Weakness - Make Beats In Reason - "Kryptonite" Sample Flip Hip-Hop Instrumental
Loading...
16,477
Uploader Comments (TaurusBeats)
Top Comments
-
Real nice !
Respect
-
head noddin. Much respect, i'm subbed. Peace, BIZZY
Video Responses
This video is a response to Loop Based Chopping/Sampling Example
see all
All Comments (90)
-
lets colab email me xsquadrecords@gmail.com
-
@TaurusBeats nice..ima try that next time i load reason up. man ill let u know when I gotta new beat!!
-
fuck the sampling law.thats how great hip hop beats are made.am i correct or not???
Loading...
Man can you tell me what lengths you put the blocks to make it drop nicely into the bass and main verses???
BrianPerrotti 1 month ago
@BrianPerrotti - The flips are in blocks of 4 measures each. This gives me enough to play with when I want to improvise keys/piano over the track. Also, it gives me me enough to work in key changes.
TaurusBeats 1 month ago
You are correct in that great Hip-Hop has been made by sampling. It's part of the foundation of Hip-Hop. But the law is still the law until we do something to change it. Let's work to change the law.
TaurusBeats 2 months ago
jw how you gonna sell a beat that you made with a sample? did you buy the rights to the song? haha jw
StuartJames34 4 months ago
@StuartJames34 - I only sell my part of the beat. I let my customers know that I am only selling MY creations. If a customer wants a beat with the sample, they have to clear the sample with the owners/publishers in order to use the sample, but I give permission to use my part of the beat. The customer pays for and gets the beat without the sample to use in a derivative work. Good question. Hope that helps.
TaurusBeats 4 months ago
@StuartJames34 you can sample freely, that is when your sample is not longer than 8 seconds.
ha.ha
daydreamproducties 3 months ago
@daydreamproducties - I've heard that before, but I'm not 100% sure that's correct. A sample, no matter how long it is, is still protected by copyright. However, sampling is still allowed, it's just what the final product is used for that raises the money flags. In short, the law really doesn't care too much about WHAT a sample is used for. As soon as something is sampled, the copyright protections kick in. It's an issue much bigger than I can cover here.
TaurusBeats 3 months ago