Peter Gotcher here, co-founder of Digidesign (our initial name was Digidrums but I quickly realized we may want to do more than drum samples). A friend sent me this video, which I really enjoyed. Took me back in time. Those early drum chips were really challenging. I edited them on a home brew S-100 bus computer by looking at screens of hexidecimal code. No waveform displays. I had to edit based on converting base 16 numbers in my head to sample values. Had to end on a 00 or the D/A converter would output a loud click. The Drumulator allocated 8K bytes for most samples, with a whopping 64K for the ride cymbal (if my memory is right). The format was 8-bit mulaw compression with a low sample rate. I had to fit the snare sample into less than .25 seconds. I guess enough time has passed that I can admit that the kick and snare came from When the Levee Breaks. I then recorded the toms and the rest of the sounds in my studio and tried to match the vibe. I did not do a very good job. The short and low sample rate cymbals were really impossible. But we sold a couple of million $ worth of drum chips and that funded Sound Designer, Sound Tools, and eventually ProTools. So many great memories from that journey. Nice to see videos like this revisiting those very interesting times.
Hi, Peter, thank you very much for all the great insights, and for setting the record straight - much appreciated! It's amazing what you guys were able to do with such small amounts of memory and hex commands only.I think you did a great job, on the toms and hat too! The kit still stands out today and for sure is a classic set beloved by many. I talk to a lot of people through this channel / other social media, and while today we can have any sound we want on our personal computers / tablets / phones, many, many musicians (including me) often tell me that they are still very fond of the classic sound of early digital machines, and use them in modern day productions. Thanks again for the great comment!
Solid recreation. Simple pattern, but you have a great ear. I’m always miffed at people who get even the most basic pattern recreations so wrong. 0:53 lesson to all electronic music nerds and collectors...find, keep and even restore if you have to, old computers and drive/disc formats and don’t always just upgrade to the latest OS cause everyone else is jumping off the cliff and buying the Apple Kool-Aid. Also keep and take care of an old cassette deck and vhs deck. You’re welcome.
I recognize that snare sound from so many mid 80's songs. Rick Rubin used it for Beastie Boys "Beastie's Groove", Run-DMC's remake of "Walk this Way", Whodini used it for "Funky Beat", Joeski Love used it for his hit single "Pee Wee's Dance", Public Enemy used it for "Miuzi Weighs a Ton" and of course, Tears for Fears "Shout". I always had a feeling it was originally taken from Led Zep and then I read in the comments that it was. I also used to think the drumkit was from the Fairlight & never knew the Drumulator was the culprit.
In my driveway in Indianapolis I heard big synths and thought the adjoining neighbor's stereo was on too loud. Then I realized I was hearing a Tears for Fears soundcheck from a quarter of a mile away at Starlight Musicals. Fun memories. Thanks for sharing, Paolo. Best, Daniel
Also used by Clan of Xymox and Cocteau Twins, both signed to 4AD at the time. The label had equipment that many of their bands shared, notably the Emulator II. I have the Rock Drum chips for my Drumulator, as well as a custom Linn LM1 set that are my favourite.
I wondered what they were doing, and didn't even know about drum synths. 1000 times more info than I thought I'd get. Mind blown. Excellent explanation.Thank you.
you brought to my memory the best times of my life, DJ TV LoL the Talk Talk special recorded from television to cassette and the first time i listened to U2. never missed a episode. stay well.
wow ive been searching for years for the snare drum used in Whodini's track "funky beat". this is it! incredible. il probably forget this link though in the morning so im gonna save it to a playlist. thanks!
I think that you should be awarded with a PhD or something like that for doing this stuff. This is just awesome. We get a nice glimpse of musical history here. Thank you for doing this!
The snare sound from Digi Drums is clearly in Shout and the Rimshot from LinnDrum it's the same of The boys of the summer by Don Henley (1984) as in Wikipedia says was used in that song. Many thanks Paolo!
I honestly never thought to look at the rhythm to Shout on a drum machine/DAW but I always loved the song (brilliant song Brilliant rhythm). But the way you put this together with the triangle et al: It really made me smile. Thank you Paolo!
You absolute legend, you did so well to recreate the drums and patterns, you explained it so well, showed off the gear and made this video to perfection! Thank you so much for loving this gear and music and actually creating with it, sharing this for us and sharing your interest 😍 time to dig up my old Songs from the big chair cassette and rock out 🤘
Thanks paolo for this great tutorial of this classic drumulator rock kit breakdown of shout. I couldn’t get hold of a drumulator but had these chips for my sequential drum tracks. These drums also featured on lot of 80’s big beat hip hop tracks 😊
Another 80s' mystery solved. Thanks for that. You did a good job. I always wondered from which drum machine this powerful snaredrum was. Also used for Anne Clark's Our Darkness from 1984. I agree with you, "Shout" is a song which was great when it came out and still fascinates me.
I found a few popular songs that use the digi-drums. The song "Beastie Groove" by The Beastie Boys and the theme from the show "Everybody Hates Chris" use it.
I was 14 years old on 1984 and first time I heard Shout from my favorite that days Radio Luxemburg because in USSR where I lived there wasn't stations like this.And of course nobody knows what this song was about but everybody likes the music and performance.
Paolo, thank you for doing this video. I have also loved this song since it was first released and it was interesting to see how they produced those classic rhythm parts.
As a kid in early 80s and a teen in the later 80s I too recall first hearing about AIDS and it was really scary... prior to that we were scared of the threat of nuclear war! A crazy decade for sure... it with some memorable music!
