⚫️ D&B SNARE DESIGN With FADE BLACK [Kick 2.0 & Addictive Drums]

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  • Опубликовано: 2 мар 2022
  • Andy & Nick from Fade Black teach how to make a well engineered snare drum. 🎛🎚🥁
    The rest of their course all about Drum Design, and many more videos from the best in D&B, can be accessed with a membership, just head over to Sample Genie to have browse :]
    sample-genie.com/product/full...
    #SnareDesign
    #Drum&Bass
    #FadeBlack
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Комментарии • 17

  • @diy4life-keigo
    @diy4life-keigo 7 месяцев назад

    Amazing....This is a masterpiece by geniuses. We ordinary people could never have come up with this.

  • @blackfen1x
    @blackfen1x 2 года назад +15

    Sick snare sick bri ish accent

  • @LogicControl
    @LogicControl 2 года назад +5

    Nice tutorial! I always worry I'll spend too much time just developing a drum hit that I'll lose the inspiration of the track lol. This shows me why 😂

    • @digitallabzmusic
      @digitallabzmusic  2 года назад +13

      really good idea to engage right and left brain in different sessions, sitting down making snares one day, then using them to make a beat on another day- have fun!

    • @infinitenovelty
      @infinitenovelty 4 месяца назад

      I’d like to second that. Have different sessions for sample creation, sound design, etc., and for songwriting using your unique sounds

    • @DominicSJarrett
      @DominicSJarrett 24 дня назад

      As everyone has said, it's better to make sounds in separate project files until you have a good library of sounds you made yourself. It's also the best way to get good at making sounds without having to worry about producing. Then you can go through your sounds until some inspiration comes to mind.
      When I first started doing this, the quality of my music dropped since all the sounds started to become exclusively my own (they weren't good at first). Then over time, you end up at a point where the sounds you make yourself outclass any preset/sample pack you have (the exception would be real acoustic instruments like strings, wind instruments, and that sort of thing).
      Take snares for example, the only thing an acoustic snare has over synthetic ones is the overtones/mind-end quality. It's difficult to re-create acoustic overtones for snares (creating harmonics using EQ on white noise gets pretty close). This isn't the case for fundamentals and top end though.
      So whether you make a snare yourself and layer it with an acoustic snare, or you start with the acoustic snare and layer it with synthetic _parts,_ it will always sound better off to replace the fundamental with your own user-made one layered with high-passed white noise; shaped yourself using amp envelopes. The acoustic layer then serves as those all-important overtones. You can also use any other sounds like what had been mentioned in the video. You can take vocals and isolate harmonics to mimic snare overtones (wind instruments tend to work well too).

  • @mugatu8732
    @mugatu8732 Год назад

    big tip at the end! always listen in context

  • @ryde2012
    @ryde2012 10 месяцев назад +1

    Wow what tune

  • @uniqueflowsnake
    @uniqueflowsnake 2 года назад +1

    never thought of putting so much effort into simple clicky sound tbh

  • @urigeheadmot1196
    @urigeheadmot1196 2 года назад +6

    How much snare tutorials do people need, this topic has been milked for like 3 years now.

    • @user-fb6ll7fx2k
      @user-fb6ll7fx2k 2 года назад +2

      Please send similar videos

    • @No.0.o.0
      @No.0.o.0 Год назад +1

      Can you make a good snare though?

    • @urigeheadmot1196
      @urigeheadmot1196 Год назад +2

      @@No.0.o.0 yes

    • @rayr268
      @rayr268 8 месяцев назад

      I need all of them

    • @47leivee
      @47leivee 4 месяца назад +1

      World turns, new people get into producing, the recent the video the easier it is to work with so u see it's not all about snares it's way bigger than your small ass brain could ever comprehend