Why Tribe Made ZERO Dollars from “Can I Kick It”

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  • čas přidán 28. 03. 2024
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    • RUN-D.M.C. Live at the...
    • Walk On The Wild Side ...
    _________________________________
    Topics Covered
    Sampling
    Lou Reed
    Can I Kick It
    A Tribe Called Quest
    Hip Hop
    Music History
    Sample
    Walk on the Wild Side
    Run DMC
    Aerosmith
    Breakdown
    #atribecalledquest #hiphop #musichistory

Komentáře • 377

  • @dhruvpandit4583
    @dhruvpandit4583 Před měsícem +365

    Industry rule #4080, record company people are shadyy

    • @leewightman8619
      @leewightman8619 Před měsícem +12

      That's rule no1#

    • @Positive_Tea
      @Positive_Tea Před měsícem +1

      Shiftless!!

    • @keatonwiththatheatson
      @keatonwiththatheatson Před měsícem

      Kids, watch your back ‘cause I think they smoke crack
      I don’t doubt it, look at how they act

    • @CarbonComs
      @CarbonComs Před měsícem

      @@leewightman8619it’s a q tip lyric

    • @SauceBlob
      @SauceBlob Před měsícem +2

      Industry rule #3333 distribution companies are shady

  • @clrs6576
    @clrs6576 Před měsícem +327

    "can i try something, COURSE YA CAN"

  • @Positive_Tea
    @Positive_Tea Před měsícem +130

    Aww man this is a tragic story. The session bassist is like the drummer from the Amen break. Billions have heard their work and they got paid nothing. Wild.

    • @Quesoeighty
      @Quesoeighty Před měsícem +6

      I was thinking the same thing! Sampling rules are bull shit.

    • @Valleyplant
      @Valleyplant Před měsícem +2

      That’s how it goes man, sampling is a risk!

    • @hunterericson6782
      @hunterericson6782 Před měsícem

      i was walking in druid hill, baltimore in 2008. rough area. saw a poster hanging on the wall of a burned up house : Jazz concert featuring Greg Coleman of the winstons.

  • @astropo
    @astropo Před měsícem +134

    Note that after Tribe’s song dropped, Walk On The Wild Side was back on top 40 radio in 1990, even when they didn’t play Tribe. Old guys complaining about clearance and then making money so many different ways was so cynical.

    • @need-to-know-
      @need-to-know- Před měsícem +2

      Thank you!

    • @need-to-know-
      @need-to-know- Před měsícem +8

      “The job of resurrector, is to bring life to the dead.”

    • @buckodonnghaile4309
      @buckodonnghaile4309 Před měsícem +2

      "Theft should be legal" -the young and dim

    • @need-to-know-
      @need-to-know- Před měsícem +2

      @@buckodonnghaile4309 boot leather tastes so sweet. The even dimmer.

    • @AndrewFullerton
      @AndrewFullerton Před měsícem +2

      ​@@buckodonnghaile4309 When theft is a victimless crime? Of course. There's no parallel between stealing the food off a starving family's table and repurposing an artistic motif. Physical property is 0-Sum, digital and intellectual property aren't.

  • @KennyLauderdale
    @KennyLauderdale Před měsícem +42

    Fortunately Tribe made money on shows and merch. All wasn't lost... Plus they have a historic record that they can STILL get paid off today for performing it!!! RIP Phif Diggy

  • @lairdhercules4553
    @lairdhercules4553 Před měsícem +134

    Same thing happened with the verve's bittersweet symphony. I always wonder how many great songs we haven't heard because of sampling cost.

    • @gfdggdfgdgf
      @gfdggdfgdgf Před měsícem +12

      Years later the verve got the rights though

    • @biglou9776
      @biglou9776 Před měsícem +17

      @@gfdggdfgdgf Too many years later

    • @leolovetoparty
      @leolovetoparty Před měsícem +12

      That was much more messed up and underhand. They’d actually (thought they’d) licensed the sample until a week before release, the owner moved the goalposts and basically blackmailed band and label.

    • @johnviera3884
      @johnviera3884 Před měsícem +2

      that’s why you ignore them and just release it.
      tribe called quest just paid a large marketing fee but maybe without that song they would’ve disappeared into oblivion

    • @brendonross5774
      @brendonross5774 Před měsícem +5

      Better to think of all the great hip hop we got post 1990 when producers couldn’t just loop a James Brown drumbreak.