Another great video! love shout. When you brought the digidrums in I could almost hear the vocal... Saw them in concert in a small venue several years ago I was almost in 3rd-4th row - Incredible live show
TFF used the DigiDrums Rock Drums chip version for the LinnDrum for "Shout" which is why you have a lot of the other LinnDrum sounds on the drum track. Yes the kick and snare from the Rock Drums chips were sampled from Led Zeppelin's "When The Levee Breaks" (isolate the kick and snare yourself on any sampler and you have the same thing). This, of course was done waaaay before the sampling lawsuit era, so that's how they got away with that. Howard Jones, though, did use this same Drumulator/Rock Drums setup for his "Dream Into Action" album, namely the songs "No One Is To Blame" (original version) and "Look Mama."
I thought of that too but there's an article where they state they had the Drumulator in the studio as well. As far as I've found, DigiDrums did several sets for the Drumulator first and foremost, although it's possible that by the time Shout was recorded, they started making them for the LinnDrum and other drum machines already. Information is scarce, so if you have actual insight / proof, please post it. As far as the Levee, I did chop them and compare them in an audio editor. They are similar but they are not the same. This could be because of the extreme low resolution of sampling back then. But I don't know. A lot of people are repeating this Levee mantra on the Internet, but nobody has offered an actual proof that they were sampled by Levee. There was a moron posting here (from Matera, Italy, btw) who insisted he had some forensic software and he would do a forensic analysis, but of course he didn't produce SQUAT and he started acting up so I kicked him out of the channel. There is an interview at NAMM oral history with one of the founders of DigiDrums in which he says they produced the sets. So, are you stating these facts because you know for sure (in which case, please furnish the proof as we'd all love to know?), or because you've read it on the Internet? Please do tell. www.namm.org/library/oral-history/peter-gotcher and daily.redbullmusicacademy.com/2015/03/key-tracks-tears-for-fears-songs-from-the-big-chair
I have a Drumulator with a JLCooper model so it has 3 chip sets in it. Theres a 3-way switch to change sounds. I alway figured the drum sounds were played by Ian Stanley's Fairlight, which they obviously had with the Sarrar/Arr1 sample playing the melody. And with one of Adam Ant's old drummers, Chris Hughes in Tears for Fears at that time, I always figured they just sampled Chris playing the drum sounds into the Fairlight.
@HighHopesBass HI - Check out Failed Muso's youtube/blog. He restored Stanley's Series III Fairlight, which came out in 1985, the same time as Shout. For The Hurting (1982), I've read they borrowed Peter Gabriel's Series II Fairlight. I've not heard that Orzabal owned a Fairlight himself.
Recently saw a documentary about TFF and two of the studio tech guys said that at one point during recording 'Shout' they were banging on mic stands with screwdrivers to get that particular sound ;-)
@@SynthManiaDotCom - Tears for Fears: Songs from the Big Chair Documentary that explores the creation of the seminal, second album by Tears for Fears. Songs from the Big Chair took the gothic synth-pop foundations of the band and combined them with arena-ready anthems, leading to critical acclaim and three international hit singles, Mothers Talk, Shout and Everybody Wants to Rule the World. This documentary, made with the full cooperation of the band, explores how the album was recorded and how the band left their indelible imprint on new wave music. www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000f8xc
I used to love playing the flutey vox riff that I believe was the same sample as Art of Noise used. I had no sampler so had to make do with combining a sine wave with white noise.
Amazing!!! Awesome recreation. It always calls my atention the Drumulator's expansion capabilities. Shout is a very powerful song. Love to hear your anecdotes.
Someone I recently sold a synth to was talking about swapping and burning EEPROMs on these old drum machines. Very cool to see an example of it, and with one of my favorite songs!
I almost bought that Digidrums chipset for the LinnDrum I had at the time. I remember the keyboard rep at the music store told me about them, he called it the John Bonham chipset, so I've always thought that they were sampled from the intro of "When The Levee Breaks".
I was 10 at the time, and it's when I started watching DeeJay Television. I loved it, there was so much great music coming from abroad. It's where I first saw Duran Duran's Wild Boys' video and so much more. A couple years later more Rap made it into the program (possibly only good thing Jovanotti did in his career). Cecchetto was one of our greatest music industry tycoons, always his ears peeled for what was great coming from the rest of the world. Wasn't it for that I'd not be introduced early to Jimmy Sommerville, Spanday Ballet, Depeche Mode and many more. It formed my taste, and I'm grateful for that. Grazie per aver condiviso la storia, ricordo anche io la paura derivante dall'annuncio dell'AIDS 🙏🏼
Wow we have so much in common including the Garfield elec. dr click ah ah.i graduates H.S in 83, so I understand what you say at the time I was with Atari 1040ste /Cubase later a falcon I used to play with wall of voodoo bass keys a multi moog and a pro-1 your videos are brilliant very good ears you have keep up the good work
@John Tammaro Listen one of the earliest Rick Rubin productions on Def Jam for the *Beastie Boys "Beastie Groove"/"Rock Hard"* . Also one of the *Marley Marl* productions for *Super Kids, "The Tragedy"* (Marl says on Redbull lecture that he sampled the sound of Art Of Noise "Beat Box" song).
Dj Television! Mi hai risvegliato un ricordo, era un appuntamento fisso, imperdibile! Avevo 18 anni, grande passione per synth, drum machines e UK music. Il drum pattern di Shout è sempre stato uno dei miei preferiti!
