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Break (music)

In popular music, a break is an instrumental or percussion section during a song derived from or related to stop-time – being a "break" from the main parts of the song or piece. A break is usually interpolated between sections of a song, to provide a sense of anticipation, signal the start of a new section, or create variety in the arrangement.

Jazz

A solo break in jazz occurs when the rhythm section (piano, bass, drums) stops playing behind a soloist for a brief period, usually two or four bars leading into the soloist's first improvised solo chorus (at which point the rhythm section resumes playing). A notable recorded example is sax player Charlie Parker's solo break at the beginning of his solo on "A Night in Tunisia". While the solo break is a break for the rhythm section, for the soloist, it is a solo cadenza, where they are expected to improvise an interesting and engaging melodic line.

DJing and dance music

In DJ parlance, in disco, hip hop and electronic dance music, a break is where all the elements of a song (e.g., synth pads, basslines, vocals), except for percussion, disappear; as such, the break is also called a "percussion break".

This is distinguished from a breakdown, a section where the composition is deliberately deconstructed to minimal elements (usually the percussion or rhythm section with the vocal re-introduced over the minimal backing), all other parts having been gradually or suddenly cut out.[1] The distinction between breaks and breakdowns may be described as, "Breaks are for the drummer; breakdowns are for electronic producers".[1] In hip hop music and electronica, a short break is also known as a "cut", and the reintroduction of the full bass line and drums is known as a "drop", which is sometimes accented by cutting off everything, even the percussion right before the full music is dropped back in.

Hip hop

Old-school hip-hop DJs have described the relationship between breaks, early hip-hop music, and disco. According to Afrika Bambaataa:[2]

Now he took the music of like Mandrill, like "Fencewalk", certain disco records that had funky percussion breaks like the Incredible Bongo Band when they came out with "Apache" and he just kept that beat going. It might be that certain part of the record that everybody waits for—they just let their inner self go and get wild. The next thing you know the singer comes back in and you'd be mad.

Musicologist David Toop, based on interviews with DJ Grandmaster Flash, Kool DJ Herc, and others, has written:[3]

Break-beat music and hip-hop culture were happening at the same time as the emergence of disco (in 1974 known as party music). Disco was also created by DJs in its initial phase, though these tended to be club jocks rather than mobile party jocks – records by Barry White, Eddie Kendricks and others became dancefloor hits in New York clubs like Tamberlane and Sanctuary and were crossed over onto radio by Frankie Crocker at station WBLS. There were many parallels in the techniques used by Kool DJ Herc and a pioneering disco DJ like Francis Grasso, who worked at Sanctuary, as they used similar mixtures and superimpositions of drumbeats, rock music, funk and African records For less creative disco DJs, however, the ideal was to slip-cute smoothly from the end of one record into the beginning of the next. They also created a context for breaks rather than foregrounding them, and the disco records which emerged out of the influence of this type of mixing tended to feature long introductions, anthemic choruses and extended vamp sections, all creating a tension which was released by the break. Break-beat music simply ate the cherry off the top of the cake and threw the rest away. In the words of DJ Grandmaster Flash, "Disco was brand new then and there were a few jocks that had monstrous sound systems but they wouldn't dare play this kind of music. They would never play a record where only two minutes of the song was all it was worth. They wouldn't buy those types of records. The type of mixing that was out then was blending from one record to the next or waiting for the record to go off and wait for the jock to put the needle back on."

Hip hop, disco, and eroticism

DJ Kool Herc's innovative use of the break-beat came about through his observations of dancers and desire to give them what they wanted. In this case the who was b-boys (otherwise known as break-boys or breakdancers) and what they wanted was an opportunity to move explosively, express themselves, and peacock to women (Brester and Broughton 167).[4] This grounds the conception of the innovation both in the embodied movements of the dancers and in the eroticism and sexuality of the b-boys themselves. As hip-hop used a number of disco tracks, and a number of Afro-American and Latin American tracks popularized by disco record pools, the eroticism brought out by these tracks can be presumed to be replicated in these hip-hops mixes, albeit altered through the emphasis and repetition of the break-beat. This suggests strong ties between hip-hop and disco so far as their vibrations, in that both are dancer focused and as such the corporeal vibrations between the embodied sensual movements of the dancers and the sounding of the DJ are resonating off each other to create a space for expression and eroticism in the club.

