Thanks man! Appreciate it! I always say the drums are the heartbeat of the songs. If the drums sound solid on their own the rest will glue together really well.
Do you notice anything unique on the MPC 1000/2500 sequencers timing wise? Watching you program those drums, it just seemed like it sounded tighter and maybe more musical than how that would translate in Ableton. And how about those drum machines on the mix? I remember I heard a producer say once something to the extent of "Once I got the MPC 2500 I finally got a sound I was always trying acheive but couldn't working in the box" Thanks man, always been curious as a long time Ableton user
thank you for tunin in 🥁 The great thing about the MPC machines is that each one has its own sonic characteristics. You can play through same sequence and it will swing diff and hit diff in each machine. So the 1000/2500 are same machines just one is more portable. The 2500 take the transients and rounds them out a lil to give it a warm yet punchy sound. The built In compressor is also a deadly weapon. The MPCs have a natural 50% swing. When I export into pro tools it never actually lines up perfectly on grid and that’s what gives it that extra feel. When sampling drums in they are hittin converters in the machines so it’s different then just dragging drums from a hard drive into Ableton. Also, the MPC will glue your drums very well if you know how to really work the machine. Not that I can’t make my drums knock in software but I can def tell a diff when I program drums in a my machines. Hope that helps 🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽
That drum pattern is 🔥🔥🔥🔥
Thanks man! Appreciate it! I always say the drums are the heartbeat of the songs. If the drums sound solid on their own the rest will glue together really well.
Dope🔥🔥🔥
Thanks man 🙌🏽 appreciate the support
Dope video 💯🤝
Thanks for tuning in! 🥁🙌🏽
🔥 💯
Appreciate it! 🔥🔥
Do you notice anything unique on the MPC 1000/2500 sequencers timing wise? Watching you program those drums, it just seemed like it sounded tighter and maybe more musical than how that would translate in Ableton.
And how about those drum machines on the mix? I remember I heard a producer say once something to the extent of "Once I got the MPC 2500 I finally got a sound I was always trying acheive but couldn't working in the box"
Thanks man, always been curious as a long time Ableton user
thank you for tunin in 🥁
The great thing about the MPC machines is that each one has its own sonic characteristics. You can play through same sequence and it will swing diff and hit diff in each machine. So the 1000/2500 are same machines just one is more portable. The 2500 take the transients and rounds them out a lil to give it a warm yet punchy sound. The built In compressor is also a deadly weapon. The MPCs have a natural 50% swing. When I export into pro tools it never actually lines up perfectly on grid and that’s what gives it that extra feel. When sampling drums in they are hittin converters in the machines so it’s different then just dragging drums from a hard drive into Ableton. Also, the MPC will glue your drums very well if you know how to really work the machine. Not that I can’t make my drums knock in software but I can def tell a diff when I program drums in a my machines. Hope that helps 🙌🏽🙌🏽🙌🏽
@@evoproducer Man, thank you for the well thought out reply, I've always been curious and wanted insight into this.
What interface do you use bro
What’s going on man? I use the tascam model 12 as the interface for each channel. I also have an Apollo I use for tracking vocals