Soul Sides / Sliced: Breaking Beats Down Main MenuBreaking Down: The Emotions' "Blind Alley" (Stax, 1972)Breaking Down: Sly and the Family Stone's "Sing a Simple Song" (1968)Joseph Schloss dissects Sly and the Family Stone's "Sing a Simple Song"Breaking Down: Cypress Hill's "How I Could Just Kill a Man"Breaking Down: The Impressions' "My Deceiving Heart"Breaking Down: The Souls of Mischief's "A Name I Call Myself" (1993)Oliver Wang918df11fe894a275490c89b013e2201b6eff6a54Loren Kajikawa8a2c7f4e0e5b2e790c0572a2adabcbdd73c09bf4Joseph Schloss0f83890ec22453923318b29cd83fe024cee91d9aBack to Soul Sides12011-10-02T00:04:54-07:00Oliver Wang918df11fe894a275490c89b013e2201b6eff6a547818-bar break. When the break comes in, the horns and guitar are in the left channel and the drums are in the right. Years later, hip-hop producers realized that they could isolate the drums on this song by sampling from only the right channel. plain2011-10-02T00:04:54-07:00Oliver Wang918df11fe894a275490c89b013e2201b6eff6a54
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12011-10-01T23:30:31-07:00Oliver Wang918df11fe894a275490c89b013e2201b6eff6a54Sly and the Family Stone's "Sing a Simple Song" (1968)1Sly and the Family Stone's "Sing a Simple Song" (1968)plain2011-10-01T23:30:31-07:00Oliver Wang918df11fe894a275490c89b013e2201b6eff6a54