  • @gnarwhal7562
    @gnarwhal7562 Před měsícem +65

    "Record industry people are shadyyyyyyy" - A Tribe Called Quest.

  • @soulchorea
    @soulchorea Před měsícem +64

    Iron-clad defense that no one has ever tried: "My client didn't sample this song; he simply sampled himself, LISTENING to this song! That's way different!"

    • @CantTellYou
      @CantTellYou Před měsícem +10

      You do look like a lawyer so, case closed verdict goes to the defense

  • @artisans8521
    @artisans8521 Před měsícem +26

    Same problem with The Sneaker Pimps's "6 Underground" and John Barry......and so many others. Only solution, play the song yourself. Then sample. Then you have only to deal with cover rights. Even Dilla stopped sampling for years because of the sample clearing conundrum.

  • @TheNicoDavis
    @TheNicoDavis Před měsícem +22

    performance royalties for musicians would be a good start. It's crazy to me how America there still aren't performance royalties for musicians the same way as everywhere else in the world.

    • @RockandrollNegro
      @RockandrollNegro Před 14 dny

      There are performance royalties, just not for session players. Very few places in the world give performance royalties for session musicians, as otherwise it would be pretty pointless to record an album that nobody is going to make any money off of except the record label. It's kind of a catch 22- be a session musician and get paid up front by the hour, or be a performing bandmember who makes royalties after the first 100,000 copies are sold, at 0.008% per unit. In most cases, hourly session musicians come out far better than band members do working the royalty system. Cases like the Clyde Stubblefield drumbreaks and the Herbie Flowers bassline(s) are unfair in hindsight, but how many thousands of hours did they get paid for performing on tracks that never made a dime in profit?

  • @iancpowell
    @iancpowell Před měsícem +14

    Dr. Buzzard’s Original Savannah Band for that slide guitar, “sunshower” August Darnell aka Kid Creole, killer sample that sticks out in other songs that likely used it to reference this track like MIA’s All I Wanna Do. Flipping stations one day ran into Sunshower and went on a deep dive researching the band, and then the sample history on something so simple that’s become so iconic via the samples.

  • @MegaVern1
    @MegaVern1 Před měsícem +87

    This episode makes me think of De La Soul, Biz Markie, Pharoah Monch and many others. Sampling is an art and if weren’t for hip hop I wouldn’t know where these songs came from

    • @need-to-know-
      @need-to-know- Před měsícem +2

      That’s why I disagree with the bull..bs. As a DJ, I think people we sample should actually be paying us if anyone is paying.

    • @ROLLINTHUNDERNUMBER1
      @ROLLINTHUNDERNUMBER1 Před měsícem +3

      De la soul and Biz markie
      got sued for sampling

    • @paulmcgrath6118
      @paulmcgrath6118 Před měsícem +3

      @@need-to-know-that makes absolutely no sense . Write your own song maybe 🤔

    • @need-to-know-
      @need-to-know- Před měsícem

      @@paulmcgrath6118 That’s like companies telling CZcamsrs not to advertise for them, create your own products while you’re creating your own content.

    • @ShrimplessScampi
      @ShrimplessScampi Před měsícem +2

      Samples in hip hop are a major reason I’ve grown to be a fan of music in general. Dipset had a stint where some of their craziest samples were from 80s rock bands. I’d look for the sample and more often than not would end up playing the source material just as much as the song that sampled it. Same with guys like DOOM and Madlib sampling old soul & R&B and obscure jazz, etc from countries like France and Brazil

  • @shoveI
    @shoveI Před měsícem +13

    youtube monetization works like that too, you could make an hour of truly original content but if there's a 30 second piece of copyrighted music in the middle somewhere they get whatever the whole video makes. That ain't right. They should get paid for their contribution but all of it isn't fair play.

  • @RealWakeMusic
    @RealWakeMusic Před měsícem +11

    Some of the best music content on CZcams. Thanks for all the continued work.

  • @P._Version
    @P._Version Před měsícem +9

    Peace brother. Method Man's mixing engineer here (also done some sample-free beats for him).
    Same 100% move happened with "All I Need". Ashford & Simpson wouldn't clear the sample unless they got the 100% publishing. Meth didn't like the song, RZA insisted, told him to trust him on that one and sure enough, they got a Grammy for it. Weird thing is Nick Ashford was the nicest dude, but I guess business is business...

