 Me Mhat: have many wack beats… You Beat Junkie: desperate for whatever I offer… :) Features Kevin Godley on drums. It's kind of like a Tarzan vibe, unlike anything I've heard before.
I dont see artists tracking down to see who inspired them the most in a certain song and giving them credit (in none other than MLA 2009 format) or a instrumental soloist saying "oh yeah, this lick might be based off of Geezy McDavis, and the one before that was Blue Sunday, and the one I'm doing right now might be a Slippy Bo Jangles riff" while they improvise in front of an audience.Phat Drums Loops: Free Funky Drum Samples! SEARCH THE LOOPS LIBRARY:įile Format: ACM Compressed WAV - good Uploaded: Other than ego related reasons I see no idea why anyone shouldnt.Įveryone is a patchwork plagiarist in some way, even if they dont intend to be. Now if a person was to use my invention, (or amen break) and take it (or part of it) to make something improved or different (a new DnB song), I'd be all for it. It suggests that a person takes the same song and resells it, unaltered. The second example is not even analogous. I don't think that's a very good comparison.
If you invent something and someone decides "Hey this is cool! Let me take it and sell it myself." They make money off it and your fucked.what would you do?
What would you do? Allow it?Įven more simple terms. Some random person starts using samples of your song without your permission, makes money off it (even just a little) and takes all the credit. Lets say you created an amazing track from scratch, no use of samples nothing. Can you copyright basic drum patterns? Does the Amen break imply more than a basic drum pattern? At 1/8/11 11:17 PM, TMM43 wrote: