S.O.U.L. - Peace Of Mind (1972)

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Uploaded by on Feb 26, 2008

from the album "Can You Feel It"

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Music

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Standard YouTube License

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  • i see your point. the music should stand out by itself but most hip hop heads will always care. it's fun for them.

  • It doesn't matter if the song has been sampled to death. It's down to whether your musical personality is strong enough to leave your own signature on it and make it your own. I've sampled stuff jammed ideas to loops and twist it to my own thing. I then take the sampled loops out and no one can tell where I got the idea from. The tune I end up with sounds nothing like the point I started from. Its a question of musical interpretation.

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All Comments (85)

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  • MOP's "Roll Call" brought me here. Then I noticed the Main Source sample. Premier and Large Pro are the shit.

  • I could sodomize Larry Craig's blumpkin-ridden butthole to this song if I could!

    sodomy from crack addicts feels good listening to R&B.

  • @76BomberGeez you're absolutely right about the sample. It was used on "what's wrong with out future", from the blue funk album

  • @HerbertReid First of all because the music you decide to sample is something that requiers several musicians, so it's something you can't do by yourself.

    Second of it, an acoustic ensemble sounds a thousand times better than most of those screwed up electronic keyboards, rhodes and all..

    Third, when you chop up and flip samples upsidown you can create something than nobody would have ever imagine, it can be very special and unique..

    And finally it gives forgotten records a 2nd life.

  • "we would really like to help you.."

  • sample by DJ PREMIER FOR M.O.P. .. Firing Squad

    

  • classic

  • @76BomberGeez You're exactly right, it was from Peaceful Journey. I think it was called Letter to the Future, one of Pete Rock's earliest productions. Large Professor also used this on the remix of Main Source's Peace Is Not The Word To Play.

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