

I wanted to figure out my own way to do this. “It was cool, I like 808 Melo, but we realized that everybody wants to do this shit, so we had to do it in a different way. “The drill wave came, Pop Smoke and all of them,” Cash explains. The sound was influenced by Brooklyn drill artists like Pop Smoke, but producers like Cash Cobain wanted to put their own spin on the existing drill movement that was already popular in the city. On the surface, it’s a simple formula-loop the chorus of “Dilemma” and put some drill drums behind it, and you have an extremely catchy new song (with a gritty, menacing edge). It relies on the sampling of classic R&B, pop, and rap records, and pairing them with drill production staples: gliding bass and emphatic snares. Sample drill, which is sometimes referred to as Bronx drill, is an evolution of the Brooklyn drill sound. Here’s a crash course on the bubbling subgenre. Sample has become one of the most popular music movements coming out of New York City, and there’s a high ceiling on its future, with a group of impressive young artists leading the way. All of that music was embedded into me, so when it’s time to make songs, I already know this shit.” That’s from the ‘60s, ‘70s, ‘80s, I know all of that shit. We all love music, so I just know music from when they were young. Blige’s “Everything,” and it’s been used over 400,000 times on TikTok and has garnered two remixes featuring A Boogie and G Herbo.Įxplaining how he gained a deep understanding of the throwback music that he samples, Cash Cobain tells Complex, “I grew up with my mother, my grandmother, my whole family. One of the biggest songs that have emerged from the scene thus far is B-Lovee’s “My Everything.” Produced by Cash Cobain, the song samples Mary J.

Young drill artists like Kay Flock, B-Lovee, Shawny Binladen, and more have been pivotal in pushing sample drill forward over the last few years. TikTok has played a big role in the explosion of sample drill, with many tracks being used as the soundtrack for viral trends, and now the movement has caught the attention of mainstream stars like Cardi B, who jumped on the remix for fellow Bronx rapper Kay Flock’s sample drill song “Shake It.” By flipping easily recognizable hits, like Lauryn Hill’s “Ex-Factor” or James Brown’s “Georgia on My Mind,” the songs are digestible and catchy, with plenty of viral appeal. As the name suggests, the subgenre pairs classic samples with New York drill’s signature bass-heavy production, to create a nostalgic-yet-modern sound. Sample drill is a subsect of New York drill, and it’s been bubbling over the last two years. The art of taking a classic song and transmuting it to fit a new era through sampling has been a staple in hip-hop production for decades, but now the New York drill scene is experiencing its own sample renaissance. The New York rap scene has a new formula that’s making songs go viral every day.