    • @knocklesnar
      @knocklesnar Před měsícem +1

      Wow, that's wild. RZA really doesn't get the credit he deserves for being a musical genius and architect for their Wu's success and icon status. Thanks for sharing, fam, and for your delivering the world so much amazing music

  • @steve_santiago
    @steve_santiago Před měsícem +19

    Same thing happened to Peter Gunz when he sampled Steely Dan for Déjà vu

    • @Polostar79
      @Polostar79 Před měsícem +8

      That case was worse because Steely Dan were a-holes to them about it.

    • @steve_santiago
      @steve_santiago Před měsícem +2

      @@Polostar79 Yeah. I even heard those dudes posted a video clowning Tariq and Peter

    • @Polostar79
      @Polostar79 Před měsícem +2

      @@steve_santiago I initially read it was because they put the song out without clearing the sample but when you listen to Steely Dan clown them you get the feeling they don’t like rap at all and want to tax them.

    • @cptight88
      @cptight88 Před měsícem +3

      They used a super obvious piece of "Black Cow," did not flip it at all, and then had a huge-ass hit with it. You couldnt go 10 minutes in NYC without hearing it, which is where Steely Dan lived.

    • @sirjer73
      @sirjer73 Před měsícem +1

      ​@steve_santiago Are youtalking about the DVD when they are doing a deep dive of the 7 tracks on their groundbreaking 1977 album Aja. They comment on the process of making each track. When they play the beginning of Black Cow they chimed in with the " uptown baby we get down baby" chorus. Steely Dan had some incredible music. Even the Jazz cats dug their stuff.

  • @oflittleconsequence
    @oflittleconsequence Před měsícem +51

    I think you're missing a thread here. You touched on it, but it goes deeper...
    Lou Reed (certainly in his solo career - and especially on 'Transformer') was really pushing the edges of "rock and roll" into R&B, jazz and even the soulful side of funk. "Walk on the Wild Side" could even be seen as a primordial precursor to rap, or at least Blondie's version of early rap. He was rhythmically speaking much more than he was "singing" and that bassline and loose, jazzy drums were fucking delicious!
    I think he was a genuine fan of hip-hop and probably saw himself as one of the early brick layers (as you allude to with his 'The Original Wrapper'). I think he may have been wanting to be recognized as such but, much more so, he wanted to be involved and continue to evolve and blend genres. Given his musical styles, I imagine he would have been a fan of Tribe and what they were doing, so when they just wanted the sample of his (not his) bassline, and given the pale performance of 'Wrapper', I think it was less that he felt slighted or pissed at them, than he saw the writing on the wall and knew the genre was moving on without him.
    Sure, it was a douche move, but he saw his career ending and wanted to get what he could while he could, because those collaborations just weren't going to come and nobody was seeing him as the godfather - or even grandfather - of hip hop. Tribe could have just refused and went with another sample, but I'm damned grateful they didn't!

    • @jaydeem1264
      @jaydeem1264 Před měsícem +8

      As much as I love this channel, I feel like he doesn't really understand rock. That's fine, he doesn't make videos about rock and roll, it's just not his thing. This being said he should have looked into Lou's music more

    • @nathanlee1161
      @nathanlee1161 Před měsícem +20

      Just no. Rap came up as a specific culture, Lou Reed was not part of it, he got inducted unwittingly by being sampled and he might have liked it but that doesn't just mean you get to be part of a scene you're not part of. He was part of his own scene, its why its not really featured hugely about Reed's career in this, its about hip hop's mainstream come up and where sampling intersects with artists, not about Lou Reed per say. Those werent just internet days where everyone was exposed to everything, there's a core nucleus of where hip hop and rap came from and it can be localized. He might have wanted to collaborate with rappers and even been influenced by the budding new genre in places but that by no means gives him a place in rap/hip hop history other than the context of this video.
      During hip hop's formative years he was living in Long Island while rap was brewing in the Bronx, he probably didnt even know anything about it until groups got bigger

    • @moresnqp
      @moresnqp Před měsícem

      why do white people need to be credited for every kind of music? White slave owners actually were the prime influence for blues music, luckily they got plenty royalties in their time lol

    • @randomcharacter6501
      @randomcharacter6501 Před měsícem +5

      ​@@nathanlee1161I thought this as soon as I saw Blondie. There's a difference between making something more accessible to a wider audience than making it altogether.

