Record Store Day 2017
people crate digging on Record Store Day 2017 (photo via @hcianciosi)

Library of Congress launches open-source sampling tool

The Library of Congress is getting in on the “more content to help with quarantine” game, with Citizen DJ, a new tool you can use to make sample-based beats from public domain audio in the spirit of golden age hip hop. Via LOC:

What is Citizen DJ?

Citizen DJ is a project by Brian Foo currently under development during his time as an Innovator-in-Residence at the Library of Congress. It invites the public to make hip hop music using the Library’s public audio and moving image collections. By embedding these materials in hip hop music, listeners can discover items in the Library’s vast collections that they likely would never have known existed. For technical documentation and code, please see the repo.

How will these sounds be made available, searchable, and discoverable?
The website will include three ways of accessing the sounds identified in this project:

1. An interface for quickly exploring a particular collection by sound and metadata

2. A simple music-creation app that let’s you remix collections with beats

3. “Sample packs” that you can download which contain thousands of audio clips from a particular collection that can be used in most music production software

Why Hip Hop?

“Since its beginnings in the 1970s, hip hop has become today’s dominant worldwide music genre and cultural movement. At the center of this movement is the DJ, whose role is to excavate, transform, and collage disparate and obscure sounds from current and past cultures to create wholly new, relevant, and infectious music.

The golden age of hip hop was said to be in the late 80s to early 90s when DJs had unconstrained creative freedom to collage from found sounds. This small window of time produced landmark albums such as Public Enemy’s Fear of a Black Planet and De La Soul’s 3 Feet High & Rising, both considered to be culturally significant and selected for preservation in the National Recording Registry at the Library of Congress. These albums were dense and intricate sonic collages composed of hundreds of found sounds. However, the increasing popularity of hip hop in the following decade gave rise to high profile lawsuits resulting in excessive restrictions on how audio could be sampled. Today, collage-based hip hop as it existed in the golden age is largely a lost (or at best, a prohibitively expensive) artform.

I believe if there was a simple way to discover, access, and use public domain audio and video material for music making, a new generation of hip hop artists and producers can maximize their creativity, invent new sounds, and connect listeners to materials, cultures, and sonic history that might otherwise be hidden from public ears.”

You can learn more here, and while you wait for Citizen DJ to officially launch this summer, you can check out the preview here.

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