Great video about a great band. Although I really like minimal synth music, especially early New Wave (first 2 Human League albums, the Normal, Fad Gadget) I always felt that bands like Tears for Fears and New Order had a unique way of weaving together traditional electric guitar and bass with electronics. Songs from the Big Chair may have been my introduction, but The Hurting is my favorite, such a powerful soulful album. I had the benefit of growing up in NY, within radio distance of WLIR on Long Island. WLIR had an arrangement with a UK distributor. All this new music was flown into JFK every Thursday. This music shaped my journey as a musician. Music I write today in my home studio has all of these influences.
+1 on The Hurting, Peter! :-) Excellent songwriting in action there, and the sonic colors are incredible. Songs like "Mad World" are truly masterpieces of pop. Like you, I only discovered The Hurting after Songs From The Big Chair, but I like a lot a lot
Also the opening track, The Hurting, nice contrast of piano, electric guitar and synths. Also Pale Shelter. If I could write a song the has a piano swell, Single strum acoustic guitar, drum machine beat and synths, I would die a happy man. It’s harder than it sounds. I think it is challenging to combine these instruments in a way that speaks to people, especially drum machines and guitar. Here, it doesn’t sound sterile (a feeling which also has its place). And I don’t think it has anything to do with creating a drummer like feel on the drum machine (which They do not do, and I am opposed to). It is a amalgamation of the sound. Prince was a master at this.
@@pjm8779 I remember reading that it was the opening toms on The Hurting that were sampled and used as the intro to 'Do they know it's Christmas' by Band Aid.
Few bands were able to merge bleeding-edge technology to make good-sounding music. Tears for Fears did. I recall hearing some of the individual tracks of that CD here on youtube along with some comments from the engineer about the tech challenges with the Fairlight and all the other gear (video might have been for a remix but can't remember).
I remember a few years back there was another RUclips guy looking for that sound chip set for his Drumulator, but he couldn't remember the name of it. It's highly sought after. I ganked those sounds like 20 years ago for my sampler using the sounds from "Never Let Me Down Again", by Depeche Mode. I figured they were from the Led Zeppelin song but that track seems to have a delay on it which isn't apparent in the Digidrums kit.
One of my favorite beats and songs. Sounds really good through the right speakers especially the 8 minute long US remix version. Good job indeed sir. ... J
A proposito di "Random Stories" , questa canzone io la associo al servizio militare: insieme a Big in Japan era continuamente riprodotta nei Juke Box quando eravamo in libera uscita. Sentendole provo sempre un sentimento misto a nostalgia perchè erano anni spensierati ma anche di tristezza a proposito di un anno che avrei potuto vivere in modo più costruttivo. E' proprio vero che ci sono suoni, canzoni e perfino odori che sono indissolubilmete legati a certi momenti di vita. Bravo Paolo. Ciao
Not too many guys that know everything about everything when synts and drum machines comes in consideration...I am more guitar man but i like to watch magic you do here..
Wow... so much better than the stock sounds. Your drumulator is in mint condition... wow. I bought one in '83-ish? Had it next to a 909 in the store and convinced myself the 909 didn't sound at all like real drums and bought the drumulator. Only thing going w/ drumulator was a custom cable I had to sync it to an Apple IIe and Passport. Ahh... the days.
Have you ever heard of the dance genre called Freestyle which was born around 1985-1986? I finally realized where one of the most recognized songs of that genre got its snare. Thank you
I heard "Point of No Return" by Expose (formerly X-Posed) at a gas station this summer and it opened my eyes to the genre! What song are you referring to, and share any other freestyle recommendations you have :) so far I've only really listened to Expose's first album, as well as PSB's Domino Dancing which I believe Lewis Martineé also produced
ernavk the snare from the drumulator was used on a song by George Lamond “Bad of the heart” produced by a production team of Mark Ligget and Chris Barbosa. If you want to listen to knew freestyle, look up The Santana Twins on Spotify or iTunes.
thanks for this video. i ordered this chips for my Oberheim DX at the same source than you :-) Thanks for the great work. now i need the other sounds from the Tears for fears video you posted too. great great..thanks so mutch
Very informative and funny video! Is interesting the fact that *Oberheim DMX/DX had their own versions of the same sounds called "BEAT KICK /BEAT SNARE"* , The equivalent of Drumulator's "ROCK KICK/ROCK SNARE".
I had always thought the second cowbell sounded lower than the first. Went back to listen to the song - you are correct of course. Strange how you remember a song to be only to find out it isn't.
Recently watched a BBC 6 Music documentary with Taylor Hawkins (Foo Fighters drummer), he was reminiscing about learning drums by playing along with pop music on the Radio. At the time he didn’t know that drum machines existed and couldn’t work out how the drummer was managing to play the beat like that :)
Ahh, that snare was on a lot of hip hop and funk tracks back in the 80s too. Like Joeski Love's 'Pee Wee Dance'. Surprised to learn it originally came from a Drumulator eprom. I always wondered where it was from. I thought it might have been a Fairlight sample.
That was my high school song! Though I didnt grasp its meaning back then, I loved it (and still do!). I used to think that the day would never come....
This isn’t a “faithful” recreation, but it’s my tribute to one of my favorite New Order songs....True Faith. instagram.com/p/BRj4VwvhFJz/?igshid=1jrofs0ieb7u9
That snare just gets me every time. It was used on an extremely obscure rap song by Joeski Love. The tune was Pee-Wee's Dance. While you might not remember that composition, you might remember the song that sampled that cut for it's snare, the more memorable "Ambitionz Az a Ridah" by Tupac.
