The Truth About 80s DRUMS (Synth Pop)

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  • Опубликовано: 11 дек 2024

Комментарии • 534

  • @Psychlist1972
    @Psychlist1972 2 месяца назад +34

    Many don't realize that there's an inherent delay in MIDI 1.0 to hardware. A single note-on messages takes apx 1ms to send over the wire, assuming it's the only thing being transmitted. If you use MIDI like we did in the 80s, using MIDI Thru on devices, you can get even slightly more variation. But more importantly, when you have multiple channels of MIDI data (multiple synths) then you end up with even more potential delay between note messages (up to 15ms more delay for a note on if you manage to max everything out).
    So even without the delays introduced by underpowered CPUs of the day, with MIDI, you already have some variable trigger delay in there. Of course, this only applies to MIDI, so post-1983 stuff.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +8

      Yes absolutely. What was especially strange about these tests though was that the random drift continued even when I took midi out of the equation and just pressed play on the drum machine. Also, I started to guess that the way the drum machines were implemented internally was actually serial (like midi) because nothing *ever* lined up and was always at least 1ms out.

    • @AndrewAHayes
      @AndrewAHayes Месяц назад

      I was wondering what caused the timing issue, I was thinking along the lines of US instruments being converted for UK 50Hz electricity.
      My set up must have some serious timing discrepancies as my MIDI set ups are a rats nest of cables.
      I wonder why MIDI never evolved into an optical system? probably cost!

    • @Psychlist1972
      @Psychlist1972 Месяц назад +2

      @@AndrewAHayes Yeah. The original MIDI standard was about using inexpensive components that were super easy to integrate in 1983 because the CPUs all had serial integrated. Optical is more expensive and requires many more components. MIDI 2.0 is faster, and with the microcontrollers available today and used in synths, network MIDI 2.0 (spec now complete and being voted on) has a ton of promise for being the inexpensive super fast solution (also without the distance limits of USB)

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      @@Psychlist1972 Still no chords though, right? And you still get ‘gapping’ with the cc data because it’s relegated below the notes. People always say that they didn’t expect to be listening to suchandsuch a song forty years later. Well I certainly didn’t expect to be peering over tiny midi monitoring screens forty years later, trying to figure out if a channel is properly taking priority 😂😂😂

    • @Psychlist1972
      @Psychlist1972 Месяц назад

      @@DistortThePreamp the MIDI protocol itself doesn't have any prioritization other than system real-time messages like clock. Everything else transmits as the sender wishes it to.
      Chords in MIDI 1.0 are serial, so if you somehow managed to hit 5 notes at the exact same time, there'd still be apx 5ms between the first and last, assuming no other traffic.
      In MIDI 2.0, they are still serial messages, but the timing is in the microseconds, not milliseconds so it becomes far less of a consideration.

  • @scottoharamusic
    @scottoharamusic 2 месяца назад +15

    Ive always imagined this was the case - I first noticed it with the Linn Drum where there is a noticeable lag if you put two sounds on the same subdivision - only one sounds in time, the other one comes in late. If you listen to those early Prince albums using the Linn Drum the Kick is almost always fractionally late on the one. He then took that on as a key part of his sound with his live bands always dragging the one - its part of what makes his feel so funky. When I first got into sequencing I used a Roland MC500 which seemed to have a great feel. When I switched over to using Vision on an early Mac laptop it still seemed to but when I switched to a modern DAW and had sounds actually IN the computer rather than on an external machine, I found that if I quantised it was too mechanical - I had to deliberately leave in timing errors, especially on drum programming, to get a natural feel. It's brilliant that you've taken the time to actually create a comparison and get the evidence! It would be cool to hear its

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +6

      Exactly. There’s another reason that’s peculiar to the Linn which is this: all of the samples had ‘dead air’ in front of them. There are lots of theories as to why this would be the case, but my guess is that Roger Linn wanted to make sure that the VCA would have time to open. However, what’s interesting is that as you define the samples the dead air (of course) gets longer. This means that the groove slightly changes depending on the drum tuning. And Prince often used very detuned claps and rimshots. I am fascinated to see/hear if the Behringer clone replicates the dead air. If it doesn’t, it won’t capture the Linn groove.

    • @scottoharamusic
      @scottoharamusic 2 месяца назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp I didn’t know about the dead air, but that makes a lot of sense as to why those detuned sounds feel so late! I wonder if he was de-tuning primarily to get the timing effect and accepting the pitch shift as the side effect!!

    • @CodyHazelleMusic
      @CodyHazelleMusic Месяц назад +1

      didn't prince play the linn parts himself, without sequencing?

    • @scottoharamusic
      @scottoharamusic Месяц назад

      @@CodyHazelleMusic same thing still happens. If you press two buttons exactly together, one will sound first!

  • @TheSnowLeopard
    @TheSnowLeopard 2 месяца назад +31

    This video surprised me, namely that apparently so many people are unaware of midi humanizers. The M4L humanizer I've been using for about 10 years which was based on statistical findings of real human drumming published in studies like "Synchronization in human musical rhythms and mutually interacting complex systems".

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +5

      Well this is true. I alluded to humanisers, right? (Or did I cut that bit?) I can’t remember whether a M4L humaniser can advance as well as delay midi, but if it can’t than the obvious workaround is to use track delay to advance the track and then double the amount of humanisation. Although as I’m writing this, it probably doesn’t matter that much - the main point IMO is capturing not so much the timing drift (which is what humanisers were intended to do) but rather the way the phase relationship changes between two overlayed sounds as a result of a differing drift in thei alignment. Great point.

    • @DollysplitBand
      @DollysplitBand 2 месяца назад +1

      So the timing feeling humanly natural doesn't matter as much as each drum hit having some unique quality caused by phase "issues". This is, i imagine, why people still refer to this era of music as rigid.

    • @williamshaneblyth
      @williamshaneblyth Месяц назад

      EZDrummer has this built in too. the funny thing is they also use real drummers and people sometimes it humanize that and it stuffs the sound up as it kind of doubles the effect makes it sound unreal

  • @Gekneveld
    @Gekneveld Месяц назад +10

    The phase argument also makes me think about the oscillators in analog synths that just keep running, instead of restarting with every 'note on' like in many (but not all) digital synths.

  • @Reg-Edit
    @Reg-Edit 2 месяца назад +16

    A lot of the timing in discrepancies were also due to the fact that they recorded onto 2 inch tape
    and a lot of cut and splice took place inherently changing timings of different tracks
    Which, when it comes to tracks from prints, and those classic 80s anthems clearly added to the complexity of the finish product
    But as a user of hardware, I can agree that when you look at it, after recording, you can clearly see it’s about the groove
    I love your analysis ❤

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +4

      Yeah, I was so surprised about this. I had assumed, like you're alluding to, that the timing discrepancies were to do with either tape stretching, or general clock drift. I was astonished to find that the drum instruments were drifting independently even when you just hit play, in other words with no midi involved at all. So when you add in SMPTE clock, etc etc etc, it all sounds very non-robotic.