    • @furcornmanwiththemasterpla8380
      @furcornmanwiththemasterpla8380 Před měsícem +1

      Honestly the bassline is so simple I think they literally could've just played a very similar bassline themselves and sampled that without getting sued for it

  • @13jcarey
    @13jcarey Před měsícem +8

    I have so much respect for the time, care, research and creativity that go into your videos. Thank you 🙌🏾

  • @MrDecksels
    @MrDecksels Před měsícem +27

    As soon as I saw the title of this video, I knew the answer was going to be Lou Reed. The man just didn't have the reputation of being sociable.
    Besides that, I've just read a biography about The Velvet Underground. It stated that Lou Reed had initially claimed 100% of all the VU-author's rights.

  • @pervertedalchemist9944
    @pervertedalchemist9944 Před měsícem +113

    Lou Reed was also a huge fan of the Kanye West album "Yeezus". So he stood up for hip hop even to the end of his life.

    • @swaglordcumlord
      @swaglordcumlord Před měsícem +1

      i thought john cale would be a fan of it

    • @brendonross5774
      @brendonross5774 Před měsícem +3

      Well Lou is “the original rapper” (circa 1986)

    • @startervisions
      @startervisions Před měsícem +8

      ​@@brendonross5774 1986? Are you suggesting rap started in 1986?

    • @CantTellYou
      @CantTellYou Před měsícem +8

      @@startervisions lol stop it Lou Reed’s song “Original (w)Rapper” is a certified hood classic!!!

    • @startervisions
      @startervisions Před měsícem +3

      @@CantTellYou never heard it

  • @wowmedialtd
    @wowmedialtd Před měsícem +10

    Another great DTG. The irony is that Lou Reed (and Velvet underground whom I'm a fan of) was backed by Andy Warhol who was famous for his pop art copying objects like soup tins. And often didn't even make the art himself. Herbie should feel proud of his contribution to the track, even if he was part of Lou's factory. And I know Lou's dead but it was an ass move to take all the pie, you never know, he may have shared a bit with Herbie....but probably not. Lets hope he's having a perfect day watching DTG.

    • @MitchTurck
      @MitchTurck Před měsícem +3

      Will add to the irony here: Warhol didn't even create the banana for the Velvet Underground album cover... he ganked it off some nondescript food advertisement and paid no one for the right to do so.

  • @DiegoDiaz-rr2og
    @DiegoDiaz-rr2og Před měsícem +5

    As much as I disagree with Lou on this I also think it's important to know that Walk On the Wildside wasn't just any song but an extremely personal song. It was written about drag queens, prostitutes, and other marginalized people he met and befriended with the velvet in the 60s. All those people where dead by the time the velvets broke up less than 10 years later. It's a commemorative song for a his dead close friends who he knew noone else would sing for. I figure that also affected his bad choice. All you mentioned plus the song itself being so close to him might have pushed him overboad.

    • @Ignoreduser
      @Ignoreduser Před měsícem +1

      They asked him first, taking 💯 of a transformed work is dirty. Like when DC sued “Captain Marvel” because he was similar to Superman. Take the percentage that’s appropriate.

  • @Stonefacemoai
    @Stonefacemoai Před měsícem +12

    Both songs are legendary

  • @clashpoet
    @clashpoet Před měsícem

    From what I remember, many many hip hop groups had tried to sample Lou Reed's music, especially "Walk on the Wild Side." He knew that once someone sampled it, that would be it for that song, so he got as much as could for it.
    Also, he was a solo artist into the 2000s. 90's era New York, Songs for Drella, and Magic and Loss are some of his best work.

  • @heychiyu1
    @heychiyu1 Před měsícem +5

    So you're telling me the Lou Reed slipped in a dis track to Run DMC?

  • @reimourrpower9357
    @reimourrpower9357 Před měsícem

    This is an awesome examination ofthe complexities of sampling and art crossing generations. Been a tribe fan since 1987-88 with "The Promo" & "Black is Black"on the The Jungle Brothers debut "Straight Out The Jungle". And I have greater appreciation of Lou Reed from this history; R.I.P. Rise In Power Lou Reed and DJ Jam Master Jay.

  • @nativesun7661
    @nativesun7661 Před měsícem

    This is such a greatly produced and researched youtube program put together with obvious love for the culture. Salute

  • @leewightman8619
    @leewightman8619 Před měsícem +26

    I don't get why artists are so harsh on sampling as it gets there music promoted when i hear a hip-hop track with a dope sample i look up the original track and listing to it and im pretty sure lots of people do that too..