Break

A break may be described as when the song takes a "breather, drops down to some exciting percussion, and then comes storming back again"[1] and compared to a false ending. Breaks usually occur two-thirds to three-quarters of the way through a song.[1] According to Peter van der Merwe[5] a break "occurs when the voice stops at the end of a phrase and is answered by a snatch of accompaniment", and originated from the bass runs of marches of the "Sousa school". In this case it would be a "break" from the vocal part. In bluegrass and other old-time music, a break is "when an instrument plays the melody to a song idiomatically, i.e. the back-up played on the banjo for a mandolin 'break' may differ from that played for a dobro 'break' in the same song".[6]

According to David Toop,[7] "the word break or breaking is a music and dance term, as well as a proverb, that goes back a long way. Some tunes, like 'Buck Dancer's Lament' from early in the nineteenth century, featured a two-bar silence in every eight bars for the break—a quick showcase of improvised dance steps. Others used the same device for a solo instrumental break; a well-known example being the four-bar break taken by Charlie Parker in Dizzy Gillespie's tune 'Night in Tunisia'."

However, in hip hop today, the term break refers to any segment of music (usually four measures or less) that could be sampled and repeated. A break is any expanse of music that is thought of as a break by a producer. In the words of DJ Jazzy Jay: "Maybe those records [whose breaks are sampled] were ahead of their time. Maybe they were made specifically for the rap era; these people didn't know what they were making at that time. They thought, 'Oh, we want to make a jazz record'".[8] Like the song Stereo World By Feeder and Upon This Rock by Newsboys are example that have a break and use this technique.

Breakbeat (element of music)

A break beat is the sampling of breaks as (drum loop) beats, (originally found in soul or funk tracks) and their subsequent use as the rhythmic basis for hip hop and rap. It was invented by DJ Kool Herc, a Jamaican who emigrated to New York. He is usually credited with being a pioneer of the technique of using two copies of one record so as to be able to mix between the same break,[9] or, as Bronx DJ Afrika Bambaataa describes, "that certain part of the record that everybody waits for—they just let their inner self go and get wild", extending its length through repetition.[7] However, it is likely that there were a number of like-minded DJs developing the technique at the same time; for example, Walter Gibbons was noted in first-hand accounts by his peers for cutting two copies of the same record in his discothèque gigs of the mid 1970s.[citation needed]A particularly innovative style of street dance was created to accompany break beat-based music, and was hence referred to as "The Break", or breaking. In the 1980s, charismatic dancers like Crazy Legs, Frosty Freeze, and the Rock Steady Crew revived the breaking movement. More recently, electronic artists have created "break beats" from other electronic music, resulting in a broad style classification itself called breakbeat. Hip-hop break beat compilations include Hardcore Break Beats and Break Beats, and Drum Drops.[7] It was during the break beats of the song that break dancers and b-boys and girls would become the focus of attention and demonstrate their personal flair. DJ Kool Herc inspired local dancers to dance on the break beats, creating new sounds by combining the breakbeats from various songs.[10]

Notable examples

Musical ensembles which are notable for their use of breaks include the Meters, Creative Source, the J.B.'s, the Blackbyrds, and the Last Poets.[7]

Notable breaks include:

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Brewster, Bill; Broughton, Frank (2003). How to DJ Right: The Art and Science of Playing Records. New York: Grove Press. p. 79. ISBN 0-8021-3995-7. it is a part when the music stops but then comes up again
  2. ^ Toop, David (1991). Rap Attack 2: African Rap to Global Hip Hop. New York: Serpent's Tail. p. 60. ISBN 1852422432. Quoting Afrika Bambaataa.
  3. ^ Toop (1991), p. 62. Quoting DJ Grandmaster Flash (1984, 1991).
  4. ^ Brewster, Bill; Broughton, Frank (2014). Brewster, Bill, and Frank Broughton. Last night a DJ saved my life: The history of the disc jockey. Open Road+ Grove/Atlantic.
  5. ^ van der Merwe, Peter (1989). Origins of the Popular Style: The Antecedents of Twentieth-century Popular Music. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 283. ISBN 0-19-316121-4.
  6. ^ Davis, Janet (2002). Back-Up Banjo. Mel Bay Publications. p. 6. ISBN 0-7866-6525-4.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Toop (1991), pp. 113–115.
  8. ^ Schloss, Joseph G. (2004). Making Beats: The Art of Sample-based Hip Hop. Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press. pp. 36–37. ISBN 0-8195-6696-9. Citing Leland and Stein (1987), p. 26.
  9. ^ . Mass Appeal. 2017-08-11. Archived from the original on April 2, 2019. Retrieved 2019-04-02.
  10. ^ Brewster, Bill (2014). Last night a DJ saved my life the history of the disc jockey. Grove Press. ISBN 978-0-8021-4610-6. OCLC 893792069.
  11. ^ Butler, Mark J. (2006). Unlocking the Groove: Rhythm, Meter, and Musical Design in Electronic Dance Music. Indiana University Press. p. 78. ISBN 978-0-253-34662-9. Even more common, especially in jungle/drum 'n' bass, is a break ... which fans and musicians commonly refer to as the 'Amen' break.
  12. ^ "Deep Blue's 'The Helicopter Tune' – Discover the Sample Source". WhoSampled.com. Retrieved August 4, 2015.
  13. ^ a b c d e Bloom, Ryan Alexander (2018). Live Drum & Bass. New York: Hudson Music.