  • @mournblade1066
    @mournblade1066 2 месяца назад +68

    An example would have been nice. You stated you tried it by recording it "normally," and then quantized(?) it, and there was a noticeable difference. Well, why didn't you share that with us?

    • @bloopbleepnothinghere
      @bloopbleepnothinghere 2 месяца назад +8

      Yes, without A/B testing then it's just a hypothesis. It's like "trust me, this is why". All music up until the 2000s was using crappy MIDI drifting timing, so I don't buy that is what defined the 80s sound, at all.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +29

      Yes. I’m really sorry about that. I made a previous version of the video which contained the full experiment but I couldn’t get it below 35 minutes and so, perhaps wrongly, I decided to remake the whole thing in a simpler way.
      The original experiments were done a couple of years ago, but the new experiments I did and filmed for the video worked as follows:
      - I sampled some of my drum machine sounds into the DAW
      - I programmed an identical pattern in (a) a midi clip in the DAW, and (b) my sequencer. (Note: I should also have done it in the drum machine which I have previously tested).
      - I recorded both.
      - Switching between the two records they sound the same, but they’re not the same as I then prove:
      - I take the kick-snare audio sum from both the midi audio and sequencer audio
      - For each of those I duplicate, layer with an offset of two beats so every kick-snare is under the previous kick-snare etc
      - I then flip the phase of the duplicate and show how with the midi audio it produces silence (a successful null test) and with the sequencer audio you get a phasey hollow sound that is noticeably different with every hit.
      - This proves that they’re different, and also different every time. And is also a perfect explanation for why DAW beats sound different to beats that were made in an old fashioned way using drum machines or sequencers.
      - I also reference some science which explained how, although humans typically perceive sounds that occur within 5ms of each other as occurring at the same time, our brains are highly attuned, albeit subconsciously, to the sound of phase shift because it’s how we perceive front to back, and from an evolutionary perspective it was an important part of staying alive when there were predators behind you.
      - Thus, in a slightly humorous way, one might say we have evolved to be able to distinguish between DAW beats and drum machine/sequenced beats, even if our modern brains can’t explain what exactly we’re hearing that’s different.
      - Finally I note that for people with proper training, they can pick out the differences and demonstrate with a blind A/B test. This last sequence was planned and demoed but not filmed.
      I’ve done a lot of thinking about this, and I am coming to the conclusion that I may entirely re-make this video in a few months with more of the science and demonstration.
      In the meantime, sorry for the hand waving.

    • @TheRyanKirk
      @TheRyanKirk 2 месяца назад +2

      This was a suggested video for me, and I’m quite interested. I appreciate the thoughtful response, so I’ve gone ahead and subscribed so I can see the follow-up. Greatly anticipated.

    • @infindebula
      @infindebula Месяц назад +1

      @@DistortThePreampyeah, you definitely need to provide examples of your findings here!

    • @pipelineaudio
      @pipelineaudio Месяц назад +1

      because he's just repeating the same thing all the yootoob experts have been saying five billion times...if you showed and a b the video would lose its impact

  • @duncansnowden6857
    @duncansnowden6857 2 месяца назад +18

    Makes sense. The spec. for the MIDI 1.0 protocol guarantees a maximum latency - “response time” - of 8.3ms (at 30 frames per second). That's well within what would be comfortable for live performance, but it's not nothing. And it fits rather neatly with your observations of around 7ms of drift.
    It never occurred to me how it would affect the sound. But of course it will.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +7

      Oh I didn't know that! And of course 8.3ms = 16.6 maximum delta. I was aware that every midi note had to be at least 1ms apart, and there is no such thing as a midi chord (because it's a serial protocol), but I should obviously have read the spec. Duh.

    • @erroneousbosh
      @erroneousbosh 2 месяца назад +2

      Interestingly the Juno 106's voice CPU has a "cycle time" in which it updates all six voices and the "global" parameters (noise, master VCA, PWM, resonance, and the various switches) is 4.3ms, but by the time the assigner CPU has done its work and it's told the voice board over its MIDI-like internal link, it averages out at about 6ms latency between "Note On" message and sound coming out.

  • @charlessomerset9754
    @charlessomerset9754 Месяц назад +2

    Loved your obscure PSB's reference and for letting me know the song.
    This and the NO code made me subribe immediately. As a producer, this stuff is as addictive as crack.

  • @ifiii-1723
    @ifiii-1723 2 месяца назад +10

    your channel is such an absolute goldmine, thank you so much

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      I very much appreciate this! Thank you so much for the comment 🙏🙏🙏

  • @markkilborn512
    @markkilborn512 2 месяца назад +6

    I'm still curious about recommendations for a modern hardware sequencer, however... this morning I wrote a script for Reaper that will randomize the placement of all selected items by up to a certain number of milliseconds, plus or minus. I use Reaper for my work so it's the DAW I generally noodle around in with music.
    I created a drum and kick track using an Oberheim DMX plugin, printed them to audio, which resulted in them all being perfectly on the grid. I then used strip silence to isolate all of the hits, then ran my script and entered 7ms as the value. It randomly pushed and pulled all the individual drum hits by up to 7 ms forward or backward. It definitely changed the feel of things.
    I think purely random may be the wrong approach, as it sounded a little chaotic. Maybe the better way is to, for example, pull all the kicks forward by 3ms, then have it push them forward or backward by up to 1ms more after that. To make it a little less random. I'm definitely going to play with it though.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +5

      So you sound like you’re properly mathsy, and therefore I don’t think it would be a random linear deviation around the mean. You might want to try a power distribution with an upper bound, but there’s another thing which is that none of the hits ever occur together and are always at least 1ms apart. That’s probably because the internal drum machine sequencer is modelled on midi and is serial. All lots of fun.
      Regarding hardware sequencers, I absolutely LOVE my Squarp Pyramid! Unfortunately they’ve retired it and are trying to move to their next gen model which looks great but is a bit physically big for me. So my recommendation is a second hand Pyramid. At some stage I’ll make videos showing my workflow, but suffice to say it works excellently for electronic pop and rock.
      Hit me up on my email in the description if you have any specific questions…

  • @rogerboltoncomposer
    @rogerboltoncomposer Месяц назад +2

    Fantastic. Thank you. I was the Fairlight Series III CMI demonstrator at Peter Gabriel's 'Syco Systems'. The timing 'issues' took me to Australia and back, then we made different versions of the software for different clients, specifically due to the quirkiness of the Series IIx and Series III. The NED Synclavier was within about 1 ms, however many of my clients preferred the Fairlight 'timing', as Trevor mentions in his book. Here we are still working with the original Fairlights and I use them for specific jobs for making soundtracks / music productions - still! :-) Your 'Temporal Phase Shift' is great. Another important element is that the Fairlight had separate individual outputs 8 and 16. Therefore the calibration of each would be slightly different. So each individual note would be both temporarily 'phase' shifted, as well as the frequency / EQ curve slightly different on EVERY note, depending on how many output (or Nphony) was assigned to each multi-sample. If that makes sense?! In other words, over 50% of every hit record from that time, needed the Fairlight somewhere in the production to make it sound like the 80s. Emu and Linn also had their own quirks, as well as the Ensoniq Mirage. I hope this helps? Cheers! PS With the Fairlight 'Page R' or 'RS Page' timing priority was given to the top 'track' and became more 'wobbly' the further down the sequencer page. There are stories that I could tell..........

