This is so fucking dope. Like actually one of the sickest beats ive heard in a while. But at the same time i think its worth noting that if you REALLY wanna make beats like j dilla, you gotta live record those chops and drum samples without quantizing. Thats what gives his beats that organic and raw feeling. You can even hear little "mistakes" in his beats sometimes, especially on donuts. Its a lot harder to capture that raw feeling when manually sequencing everything, but i dont think its inherently better or worse. Its just what set dilla apart.
Thanks bro I appreciate that. I actually live recorded the drums on my midi beat pad and left them unquantized but I manually arranged the sample chops
@@hazybeatz1327 shit I guess I was just making baseless assumptions lol sorry dude. I definitely recommend fruity slicex for live sample chopping, it's basically like using an mpc
Quick question, where do you normally find your vocal samples, and what genres do you look for? Recently Ive been experimenting with 1950s era "doo wop" samples but I think it might be nice to branch out to some more soul samples. Thanks
@@RealHumanPerson-zz7ix I usually go for 70s soul and easy listening records. The 70s have some of the best records perfect for sampling there's plenty of playlists on RUclips just search 70s soul samples. That's pretty much how I find mines
@@hazybeatz1327 have you ever listened to a record? if so, how can you let yourself sample off youtube knowing youre using a third of whats sonically possible ?
These kicks are nasty
Thanks
@@hazybeatz1327 yeah, nice kick. did you make it?
@@stuff4826 it was in a drum kit I didn't do any processing to it other than compression
This is so fucking dope. Like actually one of the sickest beats ive heard in a while. But at the same time i think its worth noting that if you REALLY wanna make beats like j dilla, you gotta live record those chops and drum samples without quantizing. Thats what gives his beats that organic and raw feeling. You can even hear little "mistakes" in his beats sometimes, especially on donuts. Its a lot harder to capture that raw feeling when manually sequencing everything, but i dont think its inherently better or worse. Its just what set dilla apart.
Thanks bro I appreciate that. I actually live recorded the drums on my midi beat pad and left them unquantized but I manually arranged the sample chops
@@hazybeatz1327 shit I guess I was just making baseless assumptions lol sorry dude. I definitely recommend fruity slicex for live sample chopping, it's basically like using an mpc
@@isaiahromero9861 it's all good bro and thanks
so much myth around dilla...
@@stuff4826 a lot of crate diggin and 1000s of beats
this is dope asf
Thanks
need more sample based beats from you for sure
I just posted some more recently and I have something I'm posting later today stay tuned. I'm just really getting into sampling
teach me senpai!
dope
Quick question, where do you normally find your vocal samples, and what genres do you look for? Recently Ive been experimenting with 1950s era "doo wop" samples but I think it might be nice to branch out to some more soul samples. Thanks
@@RealHumanPerson-zz7ix I usually go for 70s soul and easy listening records. The 70s have some of the best records perfect for sampling there's plenty of playlists on RUclips just search 70s soul samples. That's pretty much how I find mines
@@hazybeatz1327 Dilla samples a lot of jazz, funk, and r&b too
@hazybeatz1327 thanks vro your beats are dope as hell
@@RealHumanPerson-zz7ix thanks bro appreciate it
@@hazybeatz1327 have you ever listened to a record? if so, how can you let yourself sample off youtube knowing youre using a third of whats sonically possible ?