Burial's drum sequencing program.
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Re: Burial's drum sequencing program.
It's not about triplets, swing, or any of that other stuff. They are definitely useful tools, but trust me when I say it's ALL about sample selection. You can use triplets or swing, but if you don't have the right samples, it'll sound like crap. For 2-step beats, sample selection and how the hits play off of each other seems to be a lot more important than in a lot of other genres.
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Re: Burial's drum sequencing program.
This is the song that Burial sampled from for the song Archangel.
Ray J - One Wish
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9_aUaiCXtJE
26 secs to 28 secs.
Ray J - One Wish
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9_aUaiCXtJE
26 secs to 28 secs.
Re: Burial's drum sequencing program.
Quite alot of his beats come from the old garage rythm where the snare comes 1/16th earlier to make it jerk that bit more
Re: Burial's drum sequencing program.
had the same problem, i just switched producing from fl studio to Ableton, and it has a lot of options to doo drums nice. If you don't want to change your program, so search for a VSTi Sampler and make your own samples, cut it out of tunes you like or record some real beats on walls, wood or other stuff.
- mondays child
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Re: Burial's drum sequencing program.
The whole point about this is that you make the sounds yourself, start with a template and work from that point onwards.
It's not what DAW you use or how you arrange stuff, it's the WAY you do it. There are no rules because each track you make should be different. Use quantize if you think it helps, turn it off and then deconstruct the beats, move stuff around to get a more natural feel.
You can make the beats as complex or minimal as you like but it should have some kind of a groove or swing to it. There are plenty of places to get decent samples and a lot of them have been mentioned in this forum. Also if you can get hold of a mic, try sampling into the DAW or a Minidisc/tape recorder.
I wouldn't worry about it, the heart of 2 Step is a swinging beat that can be made on really cheap gear, you don't need loads of expensive kit to do it.
A useful trick is to multi track the same drum part I.E have two or three copies of the same thing, this can help to double the loudness, then you can add different compression EQ ing and so on to each copy. Try messing around with stuff like this and envelopes, Filters, gates and the like.
It's not what DAW you use or how you arrange stuff, it's the WAY you do it. There are no rules because each track you make should be different. Use quantize if you think it helps, turn it off and then deconstruct the beats, move stuff around to get a more natural feel.
You can make the beats as complex or minimal as you like but it should have some kind of a groove or swing to it. There are plenty of places to get decent samples and a lot of them have been mentioned in this forum. Also if you can get hold of a mic, try sampling into the DAW or a Minidisc/tape recorder.
I wouldn't worry about it, the heart of 2 Step is a swinging beat that can be made on really cheap gear, you don't need loads of expensive kit to do it.
A useful trick is to multi track the same drum part I.E have two or three copies of the same thing, this can help to double the loudness, then you can add different compression EQ ing and so on to each copy. Try messing around with stuff like this and envelopes, Filters, gates and the like.
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