- Source: Battle record
- Free Fire
- Yura Yunita
- Bandar Udara Internasional Kalamazoo-Battle Creek
- Pertempuran Prancis
- Biara Battle
- Label rekaman
- PUBG: Battlegrounds
- Ryuji Imaichi
- Hiroomi Tosaka
- My World
- Battle record
- Military career of Napoleon
- Battle Records
- Altair: A Record of Battles
- Wars of Alexander the Great
- Banda Singh Bahadur
- EugĆØne de Beauharnais
- Hannibal
- Lists of battles
- Battle Records (record label)
Battlefield: Fall of The World (2022)
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
Sorry, Charlie (2023)
Do Not Enter (2024)
Radio Free Albemuth (2010)
Tales From The Occult: Body and Soul (2023)
The Outpost (2020)
Fate/stay night: Heaven’s Feel III. Spring Song (2020)
Hellboy (2019)
The Prestige (2006)
No One Will Save You (2023)
Underworld: Rise of the Lycans (2009)
Creed III (2023)
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A battle record, also often called a battle tool or battle breaks, is a vinyl record made up of brief samples from songs, film dialogue, sound effects, and drum loops for use by a DJ. The samples and drum loops are used for scratching and performances by turntablists. The most famous example of this format is Super Duck Breaks, a 1996 release by "The Turntablist," a pseudonym of DJ Babu.
Battle records that get released to the general public are often made by DJs banking on their celebrity or looking to capitalize on rare items in their collections. Creative, novel, or bizarre inclusions are especially prized. Often, the samples featured on these records do not have the blessing of the original copyright holders. Because of this, the use of pseudonyms and anonymous releases are common. Often, even the original sources of the samples are renamed or obscured, leading to some newcomers becoming disconnected from the history of the work.
See also
Electronic Battle Weapon
Turntablism
Remix culture