    •  Před měsícem +1

      thats cause its never about just the money man....not in america for suuuure they gotta keep proving it to you tooo look at the new internet they just unveiled lmao its about fear complaining and greed

    • @Atlas65
      @Atlas65 Před měsícem +1

      Are you absolutely sure about that. Well maybe today. But pre internet days, in the 90's. Most of us thought that all of this music by these hip hop producers were written by them. Like Ready or not with the Fugeez. There is even my favorite trip song from Cream of Trip Hop 3,, which i was mesmerized by as a 12 year old kid, called Timbre, by Grantby which I found out later after the internet came that most of the music was written by the genius composer John Barry, that wrote almost everything regarding the James Bond films, including the the main theme. Before I couldn't belief how talented my heroes were. But then I found out I was giving them huge credit for what they didn't make.

    • @Ignoreduser
      @Ignoreduser Před měsícem

      @@Atlas65fun fact: DJing was a prominent thing back in the early days of Hip Hop. So people would know that it was sampled and where if they were really into it. Your issue stems from a lack of research and not the artist themselves.

    • @Atlas65
      @Atlas65 Před měsícem +1

      @@Ignoreduser Well guess you are right. I knew that they did sample things back in the 90's I just didn't know that they sampled so much. To my deffence is that I was only 11, 12 when I was listening to tat genre, trip hop and hip, that sampled alot. little later i started to play the guitar and got much more into music that was written by the artists, not sampled - Though may I ask you, I was 12 at the time and this was back in 1996. pre internet time, where was I supposed to do all this research..?

    • @Ignoreduser
      @Ignoreduser Před měsícem

      @@Atlas65 the internet existed since the 90s plus if you watch a few black media during the time you’d learn a little bit about hip hop

  • @wisteela
    @wisteela Před měsícem +2

    Excellent video. I first found out about this via your video on sampling 78s. Yes, it's really messed up.

  • @harrysutton8998
    @harrysutton8998 Před měsícem +6

    How much did Lou Reed pay Herbie Flowers for the bassline? Lou could hardly copyright chords I to IV, flowers did ALL the heavy lifting.

  • @mingomarrero
    @mingomarrero Před měsícem +1

    This video provides fantastic and educational information. It's relevant for both old-school hip-hop fans and modern music producers sampling sounds. 🙌🏽

  • @leewightman8619
    @leewightman8619 Před měsícem +36

    Lou Reed a multi millionaire taking 100% so his name should be Lou greed

    •  Před měsícem +1

      lol yeah i used to think he was bulletproof but uhhh idk now

    • @phunkidruma
      @phunkidruma Před měsícem

      He has the complexion for the protection and the connection.

    • @THLOANIOUS
      @THLOANIOUS Před měsícem

      Ima use this as a title

    • @pjohns92
      @pjohns92 Před měsícem

      Haha good one

    • @eadweard.
      @eadweard. Před měsícem

      ​@@phunkidrumaWhere did you learn to say this sort of thing?

  • @James-xz5rz
    @James-xz5rz Před měsícem

    I’d love for you to do a retrospective on tribes first album. Great video btw.

  • @morreddie717
    @morreddie717 Před měsícem +10

    Can you do a video on sample clearance and copyright in the music industry and the industry itself?

  • @LemonJuice2
    @LemonJuice2 Před měsícem +2

    I really liked your videos and I was wondering if you can analyze People Under The Stairs, they're one of the greatest underground duos

  • @unc1589
    @unc1589 Před měsícem +1

    Really good work on this piece!

  • @darylp2280
    @darylp2280 Před měsícem

    Thank you for elaborating on this history ❤

  • @JoyOladokun
    @JoyOladokun Před měsícem

    i love these videos so much. thanks for making them!

  • @michaellanyon1232
    @michaellanyon1232 Před měsícem +3

    I think it still needs to be negotiated, depending on whether or not a sample exploits the material that contstitutes intellectual property and if not, does the sample evoke or conjur an image of someones work, is it enough to conceptualise the broader work, Vs sampling that's transformative and becomes a work of intellect and subject to it's own copyright protection or status

  • @dakritic
    @dakritic Před měsícem +4

    This is arguably your best video.