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +2

      Roger - such an interesting comment!
      I had no idea about the Page R priority! That’s hilarious! What was surprising to me was that I could hear the alignment shift in the sound combinations well before the timing errors were apparent. I was a bit coy in the video (although I dropped a very large hint) but that was an actual multitrack (that I shouldn’t have) that I was showing of a famous number one produced by Julian (whom I’m scheduled to interview in a few weeks btw). You can literally see the drift. Some of the snares are ahead, some behind, etc etc. I think everyone has historically focussed on timing discrepancies as a rhythm issue, but of course it’s just as profound if not more profound as an alignment issue between sounds that makes every combination sound different. I’ve just been doing some snare sound design where I’m layering two identical samples and delaying one of them. As you would expect a delay of only 1ms produces a very noticeable comb filter.
      The Linn timing issues are fascinating. To me the biggest ‘secret’ about the Linn is that there was dead air at the beginning of the samples which of course got longer when the samples were detuned. So when Prince was detuning his rimshots he was actually changing the groove. And that’s before one analyses how accurate its internal sequencing clock was.
      If you feel like it, get in touch over email (address in the description). I have too many questions for this short reply!

    • @rogerboltoncomposer
      @rogerboltoncomposer Месяц назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp Great. I'm in touch still with most of my old clients as there's 3-part documentary in production at the moment. I'm happy to chat via email :-) I 'curate' a number of old machines...

  • @markkilborn512
    @markkilborn512 2 месяца назад +10

    I’ve worked as a sound designer in the video game industry for almost 20 years. I take advantage of this phenomenon all the time when making transient sound effects. What I didn’t know was that this was happening all over 80s albums but it makes perfect sense.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +3

      Oh interesting! So you are taking identical samples and exploiting the fact that when they layer the sum sounds different because of phase differences? That's fascinating! And let me return the comment -- now I think about it, it makes perfect sense in your industry too...

    • @markkilborn512
      @markkilborn512 2 месяца назад +2

      @@DistortThePreampSometimes identical samples, sometimes similar samples. Sometimes I’ll cut off the first one once the second one kicks in, kind of like “choking” it in drum machine terms.
      We do this for explosives, gunshots, or anything big and transient all the time. Theres a huge variety of sound you can achieve when playing with very short amounts of time offsets. I remember when I first learned this, a more experienced sound designer taught me and it absolutely blew my mind how much a few ms could change the timbre of the sound.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +2

      Oh that sound designer would have been talking about exactly the same thing I was. It’s extraordinary once you witness it with your own ears. I’ve never done any game sound design but it sounds fascinating. Your description of ‘choke groups’ is obviously very applicable to music…

    • @klinkske
      @klinkske 2 месяца назад +1

      Fun. I drag my tracks in the daw a few ms to the front or back and then repeat till i get what i like most. But i should repeat it more later in the track 😎

    • @craigwood8862
      @craigwood8862 2 месяца назад +2

      This is cool to read

  • @DollysplitBand
    @DollysplitBand 2 месяца назад +4

    I've been recording an 80's disco/goth fusion EP, and i made this discovery myself recently. I'm sequencing on a 606 as i love the workflow.
    Recording a bar at a time, and after I'm done I'll adjust the daw's grid to match what I've recorded. The looseness of the timing is an interesting thing. Apparently the 606 actually has capacitors in circuit specifically for this, not randomness, but looseness.
    This video really did put my mind at ease, i was working around all these inconsistencies, my ears were telling me it's fine but my eyes were not.
    You know what they didn't have back in the 80s? Graphical waveform readouts.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +2

      Exactly - no graphical waveform readouts 😂 That’s why I wonder whether I’m one of the few people to ever have done these tests. But I’ve decided that I very much like the sound of the drum machines.

  • @lockdowntony7048
    @lockdowntony7048 Месяц назад +1

    Dear Sir,
    Please accept my apologies for my previous comments. I have watched your video again and realise my late night brain was misunderstanding the points you were making. You have explained and illustrated very eloquently and succinctly a huge amount of technical and creative information that helps us to understand what makes 80's music so great. As a content producer myself (not on this platform, and not music) I enjoy the indulgence of a little imperfection here and there.
    I was a young teenager in the 80's, and often felt that some of the pop songs were a bit "thin", but when I listen to them now (in my 50's), I realise that they have a complexity and sophistication way beyond what I was able to appreciate at the time. I did enjoy much of the music that was generated in that era, including many of the bands that you reference in your videos.
    I appreciate your wisdom, and have accordingly subscribed and enjoyed a number of your other films. please continue to share your insights with the world.
    Kind regards.
    PS, as a young teenager I was involved in a community "radio station", which actually involved cutting and splicing tape. later, in video editing, I came to understand that you could take advantage of the natural softening of a (electronic, not physical) "cut" on magnetic tape to make an audio cut more natural. I think that relates more to part 2 of your film.
    Thanks again.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      Dear Tony, thank you for these very kind words! Your experience of cutting and splicing tape is interesting. Were you doing something like deck-to-deck editing on U-matics, or Betacam, or something like that?

    • @lockdowntony7048
      @lockdowntony7048 Месяц назад

      @@DistortThePreamp The cutting and splicing of tape refers to when I was involved with a school "radio" station when I was around 13 yr old. We did a 20-30 minute programme broadcast over the school tannoy system on a Friday lunchtime. Music requests, shouts, news etc. So it was 1/4 inch audio tape. we would use iron filings on the tape to get the exact cut point on the signal path. Razor blade and splice block for the (diagonal, for the cross fade) cut, sticky tape to join the bits back together. long time ago, so I don't really remember a lot of the details. We'd probably call it a podcast these days.
      The school also had a Black and white 3 camera TV studio that I was involved in a couple of projects. Probably what sparked my interest in video, though it would be around 20 years before I got to that in a professional sense. It was all analogue at the time. I remember one of the techs that helped run the studio showed me that if you set the vision mixing desk up in a certain way, you could use the cross-fade control as a "threshold" for a cut, and if you got the sweet spot, it would split the screen vertically with a random zig-zag pattern. That blew my mind. And was very much "a la mode"
      The video thing I mentioned was Betamax SP. Same tapes that run on Betamax domestic players, but at twice the speed for broadcast. not really possible to physically "cut" that in the same way as audio, as (I'm sure you know) the video track ran on a slightly curved diagonal across most of the track, while the audio tracks ran in parallel along the side.
      So, to come to your main question, in my early days as an assistant editor (video), I was trying to do a really tight audio edit on a Betamax SP tape by setting up the audio mixer to do a one frame (25fps) cross fade, matching the vision cut, triggered by the edit controller. But the audio mixer couldn't do a cross fade in less than 3 frames. The supervising editor said "just make a cut ! ". with some disbelief, I tried it and it came out as a perfect soft mix. After some reflection (and I still marvel about this to this day) I realise that the malleability of the physical structure of the materials embedded in the tape would only partially move, creating the 1-frame dissolve at an atomic level. Crazy nuts stuff when I think back on it !
      PS, I hope you don't mind, I have deleted my negative comment from a few days ago. Kind regards.
      T

