NYMMEP Explore the Beat Wrap-up: Creative Approaches to Sampling

 

Explore the Beat is part of New York Music Month Extended Play, an initiative of the Mayor’s Office of Media and Entertainment.

We had Kristen Glennon, aka Pozibelle, show us some creative approaches to sampling. Here’s our recap, as well as some resources!

 
 

A Recap and Resources:

Below is a recap of our latest Creative Approaches to Sampling workshop, as well as some resources provided by Pozibelle.

What is Sampling? 

  • Warmup video: A Brief History of Sampling 

  • From Wikipedia: In music, sampling is the reuse of a portion (or sample) of a sound recording in another recording. Samples may comprise elements such as rhythm, melody, speech, sounds, or entire bars of music, and may be layered, equalized, sped up or slowed down, repitched, looped, or otherwise manipulated. They are usually integrated using hardware (samplers) or software such as digital audio workstations.

  • Like recycling, but with audio 

Why Sample? 

  • Unexpected Surprises & Happy Accidents

    • DJing and the moment that the two songs blend to create an entirely new idea

    • Hardware Samplers like the MPC or DAWs like Ableton allow for capturing of audio and creating multiple layers or sample that interact to create a new idea - like DJing in a smaller form

    • Random sampling practice -- Rhythm Roulette

  • Restrictions

    • Sampling limits your options, creating restrictions which force creativity

    • It’s like a puzzle - you have to figure out how these sounds can work together

    • Work with no expectations

    • Options can be overwhelming 

How do you do it? 

  • Audio Sources

    • Old records, tapes, VHS, radio

    • Field recordings 

    • Digital Audio like Mp3, wav or record audio streaming from your computer 

    • Anything! Record Everything! 

  • Recording audio & building your library 

    • Your phone - subway musician, singer, sound of the train

    • Audio interface - iRig, Scarlett Focusrite - record into DAW

    • Hardware Sampler 

    • Recording audio internally from computer into DAW

Choosing your Hardware or Software:

  • Serato Studio - free DL, simple UI, easy transition from Serato DJ 

  • Ableton - in depth, playful, full package, free trial & even the $99 version is super powerful for audio manipulation/sampling

  • Maschine - sketchpad, easy sampling, thinking in blocks 

  • PO-33 - affordable, portable

  • Koala - app, any device, quick record of voices 

  • Octatrack 

  • MPC 

  • Audacity 

Samples often go through many layers and morphs - sometimes they even get taken out once other instruments are placed around them 

-Pozibelle’s practice: random sampling to spark creativity - how many different combos can I make from the recording? Sometimes it works to create a complete song, sometimes I get one dope stem from the practice, which I can use in other creations.

-Save samples to a central location for quick recall

  • Edit samples and store in a folder - the benefits are big for workflow and creates a “sound” - don’t have to start from scratch all the time. 

  • Separate sampling time from production time


****Disclaimer - be sure the research copyright laws before releasing music, document your sources, clear samples where necessary, these are techniques for creative practice.

Check out future workshops on beat making by clicking here!