  • @Slim_digi
    @Slim_digi Před měsícem +2

    "Spirit Mix" version is the best version of Can I Kick It. The video uses that remix

  • @valerie4912
    @valerie4912 Před měsícem +1

    I never knew! Thanks for educating me 🙏

  • @NmpK24
    @NmpK24 Před měsícem +1

    As someone who has been a session musician, there was always kind of an understanding if you came up with something during a session you wouldn't get credited for it. Any ideas were part of your fee, dependent on who you worked for. If you pushed a producer or artist for more they would probably hire someone else to rerecord a slightly altered version of your part anyway (if they liked it enough) and not call you next time. Or worse, tell other people not to.

  • @SouthsideFYC
    @SouthsideFYC Před měsícem

    Interesting video. Good job on the production

  • @numba2bvi
    @numba2bvi Před měsícem +1

    Well, depends on what kind of contract you sign as a studio musician.
    Great episode btw!
    Painting a house right now and it got me thinking, I'm painting the house so the owner can sell.
    Should I get part of the sale of the house since I after all painted it or should I get a one time payment for my services ?
    Just got me thinking.
    Love this channel man!

  • @Ancin47
    @Ancin47 Před měsícem +10

    These AI apps need a sample clearance process for using other people’s intellectual property.

    • @Thatguyoverthere606
      @Thatguyoverthere606 Před měsícem +3

      This seems like a no brainer.

    • @Ancin47
      @Ancin47 Před měsícem +1

      @@Thatguyoverthere606 True but the AI lobby won’t like the regulatory constraint.

  • @AndrewDasilvaPLT
    @AndrewDasilvaPLT Před měsícem

    Thank you for your work

  • @ionlawrence4401
    @ionlawrence4401 Před měsícem +1

    Was waiting for an explanation of what the other sampled artists received.

  • @evolve-officialartist
    @evolve-officialartist Před měsícem

    Watching this reminds me of The funk Brothers... You're right we need new systems in place.

  • @busywl69
    @busywl69 Před měsícem +1

    Lou was like F around and find out lol. Da man!

  • @leolovetoparty
    @leolovetoparty Před měsícem +3

    Without watching the video, the 2 word answer is probably “Lou Reed”. It famously happened to De La Soul and Vanilla Ice )to name just 2). The thing is, the music industry did really well out of sampling… 🤔

  • @williamperri3437
    @williamperri3437 Před měsícem

    Brilliant track! Back when most people had no idea Q Tip was this much of a genius.

  • @Gonzi_Supreme
    @Gonzi_Supreme Před měsícem

    I was lucky enough to see Phife perform solo before he passed and he said he haaaated this song for the simple fact that Lou Reed took all the pub and royalties. He still performed it for us though. RIP Phife

  • @oddeoarttv
    @oddeoarttv Před měsícem +1

    Great presentation

  • @crowfoot7355
    @crowfoot7355 Před měsícem

    Love that cut definitely a Tcq classic 👌

  • @juniorjones401
    @juniorjones401 Před měsícem +4

    I wonder if he charged marky mark when they sampled it for take a walk on the wild side

  • @riposter69
    @riposter69 Před měsícem +2

    Lou Reed taking a walk on the safe side with his lawyer.

  • @robrokswing8110
    @robrokswing8110 Před měsícem +2

    if Lou wouldve known the 20yr history of rappers and the drum intro on Walk before he had run dmc open he probably would've understood

  • @dangusto2596
    @dangusto2596 Před měsícem

    I wonder if Lou Reed did the same to Mark Wahlberg, aka Marky Mark from the ‘90s as well when he released the song “Wild Side”with the Funky Bunch. That song basically sampled “Walk On The Wild Side” in its entirety.

  • @patstevens4560
    @patstevens4560 Před měsícem

    This song got me into Lou Reed because that sample is so good

  • @nathanielbolden5053
    @nathanielbolden5053 Před měsícem

    One of their best jamz

  • @woojalitus
    @woojalitus Před měsícem

    That bass line is top 5 of all time. The fact that bassist didn’t make more on that totally unique hook is insane.