  • @jasmeerlabeer4591
    @jasmeerlabeer4591 2 месяца назад +18

    Ok. My mind is blown once again. I never thought they weren't perfectly aligned.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +7

      I was stunned when I discovered this. As I said in the video, I spent about a month trying to solve the ‘problem’ till I did, and then realised it wasn’t actually a problem. I honestly don’t think even the 80s producers know this. I was out with someone who used to work at Trevor Horn’s studio with all of the usual suspects, and it was certainly news to him.

    • @Mark_Anthony.
      @Mark_Anthony. 2 месяца назад

      That also blew my mind

    • @Keymandll
      @Keymandll 2 месяца назад

      I just noticed this yesterday myself when I set my DAW to 140 BPM, the drum machine synced up nicely, but sometimes it dropped to 139 BPM for a fraction of a second then jump back to 140. It happens relatively often.

  • @riordanskt
    @riordanskt 2 месяца назад +4

    Congratulations for this video. It really is helpful and we all can see you have a beautiful passion when speaking about the 80s music and overall sound. Thanks.

  • @dougroyce5784
    @dougroyce5784 Месяц назад +1

    Reason studios has a drum module called “Umpf Retro Beats” that has vintage 80’s drums and the gated reverb. It also has a “regroove mixer” that you can put your drums on different grooves and you can “slide” the midi so you can get this drifting effect.

  • @piggosalternateaccount4917
    @piggosalternateaccount4917 2 месяца назад +2

    New fave channel!
    My personal obsession - The wonderful processing of vocals for 50s/60s country music such as Marty Robbins

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Oh thank you! Old fashioned vocal processing, particularly country, is something of a lost art. Technical limitations made it impossible to do the kind of processing and overdubs that became standard even by the 70s. So if you wanted to change the EQ, you’d better select a different mic. Similarly, rather than rely on compression, the recording engineer would learn the song and literally ride the vocal fader (that sets the recording level) during the singer’s performance. It was a completely different world.

  • @RelaxingAmbientMusic-dl5rp
    @RelaxingAmbientMusic-dl5rp Месяц назад +4

    What a great video. You have unique talent in explaining thngs. I always assumed that the majority of 80's drum machine parts were either programmed in the machine, or alternatively quantized after being played manually, but I later found out that artists like Michael Jackson's musicians had the Linn Drum parts played by hand and not quantized afterwards. Other bands played live drums on top of a programmed drum machine (Fade to Grey etc). I would have thought that drum machines have their own rigid clock like on a DAW sequencer, but not so! There is a temporal phase drift as you correctly mention!

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +3

      Thank you! I was as surprised as you that the clocks weren’t and aren’t rigid. From what I can gather it’s simply a function of an underspec’d processor because the underlying quartz timing is very accurate. So the question becomes why on earth would they underspec the clock? And I’m guessing the answer is that they felt the timing was ‘good enough’ and didn’t want to spend the extra money. I’m not complaining, but it’s pretty hilarious. And it’s even funnier that my modern Squarp Pyramid sequencer keeps time like a drunk Uncle at a wedding.

  • @EnricoDePaoli
    @EnricoDePaoli 2 месяца назад +1

    Since 30 years ago not only we always loved the famous MPC feel, knowing it’s swing factors, and realizing the MIDI transmission imperfections like you very well mentioned, but I also noticed the various synths had different speeds to receive busy MIDI info and to generate the corresponding sounds. And it doesn’t stop there… the different sequencing softwares had different timing characteristics! I remember loving the feel of the Opcode’s Vision and I used it on many many records, until it was sold to Gibson who sadly killed it. I never really understood why they bought it! Anyways, after making records all my life, I rarely get impressed with what I see people saying, but you truly are a genius. Your videos are very unique, intelligent and inspiring!

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Thank you! The MPC is really quite special sounding. Really great workflow too that doesn’t get in the way of creativity. I don’t know much about the new ones - it’s potentially a bit over-complicated - but there are still a lot of great records being made on the 2000XL.

  • @djGreenALERT
    @djGreenALERT Месяц назад +3

    Creating 80's megamixes though is a nightmare for that very same reason.. I have to warp the tracks in most cases every couple of bars and then offset afterwards once I have introduced newer drums to bring back that live feel. It's funny when you think about it. When there were imperfections in beats, everyone would clamber for perfection. Now we have it? Look what we want to go back to. (I say we, because I am guilty of it too)

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +3

      I know, right! The reason I got Ableton 5 back in the day was solely to warp tracks and put them on the grid. And now here we are.

  • @jonglassmusic5813
    @jonglassmusic5813 2 месяца назад +7

    “The absence of limitations is the enemy of art”

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +2

      Well put.

    • @andygriffith5160
      @andygriffith5160 Месяц назад +2

      Totally agree. All the best electronic musical innovators produced their best stuff when they were forced to work within the limits of technology.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      @@andygriffith5160 💯

  • @michaelhaig1317
    @michaelhaig1317 Месяц назад +1

    Beautifully put! Get out of the box for sure!

  • @mattjbatkinson1911
    @mattjbatkinson1911 2 месяца назад +4

    I’ve been using an Akai MPC60 mk1 as my main midi sequencer for about 15 years now with a studio full of synths, samplers and midi kit. It’s tighter than any computer based midi sequencer. Even better than my old Atari St from 30 years ago. The Atari was tighter than any Mac or PC based sequencer but the MPC has the edge. You can offset the timing on the MPC too. It gives such an organic feel. I’ll then multitrack the audio into the computer. Slaving the MPC (can I say that word now?!) to the computer via midi clock.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +3

      I do a similar thing - I start by programming in my sequencers, then I track in and slave back to the sequencers using compensated beat clock. It’s all right enough. But nowhere near as tight as putting stuff on the grid inside a daw and hitting the render button. And this IMO is a good thing.

    • @T1F1400
      @T1F1400 2 месяца назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp what does "track in and slave back to the sequencers using compensated beat clock" mean?

  • @GrandThriftAuto
    @GrandThriftAuto 2 месяца назад +9

    Pro tip: a red stethoscope is fine for 80s music but to properly calibrate a 70s vibe it needs to be green with yellow flowers. And carved from hazel.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +4

      That’s absolutely correct. I find the hazel responds better to the different frequency gamut.

    • @TheBlackDog1969
      @TheBlackDog1969 2 месяца назад +1

      Agree, I have two.

