Ruling On Sampling Could Have An Effect On Hip-Hop[...]
[George] Clinton himself was not opposed to sampling. He produced two albums, Sample Some of Dis and Sample Some of Dat, which allowed artists to use [his] music without legal scrutiny.
"Well, first of all, I suspect that the industry again is trying to do to rap what they tried to do to funk, and that's kill it because it's got to much information, and spreading of information," Clinton told the Houston Press in 1992. "So what we've done to keep them from all this stupidity, like trying to sue, or saying that I'm suing people, is to put out a record called 'Sample Some of Dis and Sample Some of Dat' - just samples from alot of the old songs, because I have some of the demos of those songs, which is not what the record company owns, so I can license those to be sampled. We have a pay schedule that's really easy to deal with - if they sell records, they pay, if they don't they can try again. We got to make sure that rap survives, because it's our only means of communication that gets past the gatekeepers."


