I’m not even a drum and bass guy like that but this is one of the best logic x pro tutorials I have come across since switching to logic a few months ago. Thanks bro!
This is the best logic pro x drum and bass (drum) tutorial on the whole of youtube. It’s criminal that you don’t have more subscribers. Thank you so much! Can you make more for bass, synth etc ?
You're a legend man answered all my questions, it seems like many dnb producers aren't as generous with their knowledge as genres like rap producers. But thank you man made my day.
Love the tutorial! I feel i really understand the basic concepts better now. Also when using decapitator I found for my breaks that Drum Fattener 1 completely took the punch out of my kicks, not sure why that is but I used Drum Fattener 2 instead it sounded much cleaner for my mix!
That's the thing, everything is dependent on context. With analogue modelled plugins saturation/distortion, you need to be aware of how hot of a signal you're sending in to them. Gain staging is very important here.
video is decent man, looking forward to watching more from you! only thing i would say is your mic is quite quiet so i found myself turning the volume up and down quite often as the drums are quite loud. but solid tips and really clearly and thoroughly explained too, keep up the good work!
Ah, I did think that. The original recording was an hour and a half long, so this is a super condensed version. You can slow those sped up sections down via RUclips's playback speed setting if you want a better look at what's happening at least. Hope that helps!
i tried the think break with quick sampler in logic, it’s a 1 bar loop, but when i export the midi notes, it exports more than 1 bar of notes? shouldnt there only be 1 bar?
@@prspktvmusic sound bro this video is bare helpful honestly been trying for long to make powerful dance floor drums like that, I’d honestly love to see a video about what you do to your bass as well would be amazing !
Thanks for the awesome video! I'm just starting to get into dnb production. Is it common to layer multiple breaks over each other like this? Is the purpose to achieve a fuller busier sound?
Building a full and busy drum section is a stylistic decision and falls down sub genre/vibe intention. You can get the best of both worlds by cutting pieces out of each layer too, this can often end in a cleaner result than what’s shown in the video. A good indicator for this is how busy the entire mix is with everything in context.
Hey! great video, wondering if you ever do this and THEN chop it to midi? Or otherwise, how do you incorporate chopping breaks with midi with this approach to mixing breaks?
You can definitely build a drum track, then group layers together and bounce them in place. Then take that audio file into a sampler. I made a video on how to do this part, take a look on my channel.
I can certainly make a video covering parallel compression in the future! In my latest video going over my Logic template, I very briefly go over the routing for parallel compression. May be worth a watch?
Found this on reddit. GOLD! Subbed, looking forward to more tuts!
I’m not even a drum and bass guy like that but this is one of the best logic x pro tutorials I have come across since switching to logic a few months ago. Thanks bro!
Thank you dude, you actually answered a lot of questions i had in mind for months !
This is the best logic pro x drum and bass (drum) tutorial on the whole of youtube. It’s criminal that you don’t have more subscribers. Thank you so much! Can you make more for bass, synth etc ?
Thanks mate! Bass design isn't my strong point but I'll look into it further down the line 🙂
HUGE man HUGE. Thanks a million, what you mentioned to me earlier this week makes more sense now. Looks like I have more work to do on that track ;)
You're a legend man answered all my questions, it seems like many dnb producers aren't as generous with their knowledge as genres like rap producers. But thank you man made my day.
Great video again! informative and learnt a load of tricks
I seem to be learning lot from this
Hey thanks for the tips and breaks. Earned yourself a new sub. Cheers from WI
Very interesting and informative. Completely captivated, much appreciated.
big ups for this video 🙏🙏 been looking for a decent drum processing video for ages. deffo will be referring to it when i’m layering some drums
Cheers for takin the time dude.
I'm now ready to become a Drum & Bass Don
Love the tutorial! I feel i really understand the basic concepts better now. Also when using decapitator I found for my breaks that Drum Fattener 1 completely took the punch out of my kicks, not sure why that is but I used Drum Fattener 2 instead it sounded much cleaner for my mix!
That's the thing, everything is dependent on context. With analogue modelled plugins saturation/distortion, you need to be aware of how hot of a signal you're sending in to them. Gain staging is very important here.
Great tutorial bro, thanks for this.
I've really learnt so much off this quick video, cheers:)
great tutorial! well explained... looking forward for more videos :)
big ups, appreciate the window into your work flow!
nice tips :D
video is decent man, looking forward to watching more from you! only thing i would say is your mic is quite quiet so i found myself turning the volume up and down quite often as the drums are quite loud. but solid tips and really clearly and thoroughly explained too, keep up the good work!
Awesome man! So eye opening, thanks a lot! I directly subbed!
Yoooo, more for this 2022 pleaseeeee :) Big up , P \m/
thanks thanks thankssss!
great vid! so much useful info packed into such a short time
Very awesome tutorial - I found it very insightful! :D
Great video, but I think some of the sections you skip through would actually be quite useful to hear!
Ah, I did think that. The original recording was an hour and a half long, so this is a super condensed version. You can slow those sped up sections down via RUclips's playback speed setting if you want a better look at what's happening at least.
Hope that helps!
also the volume difference at 19:20 actually blew my mind... i need that plugin lol (or a free alternative ideally :P)
Yep, perceived loudness is the key!
Hi! Great video, lots of useful features. Could you remove the analysis of the track PRSPKTV - Waking Dream [WAF-ONE]. Thank you
Subbed.
i tried the think break with quick sampler in logic, it’s a 1 bar loop, but when i export the midi notes, it exports more than 1 bar of notes?
shouldnt there only be 1 bar?
Do you limit at the end once you have a full track, or would you limit as you go along ?
Where did u get those breaks they sound hard
The link is in the description!
@@prspktvmusic sound bro this video is bare helpful honestly been trying for long to make powerful dance floor drums like that, I’d honestly love to see a video about what you do to your bass as well would be amazing !
Thanks for the awesome video! I'm just starting to get into dnb production. Is it common to layer multiple breaks over each other like this? Is the purpose to achieve a fuller busier sound?
Building a full and busy drum section is a stylistic decision and falls down sub genre/vibe intention. You can get the best of both worlds by cutting pieces out of each layer too, this can often end in a cleaner result than what’s shown in the video. A good indicator for this is how busy the entire mix is with everything in context.
@@prspktvmusic thanks man makes perfect sense
and it is better to use linear phase at all eq's in this case
Why can't u add sample libraries to the browser why u have to open them in explorer ? :O
Using Finder is just part of my workflow, I'm not a huge fan of Logic's built-in browser!
Hey! great video, wondering if you ever do this and THEN chop it to midi? Or otherwise, how do you incorporate chopping breaks with midi with this approach to mixing breaks?
You can definitely build a drum track, then group layers together and bounce them in place. Then take that audio file into a sampler. I made a video on how to do this part, take a look on my channel.
Very nice video! Do you have another one that explains the parallel processing stuff which you did or can link a nice video that explains it ?
Big Up
I can certainly make a video covering parallel compression in the future! In my latest video going over my Logic template, I very briefly go over the routing for parallel compression. May be worth a watch?
Nice video, make such a tutorial for FL studio)
I don't use FL, sorry!
how do i get dnb beak 66
Link in the description 🙂