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BEHIND THE BEAT :: Washed Out + Change + Gary Low - V

Posted by V

washedoutsamples.jpg

We blogged about Washed Out quite awhile ago and you really can’t visit any music site lately without hearing the work of Georgia’s Ernest Greene touted as some of the best and most original music of the year. While we are not in any way about to claim blatant thievery, we did recently come across an undeniable parallel between Washed Out’s Get Up and a track titled, quite similarly, Got To Get Up from soul funk outfit Change, off their 1983 album This Is Your Time. Let’s be honest here, it’s the exact same instrumental line and similarly to how a DJ might work, Washed Out warped and filtered Change’s original composition and overlaid a new vocal melody. It’s hard to define the ethical bounds of sampling, and we’re still big fans of Washed Out’s interpretation, but we’re nodding our heads in the general direction of credit where credit is due.

Below you can compare Changes’ Got To Get Up with Washed Out’s Get Up. And, as an added bonus, let’s also examine Gary Low’s 1983 track I Want You and Washed Out’s Feel It All Around side by side.

Change – Got To Get Up (128 kbps)

Washed Out – Get Up (320 kbps)

Gary Low – I Want You (128 kbps)

Washed Out – Feel It All Around (320 kbps)

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12 Comments

  1. Comment by Lola on November 6, 2009 5:08 pm

    Gotta say, I like the Change track better than the Washed Out one.

  2. Comment by Scot Bowman on November 6, 2009 6:03 pm

    Wow, the similarities are shocking!  They must give credit to those artists in liner notes, right?  Both tracks sound like loose covers of the originals.  Good job on making this discovery.

  3. Comment by V on November 6, 2009 7:04 pm

    Scot to my knowledge there are no credits. Nor was I able to track down discussions of sampling in interviews.

  4. Comment by G on November 6, 2009 7:51 pm

    Damn, I gots to get me some Change and some Gary Low.

  5. Comment by amclees on November 7, 2009 6:56 pm

    Washed Up.Funny how fine the line between artistic merit and blatant forgery has become.

  6. Comment by mike on November 10, 2009 10:52 pm

    ridiculous. i don’t see how them being samples ruins anything. it should be clear from the first listen. people have a lot of silly preconceptions about ‘originality’ in music and they act betrayed when they discover an obvious sample or lift, even if it was expanded upon to create something new and evocative, and singular.
    i recognized "i want you" the second i first heard "feel it all around" and it never for a second affected my enjoyment of it.

  7. Comment by steve on November 14, 2009 11:21 am

    i agree with mike.  this is a non-issue.  enjoy music, don’t ruin it.

  8. Comment by Scott M. on November 20, 2009 9:39 pm

    It makes sense to want to fault Washed Out for forgery. But listen to his music after or before hearing what he’s sampled… his music is simply transcending of any or all preconceptions. His music is beautiful in a way no one’s heard in ages.

  9. Comment by Evan on January 31, 2010 10:26 pm

    I know I am a little late to the game, but I just stumbled on this site. This is something else. I love washed out, but always wondered where "Get Up" stemmed from. This is less of a revision (like "Feel it all Around") and more like a vocal track over a tune. He should identify this sample because it’s beyond a sample. It’s basically his whole song. 

  10. Comment by Kevin S on February 16, 2010 8:27 pm

    If anything we should credit this guy with the ability to borrow from what’s already been done, incorporate a twist of his own, and generate content that’s become what appears to be a real enjoyment for most of his listeners.

     I’m searching EVERYWHERE for the sample(s) that were used to create "feel it all around" Anyone know? Anyone have a guess or 2??

  11. Comment by Kevin S on February 16, 2010 8:35 pm

    what I meant to ask is, do you think the sound is created by gary low + something else, or, do you think that he added that sustained humid breathy sound himself

  12. Comment by Mr.Wonderful on February 27, 2010 8:51 am

    this really isn’t news most music heads know this was originally a change record and sampling/covering isn’t exactly new either .. so I don’t particularly see the point of this post

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