I do not think Tupac has sampled the cut from Joeski Love tune. Listen carefully, the sounds are different, the bass drum pattern is different. It's more likely they just simply used the same Digidrum Rock sample for the snare. This snare sample wasn't used for the first time ever by Joeski Love, whose song is from 1986. As you know, Shout itself is from 1984, and they had already used it. Sometimes you can't blindly trust what www.whosampled.com says. You always have to use your ears to judge.
SynthMania I'm not aware of whosampled and I was nowhere near the studio when the song was put together. However, its clear that this particular snare was used in all three recordings. The only sound I commented on was the snare. I'm not sure what other kits were used in any other recordings.
I see - Since you wrote "you might remember the song that sampled that cut for it's snare" you made it sound like Tupac had sampled the snare in the Joeski Love tune. I am saying that Tupac used the sample, but he probably didn't sample it from Joeski - he didn't need to - as this sample has been available since 1984 in various formats (Drumulator, DMX/DX, Linn, Sequential etc.) -that's all I meant
SynthMania Unless we talk to the songs producer, the world may never know. Keep up the good work. Its clear that you are passionate about vintage hardware and I respect that.
@@SynthManiaDotCom @breakbeats92.5 resurrrcting this 3 years later lol. But Daz of Dogg Pound actually did sample the JoeSki Love drums for the Pac record. I was there when he reconstructed the track for Cam’ron’s “Ambitionz as a killa”. Cam originally recorded it to the Pac instrumental and Daz came down to my studio and redid it from scratch. I always knew it was the JSL drums but a lot of the folks in the room were floored. I’d always thought it was common knowledge. Anyway, just passing on some knowledge. Have loved the channel for years! Salute.
Peter Gotcher here, co-founder of Digidesign (our initial name was Digidrums but I quickly realized we may want to do more than drum samples). A friend sent me this video, which I really enjoyed. Took me back in time. Those early drum chips were really challenging. I edited them on a home brew S-100 bus computer by looking at screens of hexidecimal code. No waveform displays. I had to edit based on converting base 16 numbers in my head to sample values. Had to end on a 00 or the D/A converter would output a loud click. The Drumulator allocated 8K bytes for most samples, with a whopping 64K for the ride cymbal (if my memory is right). The format was 8-bit mulaw compression with a low sample rate. I had to fit the snare sample into less than .25 seconds. I guess enough time has passed that I can admit that the kick and snare came from When the Levee Breaks. I then recorded the toms and the rest of the sounds in my studio and tried to match the vibe. I did not do a very good job. The short and low sample rate cymbals were really impossible. But we sold a couple of million $ worth of drum chips and that funded Sound Designer, Sound Tools, and eventually ProTools. So many great memories from that journey. Nice to see videos like this revisiting those very interesting times.
Hi, Peter, thank you very much for all the great insights, and for setting the record straight - much appreciated! It's amazing what you guys were able to do with such small amounts of memory and hex commands only.I think you did a great job, on the toms and hat too! The kit still stands out today and for sure is a classic set beloved by many. I talk to a lot of people through this channel / other social media, and while today we can have any sound we want on our personal computers / tablets / phones, many, many musicians (including me) often tell me that they are still very fond of the classic sound of early digital machines, and use them in modern day productions. Thanks again for the great comment!
This has to be one of the coolest comments I’ve ever read on RUclips. Respect to you Peter!
Really cool to finally know for sure that it was from the levee breaks
Wow! Fantastic story!
Peter + Paolo thank you for keeping alive this story that makes history! 🔝🔝🔝
Solid recreation. Simple pattern, but you have a great ear. I’m always miffed at people who get even the most basic pattern recreations so wrong.
0:53 lesson to all electronic music nerds and collectors...find, keep and even restore if you have to, old computers and drive/disc formats and don’t always just upgrade to the latest OS cause everyone else is jumping off the cliff and buying the Apple Kool-Aid. Also keep and take care of an old cassette deck and vhs deck. You’re welcome.
I recognize that snare sound from so many mid 80's songs.
Rick Rubin used it for Beastie Boys "Beastie's Groove",
Run-DMC's remake of "Walk this Way", Whodini used it for
"Funky Beat", Joeski Love used it for his hit single "Pee Wee's
Dance", Public Enemy used it for "Miuzi Weighs a Ton" and of
course, Tears for Fears "Shout".
I always had a feeling it was originally taken from Led Zep
and then I read in the comments that it was. I also used to
think the drumkit was from the Fairlight & never knew the
Drumulator was the culprit.
In my driveway in Indianapolis I heard big synths and thought the adjoining neighbor's stereo was on too loud. Then I realized I was hearing a Tears for Fears soundcheck from a quarter of a mile away at Starlight Musicals. Fun memories. Thanks for sharing, Paolo. Best, Daniel
Also used by Clan of Xymox and Cocteau Twins, both signed to 4AD at the time. The label had equipment that many of their bands shared, notably the Emulator II. I have the Rock Drum chips for my Drumulator, as well as a custom Linn LM1 set that are my favourite.
Yes! Classic sounds for sure
That Emulator II + Mac SE setup is so rad. Love these videos.
I was early teen when shout came out. It was all over the radio. Thanks again.
Thank you
I wondered what they were doing, and didn't even know about drum synths. 1000 times more info than I thought I'd get. Mind blown. Excellent explanation.Thank you.
Thank you for doing this video. I enjoyed your story at the end as well. I, too, remember when that song came out and I still love it as well.