  • @cd78
    @cd78 2 месяца назад +3

    I give your videos the thumbs up even before they start. It's so true that computers and vst will never emulate hardware.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Oh that’s amazing! Thank you! And of course you’re completely right about hardware emulation. So many tiny things.

  • @jasonwooler801
    @jasonwooler801 Месяц назад +1

    Great vid. Always interesting stuff going on in your vids.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      Thank you! I am getting sooooo much grief, and rightly so, for not including examples. Ironically I filmed them but ditched them because I thought they were too boring. That’ll teach me.

  • @veganstevenmusic
    @veganstevenmusic 2 месяца назад +5

    world class video on internal clock drift, thanks for making

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +3

      Haha - thank you! I was so staggered that it even existed. I mean they’ve all got quartz clocks. But turns out the clocks for each instrument drift independently anyway. And the irony is, it sounds fantastic.

    • @veganstevenmusic
      @veganstevenmusic Месяц назад

      @@DistortThePreamp delighted with your reply thanks peter

  • @paulmann1289
    @paulmann1289 Месяц назад +1

    Am about 75% through, you've still not revealed your insight (predict the internal clock of the sequences to blame), and you've presented a solution to an issue I was having to remove the machine like exactness of the modern computer. Slower clock speeds. And here was me trying to programmatically add a random drift of 1% to my tempo.
    Thank you 😊 🎉

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      Oh fantastic! I still don’t really know why all the internal clocks are so bad - not that I mind, because I far prefer the sound. But my quest continues…

  • @NostalgicExplorer
    @NostalgicExplorer 2 месяца назад +1

    I remember recording on my computer back in the day using an E-mu Emax II and an Alesis MMT-8, and I never quantized my music. When I recorded my first album in the 2000s, the trend was completely different-it was all about achieving a perfect sound. Projects like Thievery Corporation, Jazzanova, and those on the Naked Music label were focused on sounding flawless, so everything was quantized. I decided to mix both natural instruments and quantized elements to give the music a more 'alive' feel.

  • @els1f
    @els1f Месяц назад +1

    DAMN your channel is badass! I saw the title and thought "I imagine it's gated reverb? I'll be back to watch this soon" but this is SO much more than I could have imagined 🔥🙌

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +2

      Oh fantastic! It took me a while to get the title of this right. And you wouldn’t believe the pushback I’ve had - it’s easily my most co traversal video (and I really never try to be controversial as I think it’s bad entertainment). So I’m SO GLAD you liked it :)

  • @danitempest
    @danitempest Месяц назад +1

    That was extraordinary! Well done.

  • @oceanix1929
    @oceanix1929 2 месяца назад +2

    Recently I have been listening to early Soft-Cell, Ministry and Depeche Mode, and was thinking how organic and lively most of that music sounds, and even thought it’s mostly drum machines, synths and sequencers, you can tell that it’s not hard quantised at all, to an extent that it almost feels like those instruments were played in real time by humans because some of those sounds really have a groove. Now I know why!

    • @marcofioravanti4176
      @marcofioravanti4176 Месяц назад +1

      Some stuff might / will have been overdubbed, played by hands, onto the sequenced basics. Example: Basic Drum Pattern sequenced. -> Cymbals and tomtoms "overdubbed", by pushing the buttons by hand.

  • @derminotauros
    @derminotauros 2 месяца назад +1

    Thank's for that Video. You bring it on the Point. In my first experimental Recordings from 30 years ago I useed drum machines and sequenzed Parts triggered by the machines and it sound always intersting and human cause there is no masterclock by a computer. Today my Korg DDD 1 is the best tool to programming beats cause it has it's own heart and the sounds are as they are. 80ssssss. Love, peace and harmony Bernward

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Oh excellent! Yes - all about there being no masterclock! So glad you liked the video :)

  • @Esperluet
    @Esperluet Месяц назад +1

    Heart rate is subject to frequency variability (at rest) without our feeling or knowing it, this is an awesome convergence of living systems.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      I think this is exactly right. Very interesting point.

  • @riccello
    @riccello 2 месяца назад +1

    Love it! I recently decided to become a music producer and a DJ and among the first thing I acquired besides Pioneer FLX10 controller was a Roland TR-8S. I knew I was going to use Ableton for production and live performances, but my gut feeling told me I needed hardware instruments. My latest purchase was a Casio Privia S3000 with 88 fully weighted keys. Words cannot express how much I love that thing! A full piano keyboard lets me explore the full spectrum of harmonies as I try to find happy accidents while jamming along to my looping track.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Oh brilliant! I think the TR-8S is a great choice. With drum machines I’m a huge fan of trying to ‘perform’ with them - using mutes, solos, filters, etc. And the TR-8S is really good at that. My top tip would probably be to go easy on the fx. They sound like ear candy in headphones but live I would use delay as an occasional effect and reverb pretty much never. Obviously the filter should be used all the time though ;) And the S3000 is great. I have a proper 88 key piano but it’s not rigged up in my studio because I don’t have space for it. And I really miss it. If you’re a ‘player’ you really need those extra octaves. Let me know how you get on!

    • @riccello
      @riccello 2 месяца назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp you know what else TR-8S is great at? Being an Ableton controller. You basically get up to 11 channels with dedicated volume fader, filter knob, reverb and delay! But unfortunately I have mot found a way to launch abd stop clips with it, so I am getting a launchpad mini next.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      @@riccello oh that’s interesting! I used to use the Akai APC40 before I went dawless. It was really fantastic because not only could you launch clips but it had tight integration with things like effects racks. So from memory you could pre-map effect chains to racks and macros and then control those very easily. The rotary controllers were also very well done - infinite turning with leds to show values etc. It also had the A/B function implemented which not many people use in Ableton but which I used to use quite a lot.

    • @riccello
      @riccello 2 месяца назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp btw, I was so inspired by your video, that I researched a way to simulate random phase drift in Ableton. Basically, you can do two things. Fiest, you can Add a delay to each channel and set a range from 1 to 20ms. Then you can automate it using LFO. You can also randomize LFO rate. Second thing you can automate the same way is phase shift between left and right channel.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Ah - randomising the LFO is a great idea! 20ms sounds a bit much though. I would set the max to maybe 12ms. And maybe have it changing value every 16th note. And obviously apply it separately to every drum. That’s a really interesting solution.
      An additional tweak would be this: suppose you’ve set the max drift to 12ms, then you could also set a negative delay of the whole track to 6ms. So that the note was drifting around the grid line.
      And I don’t reckon you’re gonna have to do anything with the phase - although it would be interesting. But the mere fact that the instruments are changing their alignment slightly every time is gonna make the whole thing sound different to a DAW. As I think I said in the video, it wasn’t so much that I could hear the sound, it was much more that I could hear the contrasting sterility of the strict grid.

  • @HumanBeingWithFeelings
    @HumanBeingWithFeelings Месяц назад +2

    Great explanation!
    I don't have the technical knowledge to understand the time deviations in drum machines, but I know that nothing in nature is perfect. Our primitive instinct picks up on these imperfections, which gives us a sense of "trust," while things that are too perfect can raise suspicion and cause rejection. That’s why those subtle imperfections are more pleasant to us; it’s a clear example of the uncanny valley effect.
    Cheers!

