On February 12, Blue Note Records
will release Droppin' Science, a unique collection of the legendary label's
classic late 60s through mid-70s jazz-funk tracks, all of which have featured
prominently as samples in some of the greatest hip hop cuts of the late 80s, 90s
and beyond. Hip hop artists ranging from Dr. Dre to the Beastie Boys and A Tribe
Called Quest have sampled Blue Note grooves by such jazz greats as Lou
Donaldson, Grant Green, Donald Byrd, and Lonnie Smith. All of these original
Blue Note tracks have been compiled for the first time on Droppin' Science,
which Blue Note will release as a 10-track CD, a 13-track digital album and
vinyl LP, as well as individual ring-tunes that are based on the exact sampled
loop.
Droppin' Science Liner Notes by ?Questlove
of The Roots
DROPPIN’ SCIENCE: GREATEST SAMPLES
FROM THE BLUE NOTE LAB
In hip hop’s coming-of-age during the mid to late-’80s, I slowly discovered that
my father’s precious record collection was an oasis of endless trivia. Friends
and I would sit by his turntable and play endless soul records only to discover,
“Dayuuuuuuuum! This is where [enter hip hop producer here] got his idea for
[enter artist here] for [hip hop song here]!!!!”
For those not too fortunate with a connoisseur figurehead like mine, there were
other options like Lenny Roberts’s Ultimate Breaks & Beats and Paul Winley’s
Super Disco Breaks, which basically gave you the Cliffs Notes on beat digging.
I’m certain this upset most beat diggers pre-’85 who went as far as to wash the
label off the record so that future break vultures couldn’t cheat with the old
“look over the shoulder trick” that DJs still do to this day.
Combine all this with the discovery of your uncle’s James Brown 45s, and you
pretty much have the soundtrack to the classic hip hop period of the late-’80s.
There were some notable exceptions.
The one that makes me the proudest, of course, is my hometown champ (and the
greatest, funkiest, and most precise DJ ever!), DJ Jazzy Jeff, who lived up to
his name in 1986 with a ditty called “A Touch of Jazz,” a compiled cram session
of ’70s funk/jazz trivia looped and scratched to perfection. It was the “DJ cut”
— remember those? — on his debut album, Rock the House (along with an MC I
haven’t heard from in eons? Any locale for a Will Smith? Anyone? . . . lol).
That was the first time I heard a Bluebreak used in hip hop (my favorite Mizell-penned
classic “Harlem River Drive” for Bobbi Humphrey). As time progressed, I slowly
started to discover the side of my pop’s record collection that I used to avoid
like the plague (I mean the James/Parliament/Cameo/Ohio Players/Earth Wind &
Fire smorgasborg was enough for my naive arse). Those records looked like old
peoples’ records — what in the hell was a Lou Donaldson gonna teach me?
Enter Idris Muhammad, a crucial general in the Blue Note army that was key to
crossing the prestigious jazz label over to the soul side of thangs. That was
how I got sucked into Bluebreaks. Same jazz outlook, just a lil’ funkier, to
reach the corners of the ghetto that an otherwise (still worthy) Jackie McLean
or a Horace Silver couldn’t penetrate. Idris’s drums had equal influence on me
just as strong as if he were playing the role of John “Jabo” Starks or Clyde
Stubblefield in the James Brown band.
And pretty soon, the progressive element of hip hop entered the picture and
traded their Ultimate Discos for post - Reid Miles-designed Disc(os). A Tribe
Called Quest, De La Soul, The Jungle Brothers, Brand Nubian, KMD, Leaders of the
New School, Pete Rock & CL Smooth, and even my group, all raided the closet of
Blue Note’s funk period. Of course, the benefit to all was now there was a
reintroduction to the kids of the parents to whom the initial Blue Note albums
were aimed.
Of course, with hip hop now going through a very “curious” phase, compilations
like the very one you hold in your hands are very necessary. Sure I can give you
the ol’ “can’t know where you going ’less you know . . .” shtick, but at the
rate where this “curious” phase feels like the pit of hell . . . then . . .
perhaps a cliché might be a breath of fresh air.
— El ?uesto
(aka Ahmir ?uestlove Thompson)
Droppin' Science
In Stores
2/12
Blue Note Records
http://www.bluenote.com/droppinscience/