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Salt 'n' Pepa - I Desire


Ornette

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Artist: Salt 'n' Pepa

Track name: I Desire

Original release: LP, "Hot Cool & Vicious"

Label: Next Plateau

Cat number: PL-1007

Year: 1986

Producer: Herby "Luv Bug" Azor

Source break: Amen Brother

 

Example:

Hellrazor - I Feel So High

2 Sinister - Let It Roll

 

Notes:

I'd found this on tape from some time back but couldn't identify which track it was (it was from 1989 and was mistakenly looking at the Salt With A Deadly Pepa album) but have just spotted it thanks to the Rap Sample FAQ. This is a second generation amen derivative and is used most distinctively by Hellrazor - I Feel So High (provides the entire cadence for the track!), but have more recently noticed it used by the Dark Horse track also.

 

Listening closer, it sounds like the loop takes the first two beats of Run DMC "Walk This Way" to give that hard kick/snare drop at the beginning and then overlays some 808 snares across the rest.

 

Being from 1986 this is probably one of the first tunes to actually use a sampled looped break as its basis, prior to that hip hop tunes would either 'replay' the break in full or have the DJ scratch in the break over the chorus (have a look at Run DMC "Peter Piper" for example). The only other one I can think of earlier is Ultra Magnetic MCs "Ego Trippin'"... hmmm interestingly that appeared on Next Plateau also... http://www.rolldabeats.com/forum/public/style_emoticons/default/smile.gif

 

Clip: j8KlyAxH594

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bOe52WzBiS4

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  • 9 months later...

There's a really interesting post on Discogs that talks about this very tipping point where hip hop became a more sample based music form, around the same period I talk about above:

 

 

http://www.discogs.com/reviews/list?label=Street+Beat+Records

PappaWheelie (referencing the Ultimate Breaks & Beats comps)

 

"This series debuted in 1986, months before the Emu SP1200 hit markets in mid-1987. These 2 things combined are the sole reasons why pre-1987 drum machine driven Hip-Hop gave way to samples/loops. Even some 1986 needle drops that appear in Hip-Hop that year originate here.

 

Initially, these were compiled as a way to gather all the Hip-Hop DJ's battle tracks into a one-stop-shop when Hip-Hop still meant MC's were a compliment to the real attraction, the DJ."

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  • 6 years later...

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