External links

break, music, drum, break, redirects, here, automobile, brake, drum, brake, other, uses, break, disambiguation, confused, with, breakdown, music, popular, music, break, instrumental, percussion, section, during, song, derived, from, related, stop, time, being,. Drum break redirects here For the automobile brake see drum brake For other uses see Break disambiguation Not to be confused with Breakdown music In popular music a break is an instrumental or percussion section during a song derived from or related to stop time being a break from the main parts of the song or piece A break is usually interpolated between sections of a song to provide a sense of anticipation signal the start of a new section or create variety in the arrangement Contents 1 Jazz 2 DJing and dance music 3 Hip hop 3 1 Hip hop disco and eroticism 4 Break 5 Breakbeat element of music 6 Notable examples 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksJazz EditA solo break in jazz occurs when the rhythm section piano bass drums stops playing behind a soloist for a brief period usually two or four bars leading into the soloist s first improvised solo chorus at which point the rhythm section resumes playing A notable recorded example is sax player Charlie Parker s solo break at the beginning of his solo on A Night in Tunisia While the solo break is a break for the rhythm section for the soloist it is a solo cadenza where they are expected to improvise an interesting and engaging melodic line DJing and dance music EditIn DJ parlance in disco hip hop and electronic dance music a break is where all the elements of a song e g synth pads basslines vocals except for percussion disappear as such the break is also called a percussion break This is distinguished from a breakdown a section where the composition is deliberately deconstructed to minimal elements usually the percussion or rhythm section with the vocal re introduced over the minimal backing all other parts having been gradually or suddenly cut out 1 The distinction between breaks and breakdowns may be described as Breaks are for the drummer breakdowns are for electronic producers 1 In hip hop music and electronica a short break is also known as a cut and the reintroduction of the full bass line and drums is known as a drop which is sometimes accented by cutting off everything even the percussion right before the full music is dropped back in Hip hop EditOld school hip hop DJs have described the relationship between breaks early hip hop music and disco According to Afrika Bambaataa 2 Now he took the music of like Mandrill like Fencewalk certain disco records that had funky percussion breaks like the Incredible Bongo Band when they came out with Apache and he just kept that beat going It might be that certain part of the record that everybody waits for they just let their inner self go and get wild The next thing you know the singer comes back in and you d be mad Musicologist David Toop based on interviews with DJ Grandmaster Flash Kool DJ Herc and others has written 3 Break beat music and hip hop culture were happening at the same time as the emergence of disco in 1974 known as party music Disco was also created by DJs in its initial phase though these tended to be club jocks rather than mobile party jocks records by Barry White Eddie Kendricks and others became dancefloor hits in New York clubs like Tamberlane and Sanctuary and were crossed over onto radio by Frankie Crocker at station WBLS There were many parallels in the techniques used by Kool DJ Herc and a pioneering disco DJ like Francis Grasso who worked at Sanctuary as they used similar mixtures and superimpositions of drumbeats rock music funk and African records For less creative disco DJs however the ideal was to slip cute smoothly from the end of one record into the beginning of the next They also created a context for breaks rather than foregrounding them and the disco records which emerged out of the influence of this type of mixing tended to feature long introductions anthemic choruses and extended vamp sections all creating a tension which was released by the break Break beat music simply ate the cherry off the top of the cake and threw the rest away In the words of DJ Grandmaster Flash Disco was brand new then and there were a few jocks that had monstrous sound systems but they wouldn t dare play this kind of music They would never play a record where only two minutes of the song was all it was worth They wouldn t buy those types of records The type of mixing that was out then was blending from one record to the next or waiting for the record to go off and wait for the jock to put the needle back on Hip hop disco and eroticism Edit DJ Kool Herc s innovative use of the break beat came about through his observations of dancers and desire to give them what they wanted In this case the who was b boys otherwise known as break boys or breakdancers and what they wanted was an opportunity to move explosively express themselves and peacock to women Brester and Broughton 167 4 This grounds the conception of the innovation both in the embodied movements of the dancers and in the eroticism and sexuality of the b boys themselves As hip hop used a number of disco tracks and a number of Afro American and Latin American tracks popularized by disco record pools the eroticism brought out by these tracks can be presumed to be replicated in these hip hops mixes albeit altered through the emphasis and repetition of the break beat This suggests strong ties between hip hop and disco so far as their vibrations in that both are dancer focused and as such the corporeal vibrations between the embodied sensual movements of the dancers and the sounding of the DJ are resonating off each other to create a space for expression and eroticism in the club Break EditA break may be described as when the song takes a breather drops down to some exciting percussion and then comes storming back again 1 and compared to a false ending Breaks usually occur two thirds to three quarters of the way through a song 1 According to Peter van der Merwe 5 a break occurs when the voice stops at the end of a phrase and is answered by a snatch of accompaniment and originated from the bass runs of marches of the Sousa school In this case it would be a break from the vocal part In bluegrass and other old time music a break is when an instrument plays the melody to a song idiomatically i e the back up played on the banjo for a mandolin break may differ from that played for a dobro break in the same song 6 According to David Toop 7 the word break