that is kool


Paul's Boutique is an absolute classic; the Dust Brothers are truly inspirational throughout.


Gravatar They didn't have to clear the samples. And I think that made all the difference.

That said, it's still a work of genius. Although do I wonder if they've had to make retroactive payments on any of the samples.


Gravatar For the record, It Takes A Nation of Millions.. came out the year before Paul's Boutique.

Also, the vast majority of the Licensed to Ill audience were not actually "hip-hop heads". Not saying this to bash them but this was an MTV audience.. most of them had never been exposed to hip-hop before Beasties and Run DMC (Rock Box and Walk this Way).


Gravatar Thanks for the heads up Rafi. I must have gotten my facts mixed up as to which album was released first. I have to disagree with you about the real hip-hop headz not diggin the Beastie's cuz I was definitely diggin License to Ill and I was a hip-hop fanatic who listened to all kinds of old-school hip-hop. What hip-hop fan can deny such great songs like Paul Revere and Hold It Now Hit It.

It goes without saying that the Beastie's received a lot of MTV airplay. As a result, they gained the knucklehead frat boys attention as well. However, they quickly gained the respect and admiration of true hip-hop fans after the release of Paul's Boutique.

Jack: I obviously agree with your comment about this being a classic album. What are the Dust Brothers doing now?

Eric: I often wonder myself how much money they would have had to pay to clear all the samples. I guess we'll never know, but we'll always have the tunes to remind us what it takes to create a hip-hop masterpiece.

Peace, Kevin


Gravatar "I have to disagree with you about the real hip-hop headz not diggin the Beastie's cuz I was definitely diggin License to Ill and I was a hip-hop fanatic who listened to all kinds of old-school hip-hop."

Saying most of the album's fans were not hip-hop heads is not the same as saying none of its fans were hip-hop heads. In the book the Black Swan they write about this common human mistake. We hear a fact and our brain assumes we can also make truth by switching the terms around. So for instance we hear 99% of terrorists are Moslems and our brain then falsely equating the 2 things might assume the majority of Moslems are terrorists. But the numbers are a whole different story. It might be more like .001% of Moslems. If that makes sense.... The scale of beasties audience was huge at that time in comparison to people who were "hip-hop heads". That doesnt mean people who loved hip-hop rejected beasties (though some did of course).

"However, they quickly gained the respect and admiration of true hip-hop fans after the release of Paul's Boutique."

I'd think so. But that's kind of the opposite idea of your sentence in the original post. I'd say the album also created some real hip-hop heads from the larger other group as well because it did sound so fresh and different. And because it really encouraged digging into sources (sampling old school artists, original funk/rock sources and contemporaries like krs and big daddy kane) a la this post.


Gravatar in defense of rafi's hypothesis, beastie boys def. introduced me to hip hop.
and funk.
and disco.
and a lot of genres that i never listened to before.
i was undoubtedly the mtv audience. when i was 14, mtv was all i knew as i grew up in a REAL small central cali town. thank god for the internet, i haven't needed mtv since way back then.


Gravatar Great stuff. Don't miss the 33 1/3 book that is all about this LP. The British series doesn't cover many hip hop titles yet but Paul's Boutique is one of them. I love the quote from one of the Dust Brothers that the reason they started doing tracks was "to earn enough money so that they would not have to leave the house". This sample break down makes a great add on to the book for me. Thanks, Kevin.


Gravatar Way to break down this track - crazy amount of samples, you don't hear too many producers ripping tracks this hard nowadays. Way to find all the originals for this!


Gravatar GOD DAMN IT, I love this blog.


Gravatar Get me a late pass on this one...

Great stuff Kevin, you know I dig on a good dose of sample anatomy. 'Shake You Rump' was always my favourite track on Paul's Boutique, so it's great to be schooled on all the samples.

Peace,

Dan


Gravatar The B-Side, "33% God", is basically an instrumental remix of this track with a few extra samples (maybe six more?) thrown into the mix. It's crazy.


Gravatar Yes Yes - Paul's Boutique is a classic and I have always loved shake your rump.

Fantastic post.

Peace,

Suspect


Gravatar great post... peeling the layers of the onion.

I remember when this dropped and how stunning it was, holding me enraptured being blown away in headphones.

I never knew all the cuts, but to this day still enjoy discovering the originals as they reveal themselves to me...

Amazing that the Dust Brothers were just KSPC college radio DJs in Claremont at the time...

What a story, I gotta get that book...


Gravatar Awsome website = http://paulsboutique.info/index.php

After the chorus phrase "Shake Your Rump-a" there is a drum break with synth. The first two runthroughs, right before the rap starts again, the concluding drum fill is from "Good Time Bad Times" by Led Zepplin.
the disco call is from Foxy's "Get Off"

'Scratch' heard under "the most packinest", "your belief, chief" and at the end - "Could you be Loved" by Bob Marley


Gravatar Excellent analysis. One of my favorite songs on one of my favorite albums. I never thought to do a sample breakdown like that. Well done.

A few corrections and whatnot:

That chicken scratch guitar at the beginning of Rump isn't from Ronnie Laws' "Tell Me Something Good." Laws comes in with "I'm Mike D and I'm back from the dead" (1:02). The chicken scratch guitar is from "Daddy Rich," the 4th (known) Rose Royce/Car Wash sample on this song alone.

The scratching attributed to Bob Marley is correctly attributed here to Afrika Bambaataa's "Jazzy Sensation." Like Kevin says, go to 5:04 and it's obvious.

I'm not sure about the Zep sample. I think I hear it at :39 of "Good Times Bad Times," but I'm not convinced.

I've heard this album a thousand times, but for the first time I heard a cat meow at :37, kinda hiding amidst the "It's the joint!" sample. It may not be a cat, but whatever it is, I've never heard it before tonight. What an album. Almost 20 years later and it's still surprising me.


Gravatar The drum roll that you attribute to Alan Moorhouse at 0:37 is I think taken from the Funky 4 Plus 1's "That's the Joint" itself, from right before they say "It's the Joint". And I think the sound of a cat meowing during that drum roll is simply an artifact of the fact that they've slowed the drum roll sample down. On the original Funky 4 Plus 1 track there is a high pitched background vocal that, if slowed down slightly, would probably end up sounding like a cat meowing.

Thanks for this awesome post.




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