Glad you enjoyed it!
you brought to my memory the best times of my life, DJ TV LoL the Talk Talk special recorded from television to cassette and the first time i listened to U2. never missed a episode. stay well.
Excellent video as usual! You are truly a wizard at recreating these timeless classics -- bravo!
Nicely done. The re-creation and the original idea. Who knew that this collection of sounds and clever patterns would become a monster hit?
Real Music...Real Musician... Real Instruments... Real History... Thank you Sir!!!
wow ive been searching for years for the snare drum used in Whodini's track "funky beat". this is it! incredible. il probably forget this link though in the morning so im gonna save it to a playlist. thanks!
It's also the same snare on The System - Don't Disturb this Groove
Snare also used In conjunction with the 808 on original concepts : pump that bass and l’m bad by LL cool j’s : I’m bad.
I think that you should be awarded with a PhD or something like that for doing this stuff. This is just awesome. We get a nice glimpse of musical history here. Thank you for doing this!
The snare sound from Digi Drums is clearly in Shout and the Rimshot from LinnDrum it's the same of The boys of the summer by Don Henley (1984) as in Wikipedia says was used in that song. Many thanks Paolo!
I honestly never thought to look at the rhythm to Shout on a drum machine/DAW but I always loved the song (brilliant song Brilliant rhythm). But the way you put this together with the triangle et al: It really made me smile. Thank you Paolo!
You absolute legend, you did so well to recreate the drums and patterns, you explained it so well, showed off the gear and made this video to perfection! Thank you so much for loving this gear and music and actually creating with it, sharing this for us and sharing your interest 😍 time to dig up my old Songs from the big chair cassette and rock out 🤘
Thanks paolo for this great tutorial of this classic drumulator rock kit breakdown of shout. I couldn’t get hold of a drumulator but had these chips for my sequential drum tracks. These drums also featured on lot of 80’s big beat hip hop tracks 😊
Your channel is inspiring, man, a pleasure to hear all history, technical, musical AND personal. Glad to be witnessing this right now.
Incrivel, I love this album and the track Thanks for the show and tell about de Drums
Awesome as always, watching your videos always takes me back, it’s like taking a “MASTER CLASS” in the 80’s.
I could spend all year without any sleep in your house with all the cool 80s gear. I really Enjoy your channel. Thank you. 🎹🎹🎹👍
Another 80s' mystery solved. Thanks for that. You did a good job. I always wondered from which drum machine this powerful snaredrum was. Also used for Anne Clark's Our Darkness from 1984. I agree with you, "Shout" is a song which was great when it came out and still fascinates me.
I found a few popular songs that use the digi-drums. The song "Beastie Groove" by The Beastie Boys and the theme from the show "Everybody Hates Chris" use it.
I was 14 years old on 1984 and first time I heard Shout from my favorite that days Radio Luxemburg because in USSR where I lived there wasn't stations like this.And of course nobody knows what this song was about but everybody likes the music and performance.
I think it's about primal scream therapy which Roland was into at the time.
Paolo, thank you for doing this video. I have also loved this song since it was first released and it was interesting to see how they produced those classic rhythm parts.
Glad you enjoyed it!
As a kid in early 80s and a teen in the later 80s I too recall first hearing about AIDS and it was really scary... prior to that we were scared of the threat of nuclear war! A crazy decade for sure... it with some memorable music!
Grazie Paolo, bella dimostrazione, come al tuo solito, ma anche una bella testimonianza personale di quegli anni.
You are such a cool guy, so friendly and talented! Please keep on making these wonderful videos!!! : )
Another great video! love shout. When you brought the digidrums in I could almost hear the vocal... Saw them in concert in a small venue several years ago I was almost in 3rd-4th row - Incredible live show
Thank you!
TFF used the DigiDrums Rock Drums chip version for the LinnDrum for "Shout" which is why you have a lot of the other LinnDrum sounds on the drum track. Yes the kick and snare from the Rock Drums chips were sampled from Led Zeppelin's "When The Levee Breaks" (isolate the kick and snare yourself on any sampler and you have the same thing). This, of course was done waaaay before the sampling lawsuit era, so that's how they got away with that. Howard Jones, though, did use this same Drumulator/Rock Drums setup for his "Dream Into Action" album, namely the songs "No One Is To Blame" (original version) and "Look Mama."
I thought of that too but there's an article where they state they had the Drumulator in the studio as well. As far as I've found, DigiDrums did several sets for the Drumulator first and foremost, although it's possible that by the time Shout was recorded, they started making them for the LinnDrum and other drum machines already. Information is scarce, so if you have actual insight / proof, please post it. As far as the Levee, I did chop them and compare them in an audio editor. They are similar but they are not the same. This could be because of the extreme low resolution of sampling back then. But I don't know. A lot of people are repeating this Levee mantra on the Internet, but nobody has offered an actual proof that they were sampled by Levee. There was a moron posting here (from Matera, Italy, btw) who insisted he had some forensic software and he would do a forensic analysis, but of course he didn't produce SQUAT and he started acting up so I kicked him out of the channel. There is an interview at NAMM oral history with one of the founders of DigiDrums in which he says they produced the sets. So, are you stating these facts because you know for sure (in which case, please furnish the proof as we'd all love to know?), or because you've read it on the Internet? Please do tell. www.namm.org/library/oral-history/peter-gotcher and daily.redbullmusicacademy.com/2015/03/key-tracks-tears-for-fears-songs-from-the-big-chair
@@SynthManiaDotCom Thing is, once someone admits to the Led Zeppelin sample, out come the lawyers. :)
Have you actually chopped the samples in your editor and done the comparison yourself? Yes or no? I did it. Have you done it?