  • @owengreaves9997
    @owengreaves9997 Před měsícem

    your making some great videos keep up the great work

  • @a_doggo
    @a_doggo Před měsícem

    - [00:00] A Tribe Called Quest's "Can I Kick It" Sample Clearance and Lou Reed's 100% Royalties
    - Sample clearance complexities: Multiple samples used in "Can I Kick It" including drums from Lonnie Smith, horn stab from Sly and the Family Stone, and a baseline from Lou Reed's "Walk on the Wild Side".
    - Lou Reed's condition: Despite agreeing to clear the sample, Lou Reed demanded 100% of the publishing and royalties.
    - Implications: The lack of standardized fees in sample clearance exemplifies the imbalance of power in the music industry, disadvantaging artists like A Tribe Called Quest.
    - [03:19] Lou Reed's Relationship with Hip-Hop and Run DMC
    - Lou Reed's support for Run DMC: Inviting them to open for him and defending them against booing at a concert in 1984.
    - Lou Reed's venture into hip-hop: Releasing "The Original Wrapper" in 1986, indicating his interest in blending rock and rap.
    - Possible betrayal perception: Speculation on how Lou Reed might have felt betrayed by the hip-hop community, particularly after Run DMC collaborated with Aerosmith on "Walk This Way".
    - [07:52] Lou Reed's Perception of Collaboration and Betrayal in Music
    - Betrayal narrative: Speculation suggests that Lou Reed might have felt excluded from the collaboration process and therefore cleared the sample for "Can I Kick It" with the intention to reclaim control and royalties.
    - Symbolic connections: Comparisons drawn between song titles ("Walk on the Wild Side" and "Walk This Way") and perceived betrayals, highlighting potential motivations behind Reed's actions.
    - Impact on subsequent sampling: The dominance of Reed's 100% royalties decision sets a precedent for future sampling negotiations, impacting artists' creative freedom and financial gain.

  • @magicconches.
    @magicconches. Před měsícem

    This is why I am an advocate for sampling. It brings rap fans into new music. A lot of rockers are so greedy even though some of their stuff isn’t original either

  • @simonlove6023
    @simonlove6023 Před měsícem

    Have you heard one potential theory WHY Lou Reed took 100% of the credit for "Can I Kick It?"? The Velvet Underground song "Foggy Notion" when released on the "VU" album in 1985 has the songwriting credited to Lou Reed, Sterling Morrison, Doug Yule, Maureen Tucker and Hy Weiss. Hy Weiss being the publisher of a song which "Foggy Notion" quotes a section of lyrics from. Now, when ATCQ sampled "Walk On The Wild Side" without asking permission first, Barry Weiss, Hy's son, was an executive at Jive Records and Lou, being a vindictive man, sees his chance for revenge and took it fully.

  • @mikefishmusic
    @mikefishmusic Před měsícem +2

    What beat is that in the background of the beginning of this video?

  • @scaleshenry
    @scaleshenry Před měsícem

    Thata why that bassline was like that puzzled me for years because I only seen it as a Jazz bass but I hear the electric bass but I was not musically sophisticated to noticed ot was layered

  • @socio-tech
    @socio-tech Před měsícem +2

    WHAT!!? G-d spoke to you directly? Bob "MF" Power!!!

  • @realfingertrouble
    @realfingertrouble Před měsícem

    Run DMC had already done Rock Box in 1984, which was a precursor to Walk This Way, so rock and rap wasn't as new in 1986 (also Beasties were starting?) as you suggest.

    • @NetanyahuWarCriminal
      @NetanyahuWarCriminal Před měsícem

      Also Blondie in 1980 with “Rapture” and the Clash with “Magnificent 7” (1981), “This is Radio Clash” and “Lightning Strikes” RE cross genre tracks.

  • @robertdore9592
    @robertdore9592 Před měsícem

    A great Double bassline from the the great Herbie Flowers

  • @bleedingteddy
    @bleedingteddy Před měsícem

    It was just a couple weeks ago I was lamenting the fact that absolute masterpieces like People's Travels... and Paul's Boutique would never see the light of day under the present climate of sample clearance. Sampling should be looked at the same way mosaic art is looked at. Although it is made of pieces from different previous works it comes together to create something new where the whole is not merely the sum of it's parts.

  • @robbiedubbelman3024
    @robbiedubbelman3024 Před měsícem +1

    So basically you're saying we should give Herbie Flowers his flowers

  • @oriddle
    @oriddle Před měsícem

    Totally unrelated but do you know if the baseline used on "wild side" was an influence to the baseline of RHCP's "otherside"?