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      That’s exactly right. My theory is that even though we can’t hear the time differences, we can sense the sound differences because we have evolved to sense minuscule sonic changes arising from alignment since that’s how we detected sounds coming from behind us (and avoided getting eaten). FWIW all the producers I showed this too (some of whom have won Grammys and been making records for 40 years) were incredibly sceptical until they tried it in their own studios with their own drum machines.

  • @lestersmiley1781
    @lestersmiley1781 Месяц назад +2

    Would have been so great to hear a comparison of the “hardware” sound vs computer sound so I could actually know what the special timing drift actually sounded like. I thought for sure that since you had the isolated tracks and could probably replicate the same beat on a computer, that at the end you would have played it back to back. Interesting video for sure!

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      Yeah, I’m really sorry about this. Loads of people have made this point. It was my mistake really - I had done a version of the video with exactly that, but it was over 30 minutes and I was worried that it was too boring. I will re-make this video in a few months in a different way and show the full experiment :)

    • @lestersmiley1781
      @lestersmiley1781 Месяц назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp that’s good to hear, looking forward to it!

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      Me too!

  • @DF-eg8vl
    @DF-eg8vl 5 часов назад +1

    Back in the early 90s when i was studying audio engineering one of my teachers told me: record your drums by hand and loop or copy paste each 4 measures, but do not quantize. Or you can quantize the kick but do not qualitize anything else... duplicate and loop but do not quantize, you need those harmonics around so it can sound organic.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  3 часа назад

      @@DF-eg8vl This is exactly right. Very good approach!

  • @le49exileaudioproduktion59
    @le49exileaudioproduktion59 14 дней назад +1

    Cool video! A few month ago I stumbled across the same problem and was astonished to see this. But I was editing the drums in a midi-track in the box (quantised it), played out to my RX11 and recorded it back via the seperate outs of the machine into the computer. Same effect. So my guess, it's somehow the midi-protocol that causes this. Or it is the "Midi-Synconisation-Protocol" that I've set to 50% default in the Computer . . . however, I know now about this issue and use it. Much better results. Thank you for your work. Greetings from Dresden.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  14 дней назад

      @@le49exileaudioproduktion59 hey! So I thought it was the midi protocol too until I tried it with no midi at all. In other words just having my R8 spit out the drums when I pressed play. But whatever the reason, it sounds great so I’m not complaining!

    • @le49exileaudioproduktion59
      @le49exileaudioproduktion59 12 дней назад

      @@DistortThePreamp interesting . . . hmmm. 😏

  • @FatNorthernBigot
    @FatNorthernBigot Месяц назад +2

    This was fascinating... And the stethoscope makes you look like a musical eccentric or batshit bonkers. 👍

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      Hahaha! Remember, the stethoscope doesn’t have to be vintage, but it does have to be medical grade 😂

  • @RunWolfmanRun
    @RunWolfmanRun Месяц назад +1

    For sure, especially with the Synthpop in the mid-80's, Freestyle and very early House and Hiphop, there was this sort of "drifting" that's very "80's". I didn't know it was early midi, I thought it was just tape or something to do with tracking but okay, that totally makes sense
    Thanks for the insight, it's definitely heard but awesome you brought it forward from the subconscious, thank you so much for the talk

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      You’re very welcome! Thanks for watching and for the comment :)

  • @AndyCombes
    @AndyCombes 2 месяца назад

    Fascinating video. I think I have noticed these subtle changes in timing, but never put my finger on it. "Temporal phase drift", that's a very clever term. I follow a producer called Mirko Hirsch who does a fantastic job with some of his songs at remixing songs into 80's style.

  • @devendasmusic
    @devendasmusic Месяц назад +1

    Great video. I found this out early on in my production. I use a sample delay to slightly offset my drum hits.

  • @jdoo2252
    @jdoo2252 2 месяца назад +1

    Pet shop Boys?
    Brilliant as always. Great to see your channel growing

  • @replaceablehead
    @replaceablehead 6 дней назад

    I can’t replicate the results. For my first experiment I used Reaper's “Dynamic Split Item” feature to split up the transients by threshold on a recording straight out of my RX5. It was accurate to within 50 samples. Not satisfied, I tried manually, with a similar result. Then I thought about how the 606 has a reputation for inaccuracy so I recorded some of my Behringer RD-6, amazingly it was even more precise.
    Here are the results in milliseconds I got by manually slicing at the sample level.
    For the RX5: 0:00.249 0:00.248 0:00.249 0:00.249 0:00.248
    For the RD-6: 0:00.344 0:00.344 0:00.344 0:00.344 0:00.344
    That’s right, the inaccuracies can’t even be measured in milliseconds with me doing manual slicing. Am I misreading the Reaper figures, are they not milliseconds? I’m so confused.

  • @mistermusicenterprise3148
    @mistermusicenterprise3148 Месяц назад +1

    In Logic some native plugins like the Drummer, have a humanizer function. That helps and there is a free Plugin from Baby Audio, named pitch drift, that helps to get rid from the steril sound of samples.

  • @mikosoft
    @mikosoft 2 месяца назад +9

    One word: humanize. This was a feature of DAWs for like 30 years

    • @vladv5126
      @vladv5126 2 месяца назад +2

      And it works very very poorly. And actually sounds very much like what it is. Randomness.

    • @mikosoft
      @mikosoft 2 месяца назад +5

      @@vladv5126 well that's exactly what this video describes though, random offsets from the grid. You just have to set it so that the offsets are no more than a couple of milliseconds.

    • @TheSpeaker-ew7ol
      @TheSpeaker-ew7ol Месяц назад

      Probably better to record the audio of the "tight" drummachine and then use effects to shift the microtiming, then to do it in MIDI, since MIDI notes can only be moved in form of ticks which isn't as fine as the audio grid or better: delay times.

    • @rockuschristie8093
      @rockuschristie8093 Месяц назад

      ANd you never get the original. Any ideas of songs made with dawn that got the soul of 80' s hit ?

    • @vladv5126
      @vladv5126 Месяц назад +1

      @@mikosoft it's not quite the same. For some reason there's a pattern to the randomness of these old machines because they're actually trying to be consistent. The humanize feature in daws does the randomization all too well. It's actually best to just play the parts by hand with a controller and not quantise.