or breaking is a music and dance term as well as a proverb that goes back a long way Some tunes like Buck Dancer s Lament from early in the nineteenth century featured a two bar silence in every eight bars for the break a quick showcase of improvised dance steps Others used the same device for a solo instrumental break a well known example being the four bar break taken by Charlie Parker in Dizzy Gillespie s tune Night in Tunisia However in hip hop today the term break refers to any segment of music usually four measures or less that could be sampled and repeated A break is any expanse of music that is thought of as a break by a producer In the words of DJ Jazzy Jay Maybe those records whose breaks are sampled were ahead of their time Maybe they were made specifically for the rap era these people didn t know what they were making at that time They thought Oh we want to make a jazz record 8 Like the song Stereo World By Feeder and Upon This Rock by Newsboys are example that have a break and use this technique Breakbeat element of music EditA break beat is the sampling of breaks as drum loop beats originally found in soul or funk tracks and their subsequent use as the rhythmic basis for hip hop and rap It was invented by DJ Kool Herc a Jamaican who emigrated to New York He is usually credited with being a pioneer of the technique of using two copies of one record so as to be able to mix between the same break 9 or as Bronx DJ Afrika Bambaataa describes that certain part of the record that everybody waits for they just let their inner self go and get wild extending its length through repetition 7 However it is likely that there were a number of like minded DJs developing the technique at the same time for example Walter Gibbons was noted in first hand accounts by his peers for cutting two copies of the same record in his discotheque gigs of the mid 1970s citation needed A particularly innovative style of street dance was created to accompany break beat based music and was hence referred to as The Break or breaking In the 1980s charismatic dancers like Crazy Legs Frosty Freeze and the Rock Steady Crew revived the breaking movement More recently electronic artists have created break beats from other electronic music resulting in a broad style classification itself called breakbeat Hip hop break beat compilations include Hardcore Break Beats and Break Beats and Drum Drops 7 It was during the break beats of the song that break dancers and b boys and girls would become the focus of attention and demonstrate their personal flair DJ Kool Herc inspired local dancers to dance on the break beats creating new sounds by combining the breakbeats from various songs 10 Notable examples EditMusical ensembles which are notable for their use of breaks include the Meters Creative Source the J B s the Blackbyrds and the Last Poets 7 Notable breaks include The Amen break from Amen Brother 1969 by the Winstons 11 The Amen break is quite often used as a second hand sample from Straight Outta Compton by N W A which sampled the original Apache by the Incredible Bongo Band sampled from the intro Used by DJ Kool Herc the Sugarhill Gang in Apache West Street Mob in Break Dancin Electric Boogie 7 Ashley s Roachclip by Chuck Brown and the Soul Searchers Used by Eric B amp Rakim PM Dawn Milli Vanilli LL Cool J and many others Funky Drummer by James Brown sampled roughly 5 34 7 Used by Public Enemy Run D M C LL Cool J Ice Cube etc Fencewalk by Mandrill used by DJ Kool Herc 7 Think About It by Lyn Collins 7 The Bottle by Gil Scott Heron 7 Mardi Gras by Bob James cover of Paul Simon s Take Me to the Mardi Gras sampled from the intro Used by the Crash Crew on Breaking Bells Take Me to the Mardi Gras and by Run DMC on Peter Piper 7 Sesame Street by Blowfly interesting testimony of breakbeat science as the breakbeat is reconstructed from various places with solo drums in the song Also known as Helicopter break after The Helicopter Tune by Deep Blue which is the common second hand source of the reconstructed sample 12 Scorpio by Dennis Coffey 7 Scratchin by Magic Disco Machine 7 Soul Makossa by Manu Dibango 7 Super Sporm by Captain Sky 7 Move On Up by Curtis Mayfield It s a New Day by Skull Snaps Synthetic Substitution by Melvin Bliss 13 Impeach the President by the Honey Drippers 13 N T by Kool and the Gang 13 Tighten Up by James Brown 13 Cold Sweat by James Brown 13 See also EditBreakbeat music genre Breakdown Drum beat List of widely sampled drum breaks Ultimate Breaks and Beats Breakdancing Bridge music Get down Riff Song structureReferences Edit a b c d Brewster Bill Broughton Frank 2003 How to DJ Right The Art and Science of Playing Records New York Grove Press p 79 ISBN 0 8021 3995 7 it is a part when the music stops but then comes up again Toop David 1991 Rap Attack 2 African Rap to Global Hip Hop New York Serpent s Tail p 60 ISBN 1852422432 Quoting Afrika Bambaataa Toop 1991 p 62 Quoting DJ Grandmaster Flash 1984 1991 Brewster Bill Broughton Frank 2014 Brewster Bill and Frank Broughton Last night a DJ saved my life The history of the disc jockey Open Road Grove Atlantic van der Merwe Peter 1989 Origins of the Popular Style The Antecedents of Twentieth century Popular Music Oxford Clarendon Press p 283 ISBN 0 19 316121 4 Davis Janet 2002 Back Up Banjo Mel Bay Publications p 6 ISBN 0 7866 6525 4 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Toop 1991 pp 113 115 Schloss Joseph G 2004 Making Beats The Art of Sample based Hip Hop Middletown Connecticut Wesleyan University Press pp 36 37 ISBN 0 8195 6696 9 Citing Leland and Stein 1987 p 26 Party Over Here An Oral History of Kool Herc s Historic Back to School Jam Mass Appeal 2017 08 11 Archived from the original on April 2 2019 Retrieved 2019 04 02 Brewster Bill 2014 Last night a DJ saved my life the history of the disc jockey Grove Press ISBN 978 0 8021 4610 6 OCLC 893792069 Butler Mark J 2006 Unlocking the Groove Rhythm Meter and Musical Design in Electronic Dance Music Indiana University Press p 78 ISBN 978 0 253 34662 9 Even more common especially in jungle drum n bass is a break which fans and musicians commonly refer to as the Amen break Deep Blue s The Helicopter Tune Discover the Sample Source WhoSampled com Retrieved August 4 2015 a b c d e Bloom Ryan Alexander 2018 Live Drum amp Bass New York Hudson Music External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Break music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Break music amp oldid 1140046351, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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