  • @sootsrichmore6421
    @sootsrichmore6421 Před měsícem +4

    I wonder if Lou Reed did the same thing to MARKY MARK aka MARK WALBERG when he made his song " WYLDSYDE"?????....🤔🤔🤔🤔

    • @diggingthegreats
      @diggingthegreats  Před měsícem +5

      I looked this up but couldn’t find a definitive answer!

  • @thutomofokeng2699
    @thutomofokeng2699 Před měsícem

    I love all your work bro, but honestly I think it's time we took a deep dive into Maxwell's creative process! He gave us masterpieces such as Accession! and lake by the ocean! Wow!

  • @rkk578
    @rkk578 Před měsícem +1

    Lou Reed didn't believe much in "flower power" when it was his money on the line.

  • @stewart2449
    @stewart2449 Před měsícem

    So glad you’ve made this, partly for selfish reasons. Is it just me, or is this version of the track NOT what was released in the UK? Until recently I’d only heard the Boilerplate Mix. Am I going crazy?

  • @nihir
    @nihir Před měsícem +1

    Shouldn't have to pay to sample a song. It's a new thing. Copyright should promote the creation of new art. No one is copying here. They are innovating. Insane all around.

  • @perplexedcatstudio3285
    @perplexedcatstudio3285 Před měsícem

    Would Lou Reed had wanted such a heavy payout if they had recreated the bass line with a hired gun? Since it's such an iconic riff, they'd still be risking getting sued if they tried that without contacting Reed before the release.

  • @smokeurobinson
    @smokeurobinson Před měsícem

    Whats the name of the song playing at the end if this video?

  • @DojoOfCool
    @DojoOfCool Před měsícem +3

    Something needs to be done to compensate studio musician who so many times are creating the Hooks that make a song great. Sure a studio musician a tiny bit of the mechanical royalties, but it's for a rapidly diminishing time, at least that's who it worked in my day. The whole revenue and royality system in music is totally screwed up and need to be tossed out and a updated system for the 21st century created.

  • @eddiekaya1
    @eddiekaya1 Před měsícem

    Didn't Tracy Chapman do the same thing To Nice and Smooth with the "Fast Car" sample in Sometimes I rhyme slow?

  • @logent80
    @logent80 Před měsícem

    Steely Dan did the same thing to Lord Tariq and Peter Gunz. They actually had no writing credits on the song too! 😮

  • @debomb721
    @debomb721 Před měsícem +1

    I didn’t realize herbie flowers has an interview, he’s incredible at bass

  • @jloiben12
    @jloiben12 Před měsícem +1

    Music IP should be about getting the originator paid, not about creating monopolies

  • @nickfanning9820
    @nickfanning9820 Před měsícem

    Ahh man your videos bring me happiness

  • @fjzingo
    @fjzingo Před měsícem

    Couldnt agree more!

  • @FluxJosh
    @FluxJosh Před měsícem

    icl background music is hitting

  • @logisticalstyles
    @logisticalstyles Před měsícem

    I wonder if he did the same thing to Marky Mark & The Funky Bunch when they sampled the same song and used the same name of the song they sampled.

  • @jrhas7214
    @jrhas7214 Před měsícem +1

    Did he do the same thing with Marky Mark and the funky bunch?

  • @camerakungfu
    @camerakungfu Před měsícem +1

    Lou Reed had no shortage of chips on his shoulders. So yeah, this seems more than plausible.

  • @DJChrisSee
    @DJChrisSee Před měsícem

    So, what happened with Marky Mark's "Wildside", which is 100% based on Lou Reed's song, and released 1 year later?
    Maybe Lou knew that version (arguably a bigger hit) was coming out soon and decided to be petty with ATCQ.

  • @imrang.8777
    @imrang.8777 Před měsícem +1

    Don t know about the betrayel Part. Why should he feel betrayed bc of the collaboration with another group?

  • @mthomas1091
    @mthomas1091 Před měsícem +1

    Wow good stories

  • @loadedfun4764
    @loadedfun4764 Před měsícem

    Check out the story behind “Double Dutch Bus “ with Frankie Smith and Producer Gene Leone.

  • @MetalSonic420
    @MetalSonic420 Před měsícem

    Great video.

  • @meowraiu2
    @meowraiu2 Před měsícem +1

    you never miss

  • @olima021prod
    @olima021prod Před měsícem

    Great content

  • @ryan_3113
    @ryan_3113 Před měsícem +1

    THE GOAT HAS POSTED