The Winstons - Amen Brother descargar videos gratis


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Duración: 02:33
Subido: 2009/05/06

The most famous loop af all times! "Amen Break," a six-second drum sample( starts at 1:26 ) from the b-side of this chart-topping single from 1969. This sample was used extensively in early hiphop and sample-based music, and became the basis for drum-and-bass and jungle music -- a six-second clip that spawned several entire subcultures.

If you want to dive deeper into the evolving role of breakbeats in electronic music,

watch this video: https://youtu.be/eJf9Jptq7VY

Watch this video about the Amen Break:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SaFTm2bcac

The Winstons - Amen, Brother ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Winstons )

Wikipedia Source:

"The Winstons were a 1960s funk and soul music group, based in Washington, D.C.. They are known for their 1969 recording of an EP featuring a song entitled "Color Him Father" on the A-side, and a song entitled "Amen, Brother" on the B-side. Half-way into "Amen, Brother", there is a drum solo (performed by G.C. Coleman) which would cause The Winston's EP to become one of the most widely-sampled records in the history of electronic music. Sampled audio clips of the drum solo became known as the Amen Break, which has been used in thousands of tracks in a large number of musical genres, including drum and bass, hip hop, jungle, big beat, industrial and electronica.

The "Color Him Father" record sold over one million copies, and received a gold record awarded by the Recording Industry Association of America on 24 July 1969."

Label : (Metromedia Records, BMI)

Biography by Ron Wynn & Bruce Eder :

A Washington, D.C.-based soul act led by Richard Spencer, the Winstons signed to Curtom in early 1968 and lasted there for one single, the rousing "Need a Replacement." They had a sound that was somewhat similar to the Impressions, but were unfortunate enough to have signed with Curtom before the label had national distribution, and the single never got the play it should have. A year after leaving Curtom, they hit for the Metromedia label with a huge single called "Color Him Father," which became a Top Ten R&B and pop hit, just missing number one on the R&B list, and also earned a Grammy for Best R&B Song. It was both a great tribute number and outstanding lead vocal from Richard Spencer, along with Ray Maritano, Quincy Mattison, Phil Tolotta, Sonny Peckrol, and G.C. Coleman. Mattison and Coleman were veterans of Otis Redding's band. The Winstons eventually toured as the backup band for the Impressions, but never again made any noise on the charts.

The Winstons line-up included:

Gregory C. Coleman (vocals, drums)

Ray Maritano (vocals, alto saxophone)

Quincy Mattison (vocals, lead guitar)

Sonny Pekerol (vocals, bass guitar)

Richard Lewis Spencer (lead vocals, tenor saxophone)

Phil Tolotta (second lead, organ)

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Comentarios

5 years ago

tax slave

Entire genres were built on this one break lol.

5 years ago

TJ Ess

Literally 6 seconds that changed the course of music, forever, amen.

5 years ago

MikeBlitzMag

I bought the Winstons' Color Him Father single on Metromedia when it was first released in 1969, and immediately preferred this flip side over the A-side. It was a time when mainstream music was sinking into a protracted aesthetic slump of self-indulgence, and this relentlessly upbeat instrumental was a breath of fresh air. Brief career, enduring legacy.

5 years ago

GSgiraffes

According to WhoSampled this was sampled 2877 times. Like...how

5 years ago

Erer1243

A break beat can't mend a broken heart. RIP G. S. Coleman

5 years ago

Paolo Fiore

A six-second breakbeat clip that spawned several entire musical subcultures!

5 years ago

Dungzoo

Does anyone know what kind of drums he played? Mainly the ride cymbal. That seems the hardest to recreate. It almost has a distinct sound each time he hits it.

5 years ago

Neonmike

Kid ‘n Play - ‘Energy’ also samples the Amen Break.

5 years ago

Dan Balares

Atari Teenage Riot + Slayer = No Remorse

5 years ago

mj grinham

The beginning

6 years ago

Jermaine Long

Incredible piece of music regardless of sampling.

6 years ago

Maria O'Flaherty

And now everything makes sense....

6 years ago

Will Parker

Amen brother

6 years ago

Renzza

85% of my music taste is based on this one single track. Amazing

6 years ago

Reid 999

Dylan Ross ?

6 years ago

Mark Morales

WE GOT THE REALEST BANGER HERE FOLKS!

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