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That brings back memories!!!
We shared this with each other in college- back in 1998. Tons of fun!
This still works exactly the same on Win 10 if you set compatibility mode to "Win XP SP3".
Bram Bos makes some of the best soft-synths available on iOS - Mononoke is an especially beautiful thing. The anniversary version of Hammerhead is an absolute joy.
Yes!! Just to be explicit here - the dev behind the original Hammerhead makes a whole suite of iOS music apps now. Still going strong, crazy value for the money. Bram Bos is great.
The highlight for me in highschool music class was learning to use Hammerhead for an assignment. I was horrible at the recorder and dreaded music class because of it, but creating beats was fun.
Heh, I remember playing around with Hammerhead back in the 1990s. Nothing came of it, but it was fun.

Sadly, the download link appears to be broken. :-(

Indeed it isn't working. Cnet or other download repositories has the exe available.
They do, yes. Thank you!
I used that to make tracks with Hammerhead in the 90s. Some of my friends also did.

I was too young to club in 1997, but I knew Prodigy. The "Jungle" preset showed the secret to the some Prodigy drum sounds. Being young I was quite late in the game, and that thrashy DnB wasn't fashionable anymore (everyone was into quieter DnB around the 2000s), but our teen group loved it and it was a blast to show it to friends.

I had one of the free DAWs from the time, but one of my pals used SoundForge to put drums together. Very time consuming but to be fair I was more productive back them than now.

When I interned at a professional studio, I also used it a couple times in customer tracks that required electronic drums. We had a Roland TR-505 I think, but some customers thought it sounded too 80s for the time.

For anyone who doesn't have Windows or can't install it, here's a video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l4aaBzyH7hU

IIRC the "jungle" preset was just the Amen break: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FFKMtv8tU0U
Record companies and artists selling their sample stuff for millions and the original artist who made that drum solo got nothing, dying homeless in 2006.

If we worry about piracy, we should worry about this stuff too.

In fairness, the vast majority of tracks that use the amen break aren't going to make "millions". It started out as a few underground records that would have a relatively limited distribution. There was a lot of sampling that went on and nobody really thought anything of it because people weren't making large sums of money from it. In fact underground artists would often sample each other too and nobody minded. The problem was the amen break got sampled and almost nobody knew where it came from. It then got resampled and resampled, it was sampled so often that it started to appear on sample disks as if it were public domain. It's only relatively recently that it's become public knowledge. Heck, I'd been producing music for years before I realised and probably used that sample myself. The Winstons would have had no way to know they were being sampled either because of how niche that music scene was (and to some extent still is). So by the time the industry was big enough that artists were making a killing from that sample, it was already out there and everywhere.

I'm not saying it's fair but its far from the only sample to have been used everywhere with little recognition and sampling was one of the pivotal revolutions that gave the rise electronic music.

It wasn't exactly just a niche sample used in niche music. It was already one of the most sampled songs in Hip Hop when the authors found out about it.
Yes, when the authors found out. My point was that sample was in circulation for years back when the scene was underground and most of the artists sampling it would have taken that sample from other electronic artists rather than from the original Winstons vinyl.

I used to see this kind of thing happen all the time and not just the Amen break.

> and most of the artists sampling it would have taken that sample from other electronic artists rather than from the original Winstons vinyl

It was already popular in hip hop several years before it became popular in the underground electronic scene. It was used by Salt-n-Pepa in 1986, and by NWA, Ghetto Boys, 2 Live Crew and Ultramagnetic MCs in 1988. Even Janet Jackson used it in 1990. Heck, Informer by Snow used it! And those are the ones we know. Hardly underground.

In hip hop it was most certainly taken from the vinyl, as samplers with the required storage were still quite pricy at the time, not to mention most producers were doing their own sampling. The track name was probably passed from DJ to DJ.

The Amen craze in Electronic music only started in the early 90s. There was already some break beats in the last years of the 80s, but it was mostly Funky Drummer. It was around 90/91 when electronic musicians started doing it, from Atari Teenage Riot to Carl Cox, but it was already a thing in hip hop.

> In hip hop it was most certainly taken from the vinyl, as samplers with the required storage were still quite pricy at the time

Hardware samplers were. But a lot of home studios had an Atari ST or Amiga. Plus regardless of the hardware used, those samples would have to be stored somewhere (even on hardware samplers) to be able to playback in the first place. I mean how else are you going to sequence it, save it when you're done and recall it again after? A lot of hardware from that era, and especially the Atari ST and Amiga, would have floppy drives and it was pretty common for people to share a sample disks.

I've posted this before but here is a video of Norman Cook showing off his Atari ST: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLjgXPDzeZo

The Creator app he runs on the Atari ST is a MIDI sequencer, not a DAW or sampler. The machine is probably not fast enough for realtime sampling. For sampling he is very well known for having used a pair of Akai S950s, each with 2.25MB of RAM. You can see them both on the rack behind him with the round yellow stickers. Just in case: this specific model also came out after most of the recording I mentioned.

Anyway, I was talking about 1986 and 1988... Rockefeller Skank was released in 1998. It's not exactly representative of a hip-hop setup from 12 years before. Either way, it is quite clear that he also samples from vinyl, like I said.

Anyway, I don't see how this is relevant to the topic. My point is that the sample was well known and was used in mainstream hip-hop from the beginning, it was never only an "underground secret distributed in disks"... that happened much later than the usage in hip-hop.

If there's any pre-1986 underground track using the Amen Break, or any documented use, it would be very interesting to know, because it would should be part of music history!

> The Creator app he runs on the Atari ST is a MIDI sequencer, not a DAW.

