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Seen this posted almost as many times as I've heard the amen break. But I suppose everyone's got to have that first time experience. For years I didn't realise the amen break was an actual sample, I thought it just referred to the drum pattern. So many lazy journalists and general idiots would call any old-school breakbeat an "amen", which misled me and perpetuated the cycle. This break has been mis-attributed so much. If you listen to a lot of jungle, you get very tired of it. It's almost unusable now, such a cliché and a trope. But I don't personally think this break spawned a sub-culture. There's nothing intrinsic about it to separate it from countless other funk breaks - hence my erstwhile confusion. It's the same basic rhythmic pattern as most breaks. Thousands of tracks might not sound the same without it, but it was never the first break to be sampled, and sample/breakbeat/b-boy/junglist culture would exist without it.
I guess what I'm saying is I'm so worn out by the amen break it's lost the trainspotter lustre to me.
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Mixes:
> Maximum Elevation [Progressive House]
> DI.FM 26th Anniversary Guest Mix [Progressive House]
> Live @ Dance:Love:Hub London, 11.10.2025
> Higher Peaks [Progressive House]
> Dance:Love:Hub Afterparty (The Return) 23.11.24
Like these sets? Come see me play live at Kibosh in Manchester: https://www.instagram.com/kibosh.mcr/
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