Firstly, his track "Girls, Cash, Cars," produced by "Stay Gettin'" samples Rick Wakeman's "Black Knight." I was sitting on that sample for a while after I bought the record, along with "The Six Wives of Henry VIII." There went my chance. This track is also interpolated in the intro to Young Jeezy's "The Recession."
The second example on Killa Season is ever stranger than the first. The track "Wet Wipes" has the signature Alchemist sound-- dark, heavy and warm sounds, driving drums (see Lil Wayne's 'you aint got nothing')-- but I figured he produced the whole thing on a Nord Lead or something similar (I don't even know if he uses a Nord, but I wish I did). I was wrong. While I was looking through my own samples, I end up finding this:
Now check the Cam/Alchemist version:
Downloadable Clips
From the following albums:


3 comments:
I dig your site it appears to be fairly new. So you are a producer who just samples? I'm referring to the alchemist comment. Ph I like the remixed brandy song it would be cool if you continued that or even did a day in the life of your creative process, I always find it refreshing seeing how producers creative process differ. but anyway Keep up the blogging
Glad you enjoy the blog so far. I'm pretty new to this world. I am a producer/dj who enjoys sampling, but I produce without samples quite a bit.
I have a few videos up on my youtube page at youtube.com/jacksonwonderful
They are mostly tutorials, but hey, making a beat is a day in my life, right? :)
Stay in touch,
P
These wet wipes can be very helpful to maintain hygiene. While cooking you should always use these wet wipes to make sure that everything is germ free.
adult washcloths
Post a Comment