3 Sampling Techniques Every Producer Needs To Know
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 30 авг 2021
- ✅ My proven program to become a producer (Apply now)
➤ www.betterbeatmaker.com
✅ Make progress in only 3 minutes (My mailing list)
➤ www.betterbeatmaker.com/list Хобби
Holy cow, Navie, I made it pump with hard work, volume automation shapes. Or Gross Beat automation. Sidechaining the sample to a kick is mega smart.
@KingCobraJFS I agree with you that Navie is something else. He has this literary quality about him, you see structure all around in his work and discourse. Most people that can do stuff can't teach for shit. You can learn from them in a monkey see, monkey do way. Navie can do it, and he also messages his info like a baseball player would throw a ball into the glove. I've learned from a lot of people, but if someone asks me for some producing related content, it's Navie that I'll recommend to them for sure.
😘 how kind. Thank you so much for the lovely compliments my friend
Use kick start to get that exact pump
Side chaining is a long route when there's a plug for it
@@techniquebytheway1899 Great when using 4 on the floor, but lack on others :)
That's true engineering right there, usually routing audio into a dead end would be objectively wrong but now it's being used as an effect.
A technique I tend to use in my solo music when I'm sampling is using portions of a sample and creating a "Stop & Start" melody. Basically it means using a sample, stopping it abruptly when the snare hits and just continuing to do that to create a 4 bar loop. But I fill that open space between the sample chops with instruments, drums
etc.
Hope this helps someone
And thanks Navie for the weekly lesson🔥❄
That last tip about finding combined sounds from a sample to make a new one is dope!
I usually find small loops and whatnot, but this is gonna be a game changer!
Thanks, Navie!
Also, love the Discord. I just jumped on and I'm already getting helpful tips from the other members!
Awesome! We have a good bunch of lads and gals in the discord
DISCORD??!
@@ChrsGotFourEyes yup. I believe the link is in the description of either this vid or the previous one. Come and hang out and give some feedback on beats and get feedback on yours!
@@MvnStn is it good for learning new things as well? I just started getting serious about making beats but there’s sum things I wanna learn so I can do more.
@@yvngking19 yup, I believe there is a room for sharing ideas and thoughts, and you can ask just about anyone for a hand. Respectable!
Navie back with the 💎s
That pump technique is fire. Ive heard it before but never knew exactly how to do it like that. Thx for that
You're welcome!
Im following music-making channels for 1.5 year now and recently came across your channel. Only thing what can I say is that is the best channel for beat production Ive ever watched. Keep it up please!
🙏 Welcome aboard my friend!
Yeah I primarily watch this channel and Simon Servida. Check him out too if you haven't.
Which of those beats was your favorite?
The second one I want to use so bad
I like the third beat because it starts with a little moment of flute that made me go, oh, this lofi shit. But then the vibe quickly turn into somewhat industrial, yeezus like
3rd bear for sure the hardest
1st tip is real sauce
Pump technique’s beat, it’s kind of like j dilla
The reversed samples one! So dope with the sounds. I even think I caught you bobbing your head a little! haha I know I was..
Love the nod to Apollo Brown, one of my all time favs. Another great tutorial thanks! 👌
Thanks boss! Apollo is a legend
@@NavieD can you make Apollo Brown tutorial ?
@@TheWhtt Sido PLeease :o
I’m so glad you mentioned Apollo Brown! He is my favorite producer… Love your videos, and the way you break things down is done really well. Keep going sir 🙏🏽💯
Solid tip on sidechaining. Using a dedicated midi trigger - and tuning the length of the trigger note to shape the pump is something I hadn't really tried. Good stuff!
👌 May this tip serve you well Griffin
Thank god you shouted out Apollo brother! He's super talented
Way underrated
love your vids. Always straight forward and precise . Keep it up, & thank you !!!
The silent kick sidechain trick is pretty neat, never considered doing it like that before 🔥
Hopefully it results in some good music for you!
I love that You do advanced videos
Thank you for sharing your work Navie 🙏
Man u dont understand how much you have helped my production, keep doin what u doin dude
Thank you 🔥🔥
Thank you Nij!
Amazing video as always! The pump and stab approaches are going to be huge for me! Lol. Somehow never thought of side chaining my sample to create more variation and to cut unwanted sounds out instead of butchering it with EQ and making it thin. And the stab flip is now going to become my go to when sampling for sure. I think I take too long of phrases from samples and it just doesn't work for me personally. Appreciate the knowledge as always my friend!
No problem man! There are plenty of ways to skin a cat as they say
You are awesome ma dude!! Thank you for always providing such quality content! Look forward to everyone of your videos :)
Thank you! And your display pic is excellent
love your channel, thank you for your work!