Hello? elsongs? Have you chopped the samples and done the comparison yourself - as you've asked me to do? State your findings, please.
elsongs?? Are you there?
I have a Drumulator with a JLCooper model so it has 3 chip sets in it. Theres a 3-way switch to change sounds.
I alway figured the drum sounds were played by Ian Stanley's Fairlight, which they obviously had with the Sarrar/Arr1 sample playing the melody. And with one of Adam Ant's old drummers, Chris Hughes in Tears for Fears at that time, I always figured they just sampled Chris playing the drum sounds into the Fairlight.
@HighHopesBass HI - Check out Failed Muso's youtube/blog. He restored Stanley's Series III Fairlight, which came out in 1985, the same time as Shout. For The Hurting (1982), I've read they borrowed Peter Gabriel's Series II Fairlight. I've not heard that Orzabal owned a Fairlight himself.
That sound-set was used extensively on Cocteau Twins's Treasure.
Holy schmackers I was going to say the same thing!! That snare immediately takes me to Lorelei.
Ditto
Great album!
And their drums sound sucked there. Much better without that added "Bonham" chipset.
@@lovecraftmusic8717 yeah…Robin evidently regrets using the Rock Drums chips. “Treasure is just an abortion.” His words.
Quite a story related to Shout, Paolo!! Very touching, really.
Recently saw a documentary about TFF and two of the studio tech guys said that at one point during recording 'Shout' they were banging on mic stands with screwdrivers to get that particular sound ;-)
Post link to it
@@SynthManiaDotCom -
Tears for Fears: Songs from the Big Chair
Documentary that explores the creation of the seminal, second album by Tears for Fears. Songs from the Big Chair took the gothic synth-pop foundations of the band and combined them with arena-ready anthems, leading to critical acclaim and three international hit singles, Mothers Talk, Shout and Everybody Wants to Rule the World.
This documentary, made with the full cooperation of the band, explores how the album was recorded and how the band left their indelible imprint on new wave music.
www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000f8xc
I used to love playing the flutey vox riff that I believe was the same sample as Art of Noise used.
I had no sampler so had to make do with combining a sine wave with white noise.
@@pinkle257 Possibly.
I have since played that sample on a Fairlight, so its hard to say it's origin.
It was definitely a fairlight cmi used on the dooddoodoodoooo flutely vox haha
Amazing!!! Awesome recreation. It always calls my atention the Drumulator's expansion capabilities. Shout is a very powerful song. Love to hear your anecdotes.
Thanks!
Fascinating
Someone I recently sold a synth to was talking about swapping and burning EEPROMs on these old drum machines. Very cool to see an example of it, and with one of my favorite songs!
👏 Awesome lesson!!! Love the track! Great Drum explanation!! Thx for sharing the story of the AIDS Epidemic such a tragic time!
I almost bought that Digidrums chipset for the LinnDrum I had at the time. I remember the keyboard rep at the music store told me about them, he called it the John Bonham chipset, so I've always thought that they were sampled from the intro of "When The Levee Breaks".
I was 10 at the time, and it's when I started watching DeeJay Television.
I loved it, there was so much great music coming from abroad.
It's where I first saw Duran Duran's Wild Boys' video and so much more.
A couple years later more Rap made it into the program (possibly only good thing Jovanotti did in his career).
Cecchetto was one of our greatest music industry tycoons, always his ears peeled for what was great coming from the rest of the world.
Wasn't it for that I'd not be introduced early to Jimmy Sommerville, Spanday Ballet, Depeche Mode and many more.
It formed my taste, and I'm grateful for that.
Grazie per aver condiviso la storia, ricordo anche io la paura derivante dall'annuncio dell'AIDS 🙏🏼
I don't wanna sample snitch, but it's pretty obvious where the Shout snare drum came from, when you hear it solo'd :) Great video.
I didn't know you were Italian! I used to watch DJTV everyday when I was a kid, really loved it! I miss those days...
These are the things I CAN’T do without 😜
Dadrian Wilson
Come on!
Come on!
Your post is awsome! Hello from Laguna Beach, California
Hello there!
Wow we have so much in common including the Garfield elec. dr click ah ah.i graduates H.S in 83, so I understand what you say at the time I was with Atari 1040ste /Cubase later a falcon I used to play with wall of voodoo bass keys a multi moog and a pro-1 your videos are brilliant very good ears you have keep up the good work
Thank you very much, David Jon! Wow, Wall Of Voodoo - I used to listen to the Call Of The West record a lot back then! Really cool music
Grazie, potrei guardare i tuoi video per ore!!!
Thanks for sharing your re creation of this classic and your memories, ciao for now. (thumbs up)
Many thanks!
I was 7 in 1984 , loved that song when it came out
I recognise that Linndrum rimshot. Perhaps in some classic hip-hop?
@John Tammaro Listen one of the earliest Rick Rubin productions on Def Jam for the *Beastie Boys "Beastie Groove"/"Rock Hard"* . Also one of the *Marley Marl* productions for *Super Kids, "The Tragedy"* (Marl says on Redbull lecture that he sampled the sound of Art Of Noise "Beat Box" song).
yeah it, and all the other hits, are all over rap.
What a great video! One of the best tracks of all time.
Awesome content as always... long time viewer, first time commenter :-)
I would have liked to see you install the EPROM and feature a few close ups of the gear please!