  • @funkmachine6420
    @funkmachine6420 2 месяца назад +3

    I've been aware of this for a while, I play everything by hand to combat it

  • @SYNKSENTURY
    @SYNKSENTURY Месяц назад +1

    very interesting video! i love vintage gear, but most DAW’s have a “humanize” feature that will anti-quantize midi notes by introducing a little random variance. no reason to reach for outboard sequencers unless that work flow is genuinely preferred or some other juice is being sought after

  • @sonicspook007
    @sonicspook007 2 месяца назад +2

    The physical distance that MIDI data AND audio signal travels over the various wires between all hardware devices will also create its own natural lag, however minuscule, providing a nice sense of "timing" fluctuation as well. All clocks are a little different. I used to perform my live sets (DAWless) back around 1997-2003, like a DJ would spin records. No midi connecting any devices, only two Roland Synths (XP-80 and MC-505), and my natural sense of timing for triggering the starts of my next songs. It had the benefit of sounding amazing, or going horribly wrong, but it was human!!! It makes all the difference. 🙂

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Yes. Audio cable lengths are not all that significant becasuse they’re traveling at the speed of light, but audio through the air is obviously about 1ms per foot, and midi messages are spaced at least 1ms apart and, given that midi can’t accommodate chords) this means that a four note chord contains a spread of at least 3ms. As you say, this can add up to quite significant alignment issues that simply don’t exist if you programme inside a DAW. It just sounds different.

  • @Username_Invalid
    @Username_Invalid 2 месяца назад +1

    This is why I always prefer to record all my parts with midi into Ableton or any daw and DIAL in the amount of quantization for each part. It is almost an art of its own but it is very possible and rewarding with modern daw. A percentage of x% difference quantization can make or break a part based off a really good human recorded part. And no recorded part is ever the same so the quantizing is always different.

  • @aiaccident
    @aiaccident Месяц назад +1

    Just found this. Love it. You have a new subscriber. Now, gotto buy a stetoscope. Have a nice weekend! Best , old-school electronic musician ai accident

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      Oh fantastic! Make sure you get a vintage stethoscope - the modern ones don’t work ;) I’ve been literally editing all day (12 hours non stop) so this is a nice message to come out of the edit to 🙏

  • @alexwest909
    @alexwest909 Месяц назад +1

    Another excellent contribution

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      Thank you! This one stuttered a bit, basically because (I think) I had the wrong thumbnail so a lot of people missed it. So thank you so much for watching!

  • @geoffwoodwogga
    @geoffwoodwogga Месяц назад +1

    Trivial to add a bit of randomness in DAW drum tracks - generally called 'Humanise' or something similar. And the delay between voices in a hardware synth is not random - any delay between the first audio 'attack' of each different sample relative to a different one is constant for every beat. They do not drift around.

  • @dvsoda4180
    @dvsoda4180 2 месяца назад +1

    6:33 Magic microphone trick. Love it!

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Ah yes. I had a wizard cast a spell which means that the mic no longer needs to be pointing at my mouth to pick up perfect audio. Very useful for RUclips videos.

  • @thedddemon
    @thedddemon 2 месяца назад +2

    Brillaint. Another perfect tip. Cheers!

  • @TayWoode
    @TayWoode 2 месяца назад +1

    I’ve noticed this on extended 12 inch mixes where there’s lots of muted tracks and solos, you can hear subtle “mistakes” that make it feel more human even though it’s electronic, I used to put it down to processing power being a bit slow with tiny lags

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      You’re absolutely right about 12” mixes from the 80s. Not to descend into a history lesson, but the commercial reason they were made is that the chart rules recognised multiple sales (up to a limit) as separate units sold. So if you could persuade a punter to buy the 7” and 12” then you would notch up two sales. Therefore there was huge pressure for 12” versions to be produced of everything and very little budget to do them properly. I know several producers who used to make them in an afternoon just by basic razor blade splicing. They would mute the vocal and let the mix play, then add a middle bit, then repeat from the beginning with the vocal added. Or something easy like that. I know Tape Ops who were told to “do the edits” because the producer couldn’t be bothered, and sometimes the edits weren’t fantastic. “Shake The Disease” (Depeche Mode) has a very bad edit in the middle of the 12” version that I always found annoying.

  • @Screenbience
    @Screenbience 2 месяца назад +1

    Wow! This is awesome ! I had some intuitive feelings while working on some of my tracks, that when I record unquantized parts on the keyboard it sounded more pleasant even when it wasn't right on time and that fact that it is off the grid on the screen made me dissatisfied with the results cause "all should be aligned" 😊 but now I see that my feelings were right - small mistakes in timings are actually good! Thank you for the lesson and for being interesting!

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Such an awesome comment! So glad you enjoyed the video!

  • @animator75
    @animator75 Месяц назад +1

    Temporal Phase Drift sounds like something Dr Who would know all about. :)

  • @andydutchman1970
    @andydutchman1970 2 месяца назад +1

    The human touch. So simple so amazing. Thank you so much for your great analysis!

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Oh you’re very welcome! So pleased you enjoyed the video :)

    • @andydutchman1970
      @andydutchman1970 2 месяца назад

      ​@@DistortThePreampAs Always! I wanted to add the fully warm analog signal path with that noise and humming of gears da-converters. So yes, it all have an effect

  • @TheWarrrenator
    @TheWarrrenator 2 месяца назад +1

    This is great! Just wanted to add like many others commenting that mixing hardware with DAWs could create a micro-latency that occurs in recordings from that era. I have managed to score an EMU Proteus 1 Orchestra module and a Yamaha FB-01 in the second hand market and I plan on using them to sequence rhythm tracks and pads for new songs and revamping older stuff. I want to invest in a Arturia Beatstep Pro to blend the 90’s with the former with the 80’s with the latter and get a specific 1989-1992 vibe. I also want to use a program called SEQ24 with these synth modules to get some interesting results but I was concerned about it being too quantized. This information shared is invaluable. I am sure at some point some nerd will add some code to a DAW or Audacity or something and get the temporal phase drift as an after-effect that will be just another creative choice for nascent musicians. Thanks again!

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Both the Proteurs 1 Orchstra module and FB-01 are fantastic machines! I swear by my Proteus 1 module (I’ve got the Pop/Rock) and use it on every session. You have to use other stuff too (obviously) like analog, FM, etc etc, but the sounds are amazing. And I bet you’re right about people doing the time shifting as an after effect. It would probably have to be at the daw level because you would need negative as well as positive delay, but it’s all possible. I could probably even rig something up to get close.

  • @Video101TV
    @Video101TV Месяц назад +2

    Great video, and I think you're right!. I'm curious about your recording workflow... assuming you record into a DAW, do you sequence everything using your external Pyramid sequencer and then record it all in one go? Or do you sync the sequencer to the DAW which would then allow you to do as many takes as you want? I have a Roland MSQ 700 which I can sync to my DAW for start/stop. This would allow to me program a sequence in the MSQ 700, sync the MSQ 700 to the DAW, record the sequence, program a new sequence, then record it, and have it all line up in the DAW. Is that what you recommend or would syncing to the DAW "fix" the "problem" and ruin the effect?