The pumping effect can be achieved really easily with plugins like kickstart or free alternatives like TAL filter 2 or flux mini. I also like to do it with the fruity peak controller on the kick mixer track and linked to the volume of the melody
I'm still not tired of your videos🙏🏼 ty
These are gold .great job . Beat snippet is 🔥 too
Thank you Ismael!
I just found a new sample and navie d uploads video on sampling. Life is good, Life is G.
Hahaha time to get jiggy with that sample
@@NavieD yess sirrr :D
Man your videos have helped my tracks sound way better in a short span with using tips from your videos 🙌🏽 Keep it up with the videos man!!
Ayyyyy awesome dude, I am happy they help!
This is some advanced stuff 🔥
Your videos are really helpful and easy to understand, you rock
Yoo I’ve been looking how to do this for ages and couldn’t find it! You legend, subscribed n liked my man 🙏🏽🙏🏽
Welcome aboard MYI!
Awesome video, also thanks for the free kit! Sounds are dope!
Awesome, thank you for watching!
Wow more great help. Im gonna have to watch this over and over to catch on to some of this im gonna have to check out your other sampling videos. Great share
Thank you man! I love making sampling videos
@@NavieD cool
I learned a lot. Thanks for the great videos. It would be nice to get a video on mixing and exporting stems.
Navie you are a G.O.A.T. fr frr
🐐
Thanks for the tutorial bro. I gotta try these out
Thanks for watching boss!
Thankssss man, i really needed this🔥
Thank you for watching Aryaaaaaa
Your tutorials are very elaborate. More strength Navie.
Thanks, Navie always have A wealth of knowledge to share BLESSINGS
cool video and thank you for the free drum kit 🙏
Love ur videos, I hope u do this forever
Sencillo, al grano y sin rodeos, y bien explicado, que mas puedo pedir?
Dope Bro!
I'm finally going to make a beat in FL Studio thanks to this channel.
Really like the explanation behind the technique kee it up man
another great video. great timing as I am making a lot more samples these days.
Ohh any reason for the switchup?
@@NavieD thanks for asking. i have been thinking more about your video you made about it being okay to use samples. Also, i just got serato sampler recently along with collabing with a live drummer. Making more bboy breaks.
Brilliant!!!
I like your tutorials. came here from a reddit recommendation. good stuff :-)
the pump omfg amazing
Pump it up!
A bit late for this one but I like to share something about the first technique that you're talking about.
I call this "swimmnig chops" and the best way to achive great resoults is with fades not sidechain.
I never worked with FL Studio and not sure about the steps you have to take, but in the end you want your chops in audio (not midi) in 1/4 note lenght on the grid. Then you start to play with the fade ins and the fade outs on every 1/4 chop. This way you can do variations in certain chops and add more to the groove and the feel of it. The chops start to "swim" around the drums and the "pump" feels more natural.
When you do it with sidechain you add way more factors like ratio, tresh, attack time, release time, plus the kick is always striktly on grid and you end up with robotic groove to it.
I stumbled upon a video of Apollo Brown cooking and you can see clearly that he uses fades also.
This technique works wonders when you use soul samples with typical for the genre sustain brass, strings, organs notes on 1 and 3 more often found in the intro of the orginal songs. In my opinion this actualy is the "secret souce" of Apollo Brown which makes his beats sounds unique.
In the end, another great example of how a very simple but clever thing, makes huge impact when is used on point and also how we can go way around the corner to try to achive it when the answer is right in front. ...of course I tried with sidechain also for a few beats and then just touched the fades and it just clicked haha
Thanks homie now I understand the basics of sidechaining
You're an super amazing, great producer.
Ty 💥🙏
Thank you, awesome video
i feel bad for watching this for free, this is amazing advice, keep it up :). Greetings from Chile
Thanks this really helped
That Cobaine 808 was hard, great video tho as always
Thank you
Thank YOU Colin
Grossbeat volume presets can help you create the pumping effect too
Nice pls make more of these videos🔥💯
Thanks Derick! Hopefully the video does well cuz I really enjoyed making this video
so happy you're winning!!!
the intro beat is BANGING
There are no time stamps.
Loving Your content bro, I'm sure I'll be catching You on the top☀️➕
that third beat is soooooo fire bro!
Oooh thank you, I enjoyed that one too
I normally draw in fades but ill definitely try this sidechain technique
no way i jus watched an ad by you on your video😭🔥 newcomer gotta sub🤟🏽
Hahah that must have been confusing
Bravo.
👍
muito obrigado!!!
Needed this 🇲🇽
Jonny boy, glad it helped!
good techniques sir
For the first trick you can also achieve this using ADSR as well.
That reverse sample was nice
I mostly sample the last way. I get bird chopping quarter notes. To me it’s easier to chop phrases , pitch up or down to fit drum or vice verse. Get a lot of different sounds 👍🏽
Just discover your channel with this vid right now,very good content, u have 1 more follower now
Happy to have you on board Okada!