I didn't say it was a DAW. I assumed it was a tracker but didn't really look that closely at it.

> The machine is probably not fast enough for realtime sampling.

By the late 80s it was. There were definitely DAWs available for the ST. But Amiga was definitely the king for home sampling.

> For sampling he is very well known for having used a pair of Akai S950s, each with 2.25MB of RAM. You can see them both on the rack behind him with the round yellow stickers. Just in case: this specific model also came out after most of the recording I mentioned.

Well as you later go on to say, Rockefeller Skank was quite a bit later. But both the ST and Amiga were used for sampling. In fact coincidentally there's a discussion on the HN home page right now about doing exactly (re: Trackers). Lots of videos on Youtube of Amiga samplers too.

> Anyway, I was talking about 1986 and 1988... Rockefeller Skank was released in 1998.

Various models of Atari and Amiga were already out and available in the mid-80s and I very much doubt Norman Cook bought his ST new in 1995 to record Rockefeller Skank. But I do take your point that on this specific occasion he wasn't using the ST for sampling and nor was the ST powerful enough when it first hit the market. I believe the Amiga was. Also plenty of hardware sported floppy disk drives too (like the aforementioned Akai S950s). So my point about producers sharing sample disks still stands.

I guess this is a futile discussion though because we'll never really know who sampled Amen, Brother and who borrowed the sample of their mates.

> Either way, it is quite clear that he also samples from vinyl, like I said.

Loads of people sampled from vinyl. I've even done that. I wasn't arguing that didn't happen. All I was saying that there was also a lot of sample swapping going on and given the prevalence of the Amen break I'd wager a lot of producers had the sample included with a percussion set without knowing its origin. I mean it's included in the Hammerhead program exactly like that! I've got stacks of disks floating about of percussion I didn't directly rip.

> Anyway, I don't see how this is relevant to the topic. My point is that the sample was well known and was used in mainstream hip-hop from the beginning, it was never only an "underground secret distributed in disks"... that happened much later than the usage in hip-hop.

It's relevant because I'm saying that I think it was less well known than you claim. I think it appears more well known now because the history of the Amen break is more widely known (the kind of cognitive bias where we think things that we recently learn then seem like obvious facts that we always knew).

You might be right to be honest and it might be my memory of the era that is flawed. :/ However if that is the case then I find it weird that the sample wouldn't have been cleared by their big hip-hop labels and that the Winstons were aware of it's use but nobody cared enough to do anything about it until 10 or 20 years later when it was too late.

> All I was saying that there was also a lot of sample swapping going on and given the prevalence of the Amen break I'd wager a lot of producers had the sample included with a percussion set without knowing its origin

I never said otherwise. What I said, however is that this sample swapping you mention only happened in the 90s. Not in the 80s.

Your point was that it was widely used on "underground electronic productions" before it was used on any mainstream tracks. There is no recorded history of it, period. I'd be happy to discover that there were some usage, but there's no evidence.

My other point was that the history of sampling in the early days of hip hop is very well documented: it almost always came directly from vinyls, even when samplers were involved, due to the limitations of the machines at the time.

Sounds like I'm misremembering the 80s then. To be fair, after a while the years do seem to merge together. :)
To answer your edit:

> However if that is the case then I find it weird that the sample wouldn't have been cleared by their big hip-hop labels and that the Winstons were aware of it's use but nobody cared enough to do anything about it until 10 or 20 years later when it was too late

The Winstons leader claims he only found out around 1996. The question is, why didn't he seek royalties from people who used it afterwards, like Oasis, Norman Cook, Dua Lipa, Naruto soundtrack, etc?

My guess is that the track is in a bit of copyright limbo, because it's basically a cover of two Impressions songs. Another one is that the recording company owns the masters. They seems to have been bought by MGM.

I wonder if there's more to this story than meets the eye. The author claims a label offered to buy the masters by 1996. So there probably was money in the licensing of the sampling (or at least the risk of being sued, and the label was trying to cover its ass).

I don't know the arrangement between the bandleader and the drummer (maybe the drummer was paid by session and was owed no royalties), but, in my understanding, the owner of the copyright definitely was entitled of royalties. In the early days it was chaos but by the 1990s samples were definitely being cleared.

After 1996, when the author found out about the sample, it was used (According to WhoSampled) by Oasis, Skrillex, Prodigy, Dua Lipa, Lupe Fiasco, Skipknot, and in the Naruto soundtrack. There definitely was the possibility of the author collecting royalties from some of those from copyright lawsuits.

On the other hand I remember in various communities since the early 2000s people asking "how do I clear the Amen Sample?", but nobody exactly knew who to contact because nobody seems to know who owns Metromedia Records, who put the original album.

I remember articles and interviews about this from 15+ years ago, so it's weird how no lawyer got in touch with the song author, or how the song author never got a lawyer.

On top of that, Amen Brother seems to contain portions of I'm a Winner and Theme From Lillies of the Field by The Impressions, so maybe that's why Spencer (the bandleader) never got any money to begin with.

I guess we won't know now that both the drummer and the author of the song are dead.

Aaaahhhh.... This brings back so many memories. Roland MCs, 808s, 909s, the RM1x. They were good times.

Bram Bos also made moonfish as a sequencer, using the same UI style as hammerhead https://archive.org/details/moonfish12

So what's going on with "threechords.com"? The root page is full of broken links to sheetmusicplus, and this page says the editor is not associated with the developer of hammerhead. I mean, that was not uncommon for freeware/shareware 20+ years ago, but just sort of a funny mish mash of things here.