Refreshing finding other producers besides bnyx that make the fire beats y’all do on ableton. Wish ableton community was as active as fl studio producer community
new editing is cool. sprinkle more misc videos, graphics, etc around the vid. add what inspired you on the day of editing. screnshots from things, photos,. yea, its cool.
personally. struggling with understanding how to do drums. id pay you for a personal tut. ill explain. irst i thought what makes the drum part cool. the contrasts between higher and lower frequency percusions is what i figured out. but then layring in order from hh-oh-perc-rim-snare-clap-kick-808 in order, still didnt exactly sound good what makes the drums sound good PT.2 - a bounce. a good drum pattern adds extra bouce that compliments the melody vice versa. but whats the theory behind making drum bounce. example of basic drum bounce is drums in drill genre. easy to deffirintiate, not many percussions. but then we take amenbreaks, and what makes the drums good there. what im looking for if you read this j1mmy and respond, is a theoretical sort of basic answer about drums and how to make them that can be used for whatever beat you are making. the logic behind making drums for example after the main melody is complete. understand that it can always be different, but surely there are some common things across all beats ever that drum patterns have that can help narrow down the excruciating pain of having limitless boundless INFINITE combinations on how to go about writing a drum pattern. THanks!
I dont think theres any secret to making perfect drums some techno songs just have a kick playing & it sounds great simplicity can be great, i think just having fun & having confidence in your ability is whats important generally in rap beats hh-oh-perc-rim-snare-clap-kick-808 are the main elements to build a drum pattern but you can get away with just a kick, snare & hihats the way that i make patterns is just an accumulation of learning different beat styles & putting together what i like best (confidence) Id recommend learning some styles you like most, recreate them regularly & experiment with adding your on spin on it youll start connecting the dots - that their aren't that many differences between genres, & that the biggest changes are in tempo & sound selection 🤍🤍
do you mean that when you are writing your drum patterns, you go in order from hh...808? I think that's going to make drums a lot more difficult. the tonal qualities of your drums are important, but it's at least as much about establishing the rhythm. It's much, much easier to program your drums with the rhythm in mind rather than the tonality-and it's easier to make decisions when focusing on shaping the tonality if you have established a good rhythm!
why after 3 consequitive hihats does a perc sound good and then a beat skip and then a rim and an 808. for example in writing the rhythm, you cant not think about the tonals of drums.@@lukaxz when a good drum pattern is written on my part, i go in whatever order drums i see pleasing. But i cant understand why it sounds better to me compared to another drum pattern one i made with a similar mindset. so i was trying to figure out some common patterns between good drum patterns, what makes them sound good, interesting, not cliche, not overused, etc.
@@madebyyanogi I'm not sure I totally understand what you're saying, but what makes drum patterns sound good is really how they work in the context of the full track. a pattern that sounds great in one song could sound terrible in another. my point was just that it's generally easier workflow-wise to get a solid rhythmic idea down before you really go in on the tonality as opposed to focusing on building the tonality from the top down. (for one thing, which tones sound good in a certain drum sound is going to depend on WHERE that drum sound occurs in the track, in relation to the tonality and the rhythm of the other drums of melodic elements)
Refreshing finding other producers besides bnyx that make the fire beats y’all do on ableton. Wish ableton community was as active as fl studio producer community
all of surf gang does im p sure. also check out dj blackpower
new editing is cool. sprinkle more misc videos, graphics, etc around the vid. add what inspired you on the day of editing. screnshots from things, photos,. yea, its cool.
sweet ty! glad u like it 🤍
@@xj1mmyxit feels more homey like that, 100% a vibe
this was needed, ty for this
appreciate it !
fire btw ❤
🤍🤍
taking a little break from cooking up rn but this got me a bit excited to get back on
thanks glad u found inspo in this !
great stuff
🤍🤍
would you condsider yourself an engineer aswell as proudcer?
i can mix, but i enjoy producing more
sound selection can be really helpful to save time mixing so i just favor that
i’m so glad i clicked on this video
thanks for watching!
How do you record your screen and self broski
open camera app + screen record at the same time
personally. struggling with understanding how to do drums. id pay you for a personal tut. ill explain.
irst i thought what makes the drum part cool. the contrasts between higher and lower frequency percusions is what i figured out. but then layring in order from hh-oh-perc-rim-snare-clap-kick-808 in order, still didnt exactly sound good
what makes the drums sound good PT.2 - a bounce. a good drum pattern adds extra bouce that compliments the melody vice versa. but whats the theory behind making drum bounce.
example of basic drum bounce is drums in drill genre. easy to deffirintiate, not many percussions. but then we take amenbreaks, and what makes the drums good there.
what im looking for if you read this j1mmy and respond, is a theoretical sort of basic answer about drums and how to make them that can be used for whatever beat you are making.
the logic behind making drums for example after the main melody is complete. understand that it can always be different, but surely there are some common things across all beats ever that drum patterns have that can help narrow down the excruciating pain of having limitless boundless INFINITE combinations on how to go about writing a drum pattern.
THanks!
I dont think theres any secret to making perfect drums
some techno songs just have a kick playing & it sounds great
simplicity can be great, i think just having fun & having confidence in your ability is whats important
generally in rap beats hh-oh-perc-rim-snare-clap-kick-808 are the main elements to build a drum pattern
but you can get away with just a kick, snare & hihats
the way that i make patterns is just an accumulation of learning different beat styles & putting together what i like best (confidence)
Id recommend learning some styles you like most, recreate them regularly & experiment with adding your on spin on it
youll start connecting the dots - that their aren't that many differences between genres, & that the biggest changes are in tempo & sound selection
🤍🤍
do you mean that when you are writing your drum patterns, you go in order from hh...808? I think that's going to make drums a lot more difficult. the tonal qualities of your drums are important, but it's at least as much about establishing the rhythm. It's much, much easier to program your drums with the rhythm in mind rather than the tonality-and it's easier to make decisions when focusing on shaping the tonality if you have established a good rhythm!
why after 3 consequitive hihats does a perc sound good and then a beat skip and then a rim and an 808. for example
in writing the rhythm, you cant not think about the tonals of drums.@@lukaxz when a good drum pattern is written on my part, i go in whatever order drums i see pleasing.
But i cant understand why it sounds better to me compared to another drum pattern one i made with a similar mindset. so i was trying to figure out some common patterns between good drum patterns, what makes them sound good, interesting, not cliche, not overused, etc.
@@madebyyanogi I'm not sure I totally understand what you're saying, but what makes drum patterns sound good is really how they work in the context of the full track. a pattern that sounds great in one song could sound terrible in another. my point was just that it's generally easier workflow-wise to get a solid rhythmic idea down before you really go in on the tonality as opposed to focusing on building the tonality from the top down. (for one thing, which tones sound good in a certain drum sound is going to depend on WHERE that drum sound occurs in the track, in relation to the tonality and the rhythm of the other drums of melodic elements)
sounds like a methboi/roxa/silver type beat
wow thanks! maybe ill do a vid for those producers too
imagine an edward skelektrix's blurry picture remake 😭 the only one on yt that could do that fs 🫶
this is a very good idea
LAZER DIM 700 VID PLZZZZZZZZZZZ
its about time !
PSYKOS VID????
working on it !