I'll do a video on it :)
@@SynthManiaDotCom Yeah, never forget the gear-nerds appetite for close up shots of the rude bits... Looking forward to it!
Great history lesson and tutorial. We want more like please - I'm talking to you, *COME ON!*
Thank you and will do!
Dj Television! Mi hai risvegliato un ricordo, era un appuntamento fisso, imperdibile! Avevo 18 anni, grande passione per synth, drum machines e UK music. Il drum pattern di Shout è sempre stato uno dei miei preferiti!
Eh si'! :-) imperdibile dopo la scuola, se mi ricordo bene era all'ora della merenda
@@SynthManiaDotCom lavorando, mi dovevo accontentare della puntata domenicale.... Ciao!
Great video about a great band. Although I really like minimal synth music, especially early New Wave (first 2 Human League albums, the Normal, Fad Gadget) I always felt that bands like Tears for Fears and New Order had a unique way of weaving together traditional electric guitar and bass with electronics. Songs from the Big Chair may have been my introduction, but The Hurting is my favorite, such a powerful soulful album. I had the benefit of growing up in NY, within radio distance of WLIR on Long Island. WLIR had an arrangement with a UK distributor. All this new music was flown into JFK every Thursday. This music shaped my journey as a musician. Music I write today in my home studio has all of these influences.
+1 on The Hurting, Peter! :-) Excellent songwriting in action there, and the sonic colors are incredible. Songs like "Mad World" are truly masterpieces of pop. Like you, I only discovered The Hurting after Songs From The Big Chair, but I like a lot a lot
Also the opening track, The Hurting, nice contrast of piano, electric guitar and synths. Also Pale Shelter. If I could write a song the has a piano swell, Single strum acoustic guitar, drum machine beat and synths, I would die a happy man. It’s harder than it sounds. I think it is challenging to combine these instruments in a way that speaks to people, especially drum machines and guitar. Here, it doesn’t sound sterile (a feeling which also has its place). And I don’t think it has anything to do with creating a drummer like feel on the drum machine (which They do not do, and I am opposed to). It is a amalgamation of the sound. Prince was a master at this.
@@pjm8779 I remember reading that it was the opening toms on The Hurting that were sampled and used as the intro to 'Do they know it's Christmas' by Band Aid.
Few bands were able to merge bleeding-edge technology to make good-sounding music. Tears for Fears did. I recall hearing some of the individual tracks of that CD here on youtube along with some comments from the engineer about the tech challenges with the Fairlight and all the other gear (video might have been for a remix but can't remember).
i used to play the triangle in a reggae band, but i had to leave coz it was just 1 ting after another
Yea..you just get to stand at the back an ting!🤣
Don't be a square... oh, its a triangle 😂
Tagalog - dumating - your joke as "arrived" (nice one OldSkool and nice use of that spelling)
Maybe you should tri a different angle.
Bellissimo video! :D E' sempre un piacere guardarti! Thank you
Grazie, Tom Sins!
I remember a few years back there was another RUclips guy looking for that sound chip set for his Drumulator, but he couldn't remember the name of it. It's highly sought after. I ganked those sounds like 20 years ago for my sampler using the sounds from "Never Let Me Down Again", by Depeche Mode. I figured they were from the Led Zeppelin song but that track seems to have a delay on it which isn't apparent in the Digidrums kit.
One of my favorite beats and songs. Sounds really good through the right speakers especially the 8 minute long US remix version. Good job indeed sir. ... J
Another great video. Thank you!
A proposito di "Random Stories" , questa canzone io la associo al servizio militare: insieme a Big in Japan era continuamente riprodotta nei Juke Box quando eravamo in libera uscita.
Sentendole provo sempre un sentimento misto a nostalgia perchè erano anni spensierati ma anche di tristezza a proposito di un anno che avrei potuto vivere in modo più costruttivo.
E' proprio vero che ci sono suoni, canzoni e perfino odori che sono indissolubilmete legati a certi momenti di vita.
Bravo Paolo.
Ciao
Grazie, Fabrizio - eh si', certi ricordi ti restano tutta la vita - Che bella che era anche Big In Japan.
Wow 1984! That brought back some memories, life was so exciting then, so much to do and see in West Wood and DTLA.
Good stuff, great song those drums were iconic
Great video bro. I am a lucky owner of a Drumulator as well. I have it in storage with my Sp1200. Thanks for the video.
Thank you, Mistaish! I'd love to get an SP-12 or 1200 soon
Not too many guys that know everything about everything when synts and drum machines comes in consideration...I am more guitar man but i like to watch magic you do here..
Wow... so much better than the stock sounds. Your drumulator is in mint condition... wow. I bought one in '83-ish? Had it next to a 909 in the store and convinced myself the 909 didn't sound at all like real drums and bought the drumulator. Only thing going w/ drumulator was a custom cable I had to sync it to an Apple IIe and Passport. Ahh... the days.
Have you ever heard of the dance genre called Freestyle which was born around 1985-1986? I finally realized where one of the most recognized songs of that genre got its snare. Thank you
I heard "Point of No Return" by Expose (formerly X-Posed) at a gas station this summer and it opened my eyes to the genre! What song are you referring to, and share any other freestyle recommendations you have :) so far I've only really listened to Expose's first album, as well as PSB's Domino Dancing which I believe Lewis Martineé also produced
ernavk the snare from the drumulator was used on a song by George Lamond “Bad of the heart” produced by a production team of Mark Ligget and Chris Barbosa. If you want to listen to knew freestyle, look up The Santana Twins on Spotify or iTunes.