Amazing video man. Kindly do a tutorial on serato sampler. Many thanks 😊
Oh man, I thought this was the Khalil video I asked for...! 😉
Great vid though!
Blessing
🙏
Very useful thx! Could you do a Serato sampler tutorial please? That would be awesome 👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽
🔥
I will never unsubscribe NEVER
Thanks for sharing
As always much respect 👍🏽
Even if I start making fortnite videos?
You wouldn't lol 🤣🤣
Until that day I'm here
Really amazing tutorial. Could you please make a tutorial to combine multiple samples using circles of fifths?
Thanks Jeswil! Music theory isn't really my forte unfortunately
You can use tal filter 2 for the pump effect
Hi, is there a way to import more than one sample in FL Studio sampler? Like in FPC maybe?
You can also use Kickstart VST or Tremolator from soundtoys
sidechaining like this is also just basic mixing technique.. if you ever do any mixing, you'll need to know how to do this in about 30 different ways.. but it's cool to using mixing techniques creatively like this. I should do that more! particularly when the sample has drums i can't eq out to my liking
This is true! Sidechaining has a lot of great utility uses
Hey this one is pretty cool and creative, love it! Could you make a video on mastering and mixing though? I really can't comprehend all the nuances of this process. I've tried every possible way and either my beats sound quiet but pretty clean or loud and distorted with some audio artifacts. Also different people say different things and none of them seem to give me the result I want, I'm confused :(
Long read but if you're still having this issue or if someone who sees this is then this should hopefully help you out (basically a few tips/tricks/general rules I've learned and still use or used to use until I improved my ear). What I recommend is turning your volume to 25-30% putting a limiter on your master channel with thr ceiling set to -3 to -6 yo help give an artist room to put there vocals on and then putting each sound you want to use on the mixing rack and open up an eq on each channel you have a sound assigned to. As a general rule you don't want sounds taking up the same sound frequencies and you'll want each sound to take up it's own frequency range in the mix so that nothing clashes with each other. So if you have a kick that's hitting around 80hz you'd want to avoid an 808 that hits in this frequency and hits either lower or higher. Also if you notice the decibel level for your sound is in the red on the mixer it's best to lower the volume in your channel rack instead of the mixer to make sure it's not clipping and causing the audio distortion since lowering the volume on the mixing channel is just going to quite down the already clipping sound. I also recommend having a track with a similar sound to yours to use as a reference point for how loud all your sounds should be in comparison together. It's much better to use your ears then say that in each track your 808 has to hit at -3db your kick at -1 and hihats around -12 to -24 since some sounds will have a lot more body to them and will sound more prominent or less than they should be even if you have them set to specific levels however that doesn't mean you can't have a certain level you like to use for each sound when you start the mixing process that you can use as a starting point to see what needs adjusting. BIG TIP if you are mixing each sound individually you're limiting yourself to what it's going to sound like in the big picture and I highIy recommend looping the busiest section of your track and get your levels and eq where the need to be while everything's playing together so you can see how one change is going to effect your end product. I personally also like to mix my beats the next day with a fresh ear in case somethings not as fire as I thought it was in the moment and needs swapped out which happens often it'll be easy to catch with that fresh ear then I'll wait a few hours after I'm done to give it a final listen.
thanks :)
You're welcome!
Hi there, I love the value you bring. Please make timestamps for your videos
Hey can you make a video on how to create different hihats patterns? Like the one you used on the intro, my God!!
Kickstart 2 works for sidechain to :)
Can you do an in-depth video in the reverse flip? That would be very useful
instead of making a ghostkick for the pumping effect, you can use the plugin Sidekick by Nicky Romero for example. It does the same, but it speeds up your workflow. Nice video btw Navie. Cheers man!
Thanks Chris!
but it costs money
@@edv.3788 gotta spend money to make money
@@classlessfool9398 Not when you can use cheaper alternatives which gets you the same results
You have some nice Beats thanks for the tips
I use reason have you ever used that daw?
Have anything for Arcade on Logic?
Th last beat slaps
Hey Navie, you sorta look like Cheteshwar Pujara, a cricketer.
Pretty random but still cool.
Hahah I don't see the similarities
@@NavieD bro you look exactly like him
just realized I could probably use that sidechaining technique to create a tremolo effect
Now you're thinkin
Kickstart does that Pump really easily
🐐
🙏
@9:20 reminds me of David Banner - Like A Pimp
I got your youtube add on your video 😂
Have you had a look at one knob pumper by waves?
You can also use a vst called Kickstart by Ricky romerio to get that sidechained kick effect
Ahh, thanks for sharing!
Ricky Romerio bro?😭😭 Don’t disrespect my man like that
@@sverre6621 nicky Romero* my fault
Very nice video bro but in my opinion the sidechain with the kick and the limiter is wayyy to complicated in this case. Espacially if you want a simple four on the floor rythm just use gross beat or shaper box they do the job in 2 sec xD
works with panning too