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +2

      That’s pretty much it. I’m going to make a full video at some stage, but basically I start by tracking in the programmed parts from my pyramid into Pro Tools, then I do a tempo map in Pro Tools based on the kick drum, then I switch the master clock to Pro Tools so now the DAW is driving the clock. This means that if I need to do a sequenced overdub I can and everything lines up. I’m very familiar with this workflow in Pro Tools but I never really got it to work properly in Ableton. I am guessing that it would be possible in Logic and the other main DAWs…

  • @Tt-yr9ri
    @Tt-yr9ri Месяц назад +1

    Fascinating theory! Thank you for your great analysis! I think it makes total sense, and it's something I've considered also. what I don't really know yet, is a good way to get this done in my DAW. Any advice would highly appreciated!

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      Ah yes, there are lots of good ways. If your DAW has a bumanise function then that would work. For example, in Ableton you can use a Max4Live device called Humanize, stick it on every midi channel, and make sure it’s calibrated to move the midi notes within a +/- 7ms range (which might take some testing). Logic has a similar function built it. There are other methods, but I think those are the easiest! Because of my own personal workflow I’m a huge fan of actually rendering out the audio before mixing so there’s no longer any midi in the session, and in this case you would be rendering out humanised midi. This makes sense to me because it would mean you were taking a snapshot of the randomised timing drifts rather than having them be different with every playback. But that’s just me ;)

    • @Tt-yr9ri
      @Tt-yr9ri Месяц назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp Thank you! I'm very inspired to set this up in Cubase.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      @@Tt-yr9ri Oh - absolutely let me know how you get on! Again, I strongly encourage you once you’ve found the right sound to ‘perform’ it in to Cubase as audio. In other words set the sequence running but if possible make some parameter tweaks while it’s playing and capture audio not just an automation line. Obviously preserve the midi, but then try to work with the audio. IMO committing in this way always helps a production ;)

    • @Tt-yr9ri
      @Tt-yr9ri Месяц назад +1

      ​@@DistortThePreamp It actually worked :D. There's something called Logical Editor i Cubase; it has presets to offset MIDI notes. Now it sounds a bit more as if my vst synths are performed by a band :D.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      Oh brilliant! My top tip is not to overdo it. A very small amount goes a long way. I don’t know if you could measure the effect, but my recommendation is that every instrument, particularly drum instrument, moves a maximum of 7ms in each direction, and of course they have to move independently. That’s not to say that larger drifts won’t have an interesting effect too! But to just get the thing where every combination of kick and snare is technically different, you only need +/-7ms. Very exciting that you’re trying this though!

  • @Analoque444
    @Analoque444 Месяц назад +1

    9:33 Actually, that's true, but there is also a simple solution for the computer to bring more life into the tracks (especially to simulate this behavior). In Ableton, this is achieved by combining track delay and the echo effect with an LFO tool. Since the track delay cannot be automated, we use the delay instead. You insert a simple delay effect and switch it from beats to time. Then, set the effect to 100% wet and drag the time parameter all the way down to 1ms. Switch the mode to fade and Feedback to 0.
    Now, open an LFO and route it to the timing parameter, adjusting it to, for example, 8% and 10%. This will gently modulate the timing parameter, allowing us to mimic subtle timing inaccuracies. To make the modulation more random, set the waveform to Sample and Hold in the LFO tool (Random)-and voilà! It shift´s the track very sattle within 1ms etc. You can decide and play around with the LFOs speed settings....
    This can also work in the negative direction. For this, drag the track delay parameter to for example -10ms and set the delay to 10ms. At this the tracks will be synced and play around with the LFO there :)
    Thank you for your video and if you have questions about it, you can simply ask. Best regards.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      Thanks for this. Yea you’re absolutely right. The method I thought for Ableton is to use a neutral groove with a timing randomisation on the 16tg notes. But actually as a few people have noted the M4L humanise device might be even better. I’m not sure about an LFO because it would cycle (although in context that might be fine) although, as I’m writing this, doesn’t the Ableton LFO tool have some kind of S&H random setting? All good. And it goes without saying I was being a big flippant when I said computers were dead. What I really meant was that if all the transients are on the grid then that’s “dead”. But I know that even that depends on genre - deadmau5 is pretty grid based (although he advances his claps and snares) and his music doesn’t sound lifeless at all! Really appreciate you watching and taking the time to write this comment :)

    • @Analoque444
      @Analoque444 Месяц назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp Thanks for your work! Ableton's LFO has a random function, which can be found above the rate control where it normally says 'Sine.' Click on that and set it to 'Random,' which simulates Sample & Hold. I watched the video and thougt, this could be a possible solution and build it - it worked.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      Oh fantastic!! Did you have to do much screwing around to get the delay small enough?

    • @Analoque444
      @Analoque444 Месяц назад

      @@DistortThePreamp No, not at all. You have to switch it to time and turn the dial to full left, it will be at 1ms and from there you can adjust it to the right. If you need, you can hold shift and make very sattle changes with the mouse.

  • @scottshouse2423
    @scottshouse2423 2 месяца назад +2

    Loved this! Gives me yet another reason to stay away from DAWs and stick with my Pyramid!

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      I love my Pyramid. Most enjoyable and workflow-friendly sequencer over ever used. And that includes several hardware sequencers and DAWs.

  • @elasticoGomez
    @elasticoGomez День назад

    Have a look at the “Human” vst by Mixed in Key . I enjoy setting instrument part variations in my DAW (+ or -) 5-7ms per drum instrument part and then add Human to get the variation in timing. Saves a ton of headroom and adds that secret sauce to keep your ears interested.

  • @Astimoff
    @Astimoff Месяц назад

    Great identification of the situation and concepts to visualize what hardware timing gives us - but there are plenty of tools in a DAW to deal with this issue - moving events in any direction you want. Of courre that could be tedious, but there are simple ways to adding timing randomness... As someone who has been sequencing since the days of the Atari ST - In general with MIDI sequencing and computers, the PPQ resolution (or setting if available) also determines where events happen in terms of MIDI timing resolution.

  • @rockuschristie8093
    @rockuschristie8093 Месяц назад +1

    Old drum box had much more jittering like Roland TR 808 / 909; Linn LM1 / Linndrum. Modern clones completly lost this as they are clocked with modern processors, LM1 sequencer was driven by a VCO .

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      So this is the funny thing - I haven’t tested the modern Roland drum machine but my Behringer RD-9 absolutely has jitter! And from what I can tell so does my Squarp Pyramid. The latter is extremely hard to prove because there are so many other factors but I did some midi-free tests using the CV/gate and there was still drift. It’s all really astonishing. My best guess is that although they all have quartz clocks which in theory are extremely accurate, there’s some cheap chip being used to handle the timing. In truth quartz clocks were also used in the old units back in the 80s - the tech has always been there, it’s just that it was compromised by design choices (is my educated guess). For example, the Synclavier was only ever accurate to 10ms which is quite shocking since they marketed it as totally accurate. Etc etc etc. And of course the final irony is that in most cases the drift sounds good and makes the sound combinations vary.

  • @villavide
    @villavide 2 месяца назад +1

    I love your channel, always passionating ! You are the eighties ! 😂 (and more...)

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Hahaha! I think Espen has a copyright claim on that 😂😂😂 Thank you though…

  • @mufakkas9731
    @