동시에 발표된 많은 기념비적인 힙합 앨범과 마찬가지로--Paul's Boutique, 3 Feet High and Rising--Main Source의 Breaking Atoms는 오늘날 상업적 공간에서 존재할 수 없었을 것입니다. 그것은 지나치게 자유롭게 샘플을 사용하며, 켄예 웨스트(Kanye West)가 아닌 어떤 래퍼에게는 제임스 브라운(James Brown)의 샘플만으로도 비용이 많이 들 것이라고 상상할 수 있습니다.
하지만 Breaking Atoms이 샘플 찾기 앨범이라는 의미는 아닙니다. 그것은 그 부분의 합계 이상의 것이며, 믹스에서 샘플을 추출하는 것이 항상 쉬운 것은 아닙니다. 이 그룹은 크레이트를 뒤지는 프로듀서/래퍼 대형 프로페서(Large Professor)를 자랑했으며, 그는 종종 Main Source의 회고에서 많은 공로를 인정받습니다. 그러나 그들은 또한 최고의 파티를 위한 샘플을 탐색한 DJ로 활동했던 Sir Scratch와 K-Kut도 있었습니다. Breaking Atoms에서 어떤 노래가 샘플링되었는지, 그리고 어디서 이 샘플을 꺼내왔는지 알아내는 것은 매우 즐거운 경험이었습니다 - WhoSampled?의 친구들에게는 평화가 있기를 - 우리는 우리의 판다베어 앨범과 동일한 작업을 했습니다: Breaking Atoms의 샘플링된 곡에 대한 개요입니다.
The sample stew on Breaking Atoms is felt from the jump, as the group manages to sample Ike Turner (the main musical figure at the beginning of the song), Melvin Van Peebles and Earth Wind and Fire (the saxophone and melody at 3:19), Soul legend Johnnie Taylor (the UH!s you hear throughout the song), and Kool & the Gang (the titular dialog at :11). For good measure, they throw in a flute sample (at 2:41) from an obscure soul record too.
Kanye West famously sampled Sister Nancy’s “Bam Bam,” on well, “Famous,” last year, and you have to figure the fact that it was a famous break and sample on this album had a lot to do with that. However, “Just Hanging Out” is mostly built on the meat of Vanessa Kendrick’s “90% of Me is You,” a sultry soulful song. The track also cribs the opening guitar strum of a Mike Bloomfield-Stephen Stills-Al Kooper song (:22), drums from a Skull Snaps song, and its theme and vocal samples from a Sweet Charles song (he played with James Brown). Main Source are just showing off here, plucking tiny bits of music to make into something bigger.
Large Pro’s dexterity with chopping up jazz--which had a major impact on all the Native Tongues groups like Tribe Called Quest, De La, and groups like Digable Planets--isn’t fully felt till “Looking at the Front Door,” a song that chops up an indelible, tossed off groove from jazz trumpeter Donald Byrd, who at 1:48 of the song below skronks off the melody that became the melody for this Main Source classic. The drums come a Detroit Emeralds song, and then the vocal samples and “UH’s” all come from a variety of crate classics the group dug up.
The showcase for Large Pro is mostly built around the group’s dexterous scratching abilities. But the samples here take time to crib a dope organ line and drums from the Mohawks (at :15 in the original and :34 of the Main Source song), a piano figure literally 14:51 into a Charles Wright song, and vocals from an earlier Main Source single.
The emotional centerpiece of Breaking Atoms is this track, a song about police brutality and how a police force can see its policing as just a game it’s playing on a populace. It’s also the sample centerpiece, pulling in scraps of seven songs. Two ancillary James Brown samples (drums and organ at :37 of the Main Source song, and some drums at 3:05) boost the song’s foundational Lou Donaldson sample, and its Lightnin’ Rod vocal samples. Then Large Pro drops samples in lead up to the choruses, dropping Elephant’s Memory, the 9th Creation, and Melvin Van Peebles at various points.
Sir Scratch and K-Kut get to show off here, on this monument to scratching and sampling. The song’s main pillar is drums from the jazz musician Bob James, it also cribs some flute from Kool and the Gang (at 1:18 on the song below), and some sampled vocals from Lyn Collins and an earlier Main Source song.
This track could be its own masterclass in the power of taking scraps of old songs and making something new, as pieces of seven songs form a new, distinct, original whole. Sleigh bells and drums from an obscure old R&B Christmas song by Milly & Silly give the song its backbone. Horn blasts from Philadelphia soul group MFSB add some flourish on top of that. Then, scraps of vocals from five songs--ranging from James Brown to the Meters--pop up in the choruses where the group cuts and scratches. The result is that the song sounds like it’s conversing with these lost samples.
Large Professor gifted Pete Rock one of his first solo production credits with this track. Rock found the Soul Symphony song that this is built on, and gave it to Large Pro who made it his own. Large Pro still gave Pete the co-production credit though. Large Pro also added the vocal samples from “The Message From The Soul Sisters.”
This track has the fewest samples of any song on Breaking Atoms, and for incredible reasons: it rescues a lost song by the soul singer Lou Courtney and recontextualizes it as a hip-hop headknocker. It’s a simple song, but it swings big.
This track is maybe the most famous from this album, in that it’s the recorded debut of Nas, as he cuts a vapor trail 40 miles wide through the first verse of this song. He would go on to sample the song on his debut LP, Illmatic, which started a trend that is impossible to track: Breaking Atoms is probably the most sampled and interpolated album in rap history, as lyrical threads, samples, vocals, and parts of this album have appeared on dozens of other albums.
That’s a story for a different time though; about the samples here. The drums come from a Bob James song--he’s one of Large Pro’s faves-- and the blaxpolitation sound effects at the beginning come from a Melvin Van Peebles soundtrack cut that’s impossible to find on the net. The guitar strums--that end up on the Main Source song sounding like alarms to let you know Nas is coming through--come from a Vickie Anderson song. Then, at the :15-:18 mark of “Live at the Barbecue,” we’re treated to an interpolation of the early Run DMC song “Hollis Crew,” and a snippet of “Just Hanging Out” from this very album. Which I guess means Breaking Atoms was the first album to interpolate or sample Breaking Atoms.
Another song that’s relatively light on samples closes out Breaking Atoms. “Watch Roger Do His Thing” has a drum break from Sly Stone (at 2:12 of the Sly song below), and another drum break from Funkadelic (:34 of the Main Source song). The hockey organ? That’s apparently a Main Source original, though the mind races at the idea of the group holding up a mic at a Rangers game to get the sound.
Andrew Winistorfer is Senior Director of Music and Editorial at Vinyl Me, Please, and a writer and editor of their books, 100 Albums You Need in Your Collection and The Best Record Stores in the United States. He’s written Listening Notes for more than 30 VMP releases, co-produced multiple VMP Anthologies, and executive produced the VMP Anthologies The Story of Vanguard, The Story of Willie Nelson, Miles Davis: The Electric Years and The Story of Waylon Jennings. He lives in Saint Paul, Minnesota.