@@angelsantana3001 thanks for the recommendations! Are you one of TST? ;)
ernavk yes
Merci beaucoup pour tous ces souvenirs.
Thanks for the little story at the end.
(In an unrelated note, Bruce Dickinson has a fever. The only cure is more cowbells.)
Wow cool! That's one of my favorite beat and track of Tears for Fears👍
Great Job! Thanks for sharing!.
Very interesting story at the end. Hope you and your family are safe and healthy in this time. I have cousins in Perugia and Imola. Please take care.
Thanks for the nice explanation. I always thought the drums were coming from a Fairlight.
Those digi drums sounds remind me of my Kawai R-100 a bit. :)
Quite a scary memory to associate with that.
thanks for this video. i ordered this chips for my Oberheim DX at the same source than you :-) Thanks for the great work. now i need the other sounds from the Tears for fears video you posted too. great great..thanks so mutch
acidjack303 what is the source? My DX needs some chips.
Dio che ricordi! Grazie Paolo!
That was a great breakdown of one of the best songs from the 80s... I wonder about those LedZep samples, I think it's best it stays a mystery 😉
Shout - I remember when I first heard it too. It's one of the greatest pop songs ever.
Very informative and funny video! Is interesting the fact that *Oberheim DMX/DX had their own versions of the same sounds called "BEAT KICK /BEAT SNARE"* , The equivalent of Drumulator's "ROCK KICK/ROCK SNARE".
I heard that is what they used. DMX Extended.
my favorite 80’s new wave guitar solo is from that song
The thumb's down thought there wasn't enough cowbell
Agreed, the cowbell could have more depth.
unfair to thumb down because there is no way there can be enough cowbell. It is not possible.
Such cool sounds.
I had always thought the second cowbell sounded lower than the first. Went back to listen to the song - you are correct of course. Strange how you remember a song to be only to find out it isn't.
I did too, and of course Paolo is correct.
I remember when I first heard this song and Bon Jovi's "You Give Love a Bad Name", and thought how I'd never heard such music before.
Recently watched a BBC 6 Music documentary with Taylor Hawkins (Foo Fighters drummer), he was reminiscing about learning drums by playing along with pop music on the Radio. At the time he didn’t know that drum machines existed and couldn’t work out how the drummer was managing to play the beat like that :)
Ahh, that snare was on a lot of hip hop and funk tracks back in the 80s too. Like Joeski Love's 'Pee Wee Dance'. Surprised to learn it originally came from a Drumulator eprom. I always wondered where it was from. I thought it might have been a Fairlight sample.
1984 I was 7 years old...Deejay Television, Discoring...bei tempi!
Sounds SOOOOOO Good!!
Not sure why this is in my recommended, but it was fun to watch!
Great video! Now all we need (okay, not "all" :D) is 1:1 reproduced intro of New Order - True Faith ;-)
That was my high school song! Though I didnt grasp its meaning back then, I loved it (and still do!).
I used to think that the day would never come....
This isn’t a “faithful” recreation, but it’s my tribute to one of my favorite New Order songs....True Faith. instagram.com/p/BRj4VwvhFJz/?igshid=1jrofs0ieb7u9
Amazing. regards from Portugal.
That snare just gets me every time. It was used on an extremely obscure rap song by Joeski Love. The tune was Pee-Wee's Dance. While you might not remember that composition, you might remember the song that sampled that cut for it's snare, the more memorable "Ambitionz Az a Ridah" by Tupac.
I do not think Tupac has sampled the cut from Joeski Love tune. Listen carefully, the sounds are different, the bass drum pattern is different. It's more likely they just simply used the same Digidrum Rock sample for the snare. This snare sample wasn't used for the first time ever by Joeski Love, whose song is from 1986. As you know, Shout itself is from 1984, and they had already used it. Sometimes you can't blindly trust what www.whosampled.com says. You always have to use your ears to judge.
SynthMania I'm not aware of whosampled and I was nowhere near the studio when the song was put together. However, its clear that this particular snare was used in all three recordings. The only sound I commented on was the snare. I'm not sure what other kits were used in any other recordings.
I see - Since you wrote "you might remember the song that sampled that cut for it's snare" you made it sound like Tupac had sampled the snare in the Joeski Love tune. I am saying that Tupac used the sample, but he probably didn't sample it from Joeski - he didn't need to - as this sample has been available since 1984 in various formats (Drumulator, DMX/DX, Linn, Sequential etc.) -that's all I meant
SynthMania Unless we talk to the songs producer, the world may never know. Keep up the good work. Its clear that you are passionate about vintage hardware and I respect that.
@@SynthManiaDotCom @breakbeats92.5 resurrrcting this 3 years later lol. But Daz of Dogg Pound actually did sample the JoeSki Love drums for the Pac record. I was there when he reconstructed the track for Cam’ron’s “Ambitionz as a killa”. Cam originally recorded it to the Pac instrumental and Daz came down to my studio and redid it from scratch. I always knew it was the JSL drums but a lot of the folks in the room were floored. I’d always thought it was common knowledge. Anyway, just passing on some knowledge. Have loved the channel for years! Salute.
Amazing as usual.
That was cool. So glad you
..let it all out.
Grandes videos !!!! Saludos desde Argentina
VIntage Drumulator ROM chips and a Mac SE... so cool to see it all working!
Thanks for your tip, I ordered the digidrums rock EPROMs set on eBay