Sampled Here We Go Again Aretha

From Yasiin Bey To Outkast: 10 Rap Songs That Sampled Aretha Franklin

Elijah C. Watson Elijah Watson serves every bit Okayplayer'southward News & Culture Editor. When…

Aretha Franklin

Over the decades, a countless number of rap songs take sampled the music of Aretha Franklin. Photo Credit: Donaldson Collection/Michael Ochs Athenaeum/Getty Images

In accolade of the "Queen of Soul," we've selected ten rap songs that sample Aretha Franklin'south music.

Aretha Franklin, the "Queen of Soul," defined and redefined music for generations and crafted a legacy through numerous classic songs and her undeniable talent every bit a singer and musician. A role of her legacy is her relationship to hip-hop, with endless rappers throughout the years sampling her music. Equally rap enthusiasts know, sampling not only allows listeners to learn of music they didn't know well-nigh before, merely it also creates a generational bond as producers bridge the gap between genres. This is an integral role of rap culture, where producers oftentimes sample the music of older Black artists.

In honor of Aretha Franklin's legacy, nosotros chose 10 rap songs that sample the music of Aretha Franklin. From Yasiin Bey and Outkast to Rapsody and Kanye Due west, these rappers not only celebrated Franklin's work but introduced her to new generations of fans.

Yasiin Bey — "Ms. Fat Haul" (1999)

Samples: "One Step Ahead" (1965)

A flipped sample of "One Step Ahead" is the first thing listeners hear from "Ms. Fatty Booty." Produced past Ayatolloh, the track tells the story of Yasiin Bey and a adult female he's pursuing. The song captures the highs and lows of a relationship but offers an unexpected twist at the terminate. Bey's storytelling is what makes the song so memorable simply Franklin's vocals turned into a high-pitched loop get in that much better.

Rapsody — "Laila'south Wisdom" (2017)

Samples: "Young, Gifted and Black" (1972)

The title track for Rapsody's second anthology is essentially a tribute to Franklin. Producer Nottz kicks off the song with "Young, Gifted and Black," letting the sample ride and set the tone for the rest of the album. Then, he loops a thumping pianoforte part that accompanies Rapsody throughout. That the Northward Carolina MC'southward boastful declarations are accompanied by the Queen of Soul's powerful piano-playing is a cute, generational exchange. Rapsody is honoring the black women who came before her while etching out room for future blackness female artists on "Laila's Wisdom."

Kanye West — "Schoolhouse Spirit" (2004)

Samples: "Spirit in the Dark" (1970)

Earlier there was MAGA-lid wearing Kanye West, in that location was the old Kanye Westward who transformed classic soul songs into infectious hip-hop samples. Instance in point? "Spirit in the Dark." Franklin'southward tiresome and soulful croon is almost unrecognizable in the hands of West, who makes her audio like a chipmunk. But the sample works, a phone call and response effect happening between West and Franklin. Too, fun fact: Franklin allowed Due west to sample her song under the status that "School Spirit" didn't contain whatever profanity. This is why the song is edited even on the explicit version of the album it'southward on, The College Dropout.

Outkast — "Jazzy Belle" (1996)

Samples: "Rock Steady" (1971)

Franklin's inclusion on "Jazzy Belle" is subtle, so much and so that listeners probably aren't even aware that she'south sampled on the rail. Producers Organized Noize took Franklin saying the word "Rock" and distorted information technology, the disc scratching making the sample that much harder to identify.

The Fugees — "Some Seek Stardom" (1994)

Samples: "Span Over Troubled Water" (1971)

Similar to "Jazzy Belle," the sample on "Some Seek Stardom" isn't equally pronounced as other ones on this list. Taken from The Fugees' first albumBlunted on Reality, "Some Seek Distinction" — produced by Stephan Walker and Rashad Muhammad — is built off a small looped organ office from Franklin'south "Span Over Troubled Water." But the conclusion to apply this song but compliments the theme of "Some Seek Distinction": staying to a higher place the evils and corruption of the globe which, in the example of the song, is fame and the bad that tin can come with it.

Black Star — "You Already Knew" (2011)

Samples: "Mister Spain" (1973)

"You lot Already Knew" is full of chopped up parts from Franklin's "Mister Spain." Producer Oh No makes the singer audio like a feature, her vox nowadays throughout the track from beginning to cease. Simply the best role of the track, which serves as a tribute to Franklin, is surely the bridge:

"How you doing, how you lot experience?
And allow the globe spin circular and round
No matter how information technology spin, information technology won't intermission me down
I'm on solid basis, just far above the clouds"

This, accompanied by Franklin's vocals and soothing instrumentation, is admittedly beautiful. A moment that's so pure and uplifting that y'all'll wish it lasted forever.

Lupe Fiasco — "We Love You" (2006)

Samples: "Until You lot Come Back to Me (That's What I'g Gonna Do)" (1973)

Sampling the changing pianoforte chords from "Until You lot Come Dorsum to Me" is an obvious but still keen pick. It carries the vocal's main melody and is such an integral part of the track. Speeding it upwardly just a piddling chip and placing it over a rap beat breathes new life into it, which Lupe Fiasco raps on in "Nosotros Love You."

Nas — "The Rise and Fall" (1999)

Samples: "A Song for You" (1974)

Those twinkling keys from Franklin's "A Vocal for You" add a sure menace to Nas' "The Ascent and Fall." The latter runway paints a very vivid picture of how unpleasant fame and success can exist. Equally the rapper chronicles his rise, the lyrics only go starker:

"Every night I slept with my weapon/To guard my family, for a minute, I forgot my profession/Not from Republic of colombia or Nicaragua/Don't distribute coke from Antigua that's shipped out to Panama/Pablo Escobar's bloody reign came to an end/Far from my life, a kid who fabricated his fame from a pen/Hit the studio and inverse the game again/Wrote downward all the pain inside, top of the charts, triple-platinum/Got the fake love dorsum, money stacks, more than plaques/Had to come across who I was just to know where I was at…"

Almost similar a somber lullaby the sample looms throughout, Franklin'southward vocal virtually honey inverse into a cautionary tale about the ills of superstardom.

  Mobb Deep — "Drib a Jewel on 'Em" (1996)

Samples: "Y'all Are My Sunshine" (1967)

Mobb Deep sucked all of the sunshine out of Franklin'southward song. "Drop a Gem on 'Em" makes "You Are My Sunshine" so haunting and unsettling, as the rap duo offers a warning to anyone that tries to cross them, Franklin's dissonant piano strikes accompanying them.

Public Enemy — "Revolutionary Generation" (1990)

Samples: "Respect" (1967)

Public Enemy'due south use of "Respect" is definitely more of an interpolation than sample but information technology serves and then much importance considering the rails's commentary on how black women are mistreated in America.

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This story was originally published in 2018.

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Source: https://www.okayplayer.com/originals/10-rap-songs-that-sample-aretha-franklin.html

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