A break may be described as when the song takes a "breather, drops down to some exciting percussion, and then comes storming back again" a break "occurs when the voice stops at the end of a phrase and is answered by a snatch of accompaniment", and originated from the
bass runs of marches of the "
Sousa school". In this case it would be a "break" from the vocal part. In
bluegrass and other
old-time music, a break is "when an instrument plays the
melody to a song
idiomatically, i.e. the
back-up played on the
banjo for a
mandolin 'break' may differ from that played for a
dobro 'break' in the same song". According to
David Toop, "the word
break or
breaking is a music and
dance term, as well as a proverb, that goes back a long way. Some tunes, like 'Buck Dancer's Lament' from early in the nineteenth century, featured a two-bar silence in every eight bars for the break—a quick showcase of improvised dance steps. Others used the same device for a solo instrumental break; a well-known example being the four-bar break taken by
Charlie Parker in
Dizzy Gillespie's tune '
Night in Tunisia'." However, in hip hop today, the term
break refers to
segment of music (usually four measures or less) that could be
sampled and repeated. A break is any expanse of music that is by a producer. In the words of
DJ Jazzy Jay: "Maybe those records [whose breaks are sampled] were ahead of their time. Maybe they were made specifically for the rap era; these people didn't know what they were making at that time. They thought, 'Oh, we want to make a jazz record. Like the song Stereo World By Feeder and Upon This Rock by Newsboys are example that have a break and use this technique. ==Breakbeat (element of music)== A
break beat is the
sampling of breaks as (
drum loop) beats, (originally found in
soul or
funk tracks) and their subsequent use as the
rhythmic basis for
hip hop and
rap. It was invented by
DJ Kool Herc, a
Jamaican who emigrated to New York. He is usually credited with being a pioneer of the technique of using two copies of one record so as to be able to mix between the same break, or, as Bronx DJ
Afrika Bambaataa describes, "that certain part of the record that everybody waits for—they just let their inner self go and get wild", extending its length through repetition. ==Notable examples==