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6 Modern Songs That Sampled Classic Hits in Creative Ways

Samples are a dime a dozen in the modern music landscape. The now-common practice found its roots in the invention of the Fairlight CMI synthesizer in 1979 and the Akai MPC workstation nearly a decade later.

Stevie Wonder is widely credited as the first artist to utilize extensive sampling on his 1979 album Journey Through the Secret Life of Plants. With the rise of hip-hop, the practice became even more popular as MCs would craft their rhymes over sampled beats and hooks from past songs.

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Itโ€™s important to establish the distinction between the act of sampling and merely interpolating another artistโ€™s song on a track. A sample takes a hook, vocal, or other snippet from a song and uses the original material in the new recording. While often referred to interchangeably with sampling, interpolation is the use of a songโ€™s melody, lyrics, or another element without actually taking it from the original recording.

Nowadays, sampling is hardly confined to the sprawling world of rap and hip-hop, and the use of samples and interpolations is constantly getting more creative as time goes by. Below are six contemporary songs that sample classic hits ranging from pop and rap-rock to K-pop and disco.

1. โ€œPaint the Town Redโ€ by Doja Cat

Doja Catโ€™s indelible vocals arenโ€™t the first you hear on her single โ€œPaint the Town Red.โ€ Instead, itโ€™s the honeyed voice of Dionne Warwick delivering the hook of her 1963 ballad โ€œWalk on By,โ€ which quickly turns into a glitchy theme over which Doja brags:

Yeah, bitch, I said what I said
Iโ€™d rather be famous instead
I let all that get to my head
I donโ€™t care, I paint the town red

While Warwickโ€™s version of โ€œWalk on Byโ€ topped out at No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100, the rapper otherwise known as Amala Diaminiโ€™s incorporation of the Burt Bacharach-composed classic struck gold when โ€œPaint the Town Redโ€ became her first solo No. 1 on the all-genre tally after the success of her โ€œSay Soโ€ remix featuring Nicki Minaj.

[RELATED: Review: Doja Catโ€™s โ€˜Scarletโ€™ Is a Party on Fire]

2. โ€œPink Venomโ€ by BLACKPINK

BLACKPINK injected โ€œPink Venomโ€ into the world in the summer of 2022 as the lead single from their sophomore studio album, Born Pink.

Upon close listen, BLINKs around the world quickly realized the K-pop superstars interpolated three different smashes from the โ€˜90s and 2000s into their irresistibly catchy song, taking lyrical snippets from, of all places, The Notorious B.I.G.โ€™s โ€œKick in the Doorโ€ in Jennieโ€™s opening verse, and both Rihannaโ€™s debut single, โ€œPon de Replay,โ€ and 50 Centโ€™s โ€œP.I.M.P.โ€ once she tosses the mic to Lisa. Rosรฉโ€™s unforgettable declaration that sheโ€™s โ€œso rock ‘n’ roll,โ€ however, was all her own.

And in case you didnโ€™t know, โ€œPink Venomโ€ isnโ€™t the only track off Born Pink that ingeniously samples music from the past: the foundation for second single โ€œShut Downโ€ is actually the beginning of the third movement of Paganiniโ€™s 1826 violin concerto โ€œLa Campanella.โ€

3. โ€œMotherโ€ by Meghan Trainor

Meghan Trainor emerged on the pop scene in 2014 with a self-confident message baked into a throwback brand courtesy of her breakout hit, โ€œAll About That Bass.โ€ So itโ€™s safe to call her single โ€œMotherโ€ a return to form in the purest sense of the phrase.

The entire anthem is built atop a sample of The Chordettesโ€™ 1954 classic “Mr. Sandman,” with its a capella vocal line sped up into a perfectly Chipmunk-ish bass line. Trainor even cheekily turns The Chordettesโ€™ peppy refrain of โ€œbum, bum, bumโ€ into both a dig at the man trying to interrupt her pop sermon with all kinds of mansplained opinions, and a cheeky invitation for the girls and gays listening to shake theirsโ€”all with help from the mother of all showbiz moms, Kris Jenner, in the songโ€™s campy and colorful music video.

4. โ€œButterfliesโ€ by GAYLE

GAYLE gave herself โ€œButterfliesโ€ for her contribution to Barbie The Album by not only sampling Crazy Townโ€™s 2000 single โ€œButterflyโ€ but basically reconfiguring it into a completely new song. The track kicks off with the original guitar line to CXTโ€™s breakout No. 1 hitโ€”instantly familiar to anyone who grew up around Y2Kโ€”before the 19-year-old newcomer butts in to announce, “No, no, no, like thisโ€ and cranks up the amp to turn the song into a punky banger.

Overcriticizinโ€™, always villainizinโ€™
Overanalyzinโ€™, always overridinโ€™, slither like a snake
Just a caterpillar and you wonโ€™t see me gettinโ€™ bigger
โ€˜Til Iโ€™m flyinโ€™ in a figure-eight, circlinโ€™ your face

The โ€œabcdefuโ€ singer vacillates between menacing and rocking out, but the voice of Crazy Town frontmen Seth โ€œShiftyโ€ Binzer and Brett โ€œEpicโ€ Mazur are always there just on the other side of the cocoon wall.

5. โ€œBreak Up with Your Girlfriend, Iโ€™m Boredโ€ by Ariana Grande

Ariana Grande had a major surprise up the sleeve of her oversized hoodie with โ€œBreak Up with Your Girlfriend, Iโ€™m Bored,โ€ the flirtatiously titled final track of her acclaimed 2018 album thank u, next. After spending two verses urging her already-taken crush to split with his girl, the ponytailed pop star breaks into a clever rewrite of *NSYNCโ€™s beloved No Strings Attached-era album cut โ€œMakes Me Illโ€ on the songโ€™s bridge:

You can say Iโ€™m hatinโ€™ if you want to
But I only hate on her โ€˜cause I want you
Say Iโ€™m trippinโ€™ if you feel like
But you without me ainโ€™t right
You could call me crazy โ€˜cause I want you
And I never even ever fuckinโ€™ met you
Say Iโ€™m trippinโ€™ and it ainโ€™t right
But you without me ainโ€™t nice

To make the moment even more iconic, Grande reunited four-fifths of the millennial boy band (sans Justin Timberlake) for her headlining set at Coachella the following summer and they all performed the No. 2 single together.

6. โ€œHold Me Closerโ€ by Elton John & Britney Spears

When youโ€™ve been a living legend for as long as Elton John, sometimes the best samples are the ones found in your own back catalog. For โ€œHold Me Closer,โ€ his hit 2022 collab with Britney Spears, the Rocket Man mashed up not one, not two, but three of his past smashes for the occasion.

The disco-laced dreamscape obviously takes its central hook (and title) from Sir Eltonโ€™s 1971 classic โ€œTiny Dancer,โ€ while his and Britneyโ€™s verses take a cue from 1992โ€™s โ€œThe One.โ€ But if you listen closely, elements of โ€œDonโ€™t Go Breaking My Heart,โ€ his 1976 duet with Kiki Dee, can be heard as the third sample on the single.

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