ral-clan wrote:
So George Martin taking the original tape reals and putting them onto a different medium is not sampling in your book?
When you're burning a copy of a CD in your computer or ripping it to your I-pod, do you tell people you are making a "sample"?
No, because I am not creating a new piece of music.
No. In George Martin's case I'd have to say that what he did is just archiving or making a transfer recording. In fact, there's already a word for this action in audio/video tech circles - it's called a 'dub'.
A sample, to me, is a snippet or phrase of audio which can then be be used as a musical instrument in its own right.
To you it may be that, but to millions more it doesn´t. Majority rules, you know that.
i.e. a drum loop, or a brass hit, or a 1 or 2 bar bass phrase, or a James Brown "Yeeeahh!". That sort of thing.
Otherwise, I could call the entire contents of a CD a "sample", the entire contents of my i-pod a "sample" or a whole library's audio section a "sample". The work "sample" just gets watered down and meaningless if it is given no boundaries.
Please use a p2p app and get hold of ¨Raving I´m Raving¨ by Shut Up and Dance, then get hold of ¨Walking In Memphis¨.
Please listen to both then tell me what you think SUAD did to make ¨Raving I´m Raving¨.