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11th track and about sampling.
Thundergrip
Soundcloud
I’ve always sampled. Here’s a list of what I’ve done and used to do it;
Age 9: Portable tape recorder with microphone placed in front of TV speaker to record Top of the Pops.
Age 11: Tape edits.
We had an integrated radio, record player and tape recorder. You play a record and record sections by quickly releasing the pause button while in record. Repeating this will allow you to re arrange a song and add stutter effects.
Age 18: Casio SK5 and RZ1 drum machine.
My first sampling tools. SK5 had quite a long sampling time (about 5 seconds on minimum resolution) and allowed you to play a sample spanned over a keyboard. RZ1 drum machine had 4 x 0.2 second samples and came with an audio cassette full of percussion sounds!
Age 20: Cheetah SX16.
What a piece of shit. Never worked properly, atrocious user interface. I returned it.
Age 21: Akai s1000.
Dream machine. It cost £2750 in 1991 which was a big deal. That’s the equivalent of £5000 now (I checked!). Think what you can get with £5k; Computer/software, awesome monitors, MIDI controller and a car.
The Akai opened the door to a world of sampling and fueled a data lust for sounds.
Danny and I even did a sample CD ourselves called Jungle Warfare, but I’ll talk about that later.
We started sampling our friends record collections. All of them. People would come to The Shed with their records and we would completely rinse them. Floppy discs were filled and stored by name of donor.
Films on VHS were also good for samples.
Age 25 and onwards: Akai S3000XL and later EMU e6400.
Both were really good. The Akai was rock solid on timing, but the converters were a little sub par. Gave everything a hollowness and slight brittle edge to the top end. Not shit, but not as good as today's sound. EMU had loads of fancy filters etc and did sound better than the Akai, but the timing was not very good. Layering snares in the EMU showed up timing issues.
By this time I was working with Jay as EZ Rollers. That’s where the real sampling began.
We knew all the DJs in our area and plenty of record collectors. They were all done. For larger collections we would schedule repeat sessions! We would turn up with beers and order a takeaway for our host.
Marathon sampling sessions would take a toll on my back. Often people’s setups weren't conducive for sampling, but my blood lust for sounds would override everything!
In the mid 90s, Jay and I went to a Funk night called Gas Station run by Duncan Filp in Norwich. I remember hearing all those breaks and vocals and practically mucking my pants. We set about sampling everything that Duncan had, which took quite a while. These samples were instrumental when we came to make Weekend World.
We did some house tunes for Twisted in the 90s. Part of the deal was that we could sample the owners collection!
We also bought job lots of records from auctions which filled the studio.
We had so many fucking records! They filled walls, everywhere. We had a record room at the studio with shelves 8 foot high. One day we just got rid of all of them (not the mailouts!) by putting them back in the auction.
We actually reached a point where everyone we knew had been sampled. We had even got people we didn’t know via people we did!
Our next idea was to approach independent record shops in Norwich and pay them to let us sample their stock. This was good. Jay would peruse the records and pass me a stack for sampling. We got some good stuff doing that.
So, you’d imaging that I have a lot of data? I can’t begin to tell you.
Track - Thundergrip
One of my personal favourites.
After each sampling session we would be excited about putting a new tunes together. This track came out of one of those.
I’m struggling to think of where the vocals come from, perhaps you can help?!
I remember sampling the break from a record and being really excited about editing it. We did all the scratches and table stops.
Incidental edits at the end of 8’s are from Mantronix.
Psycho screech.
Awesome drum editing. Reminiscent of Lords of the Null Lines. I loved doing these crazy drum edit intros, and still do. One of my favorites is the intro to Crowd Rocker.
“Can you feel it” pitch sample was done by first looping the sample in the Akai (using crossfade overlap) and then programing the pitch bend manually using pitch controller data. The Akai had a variable hold time for loops, so we manually calibrated the loop sustain to fit in time with the tune. I kid you not.
Distorted bass note is a lift from Dimensional Holofonic Sound - 9 Bad Acid (what a tune).
Love the way this one drops, real groovy. Loads of scratching samples adding to that Hip-Hop influence I love.
Little synth notes playing melodies. The deeper scratchy stab is from an 808 State record.
Littered with Fat Boys samples.
Wobble bass note was made by copying a bass sample, reversing it and splicing the two together in the Akai. A crossfade loop is then applied for sustain.
Intense synth switch layered with Roland JD 800 layered samples.
Drum edit bridge that exits with Scooby Doo sounds. Makes me smile every time.
The track keeps evolving. The addition of the sleazy Jazz riff to the piano/rhodes stab is lovely.
Switch to Korg M1 Techno riff.
We added the drums to the end so people could sample them.
How did we name it?
The night we started this tune we were visited by our friend Shaun Humphries. He was in quite an excited, agitated state and he recanted the story of his day at work. The weather was bad that day, and he had been working at the top of a crane out on the jib.
It had been a rush job done with minimal safety equipment, and with the humour of nervous excitement he had coined a phrase for the way he was holding on: Thundergrip!
