Interpolation
In music, interpolation means taking a portion of an existing song—usually a melody, lyric, or rhythm—and re-recording or re-performing it within a new composition, rather than directly sampling the original sound recording.
Let’s unpack that step by step.
When an artist samples, they lift a piece of the actual audio from an existing track—say, a drum loop, vocal line, or guitar riff—and embed that exact recording in their new song. Sampling uses the original master recording.
When an artist interpolates, they recreate that element from scratch. They might sing or play the same melody, rephrase a lyric, or reproduce a recognizable hook, but they perform it themselves (or have studio musicians do so). The result is an homage or reference to the older work, but without directly using the earlier audio.
Why do this? 1. Creative freedom – Interpolation lets artists reinterpret a familiar idea. For example, Kanye West’s “Stronger” interpolates Daft Punk’s “Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger” both lyrically and melodically, but re-performed in his own production style. 2. Legal and financial reasons – Using a sample means paying both master recording rights (to whoever owns the actual recording) and publishing rights (to the songwriters). With an interpolation, you only need permission from and pay royalties to the songwriters/publishers, not the owner of the original recording. This can simplify licensing. 3. Stylistic homage – Interpolation is often used to evoke nostalgia or link eras together. Hip-hop, pop, and R&B frequently use this technique to bridge musical generations.
Forms of interpolation • Melodic – Replaying or singing the same melodic line (e.g., “Good 4 U” by Olivia Rodrigo interpolating Paramore’s “Misery Business”). • Lyrical – Quoting or rewording a recognizable lyric. • Harmonic – Using the same chord progression in a way that references a specific song. • Rhythmic – Recreating a signature rhythm or groove without sampling the audio.
Historical context
Interpolation has existed long before digital sampling. Classical composers quoted each other’s themes all the time—think of it as an early analog of the modern musical “callback.” Jazz musicians also built solos around riffs and motifs from other tunes. What modern producers call interpolation is really the continuation of that age-old dialogue between songs.
In short:
Interpolation = Recreate a piece of an old song within a new one. Sampling = Reuse the original sound recording directly.
If you think of music as a conversation through time, interpolation is when an artist paraphrases someone else’s line rather than playing a recording of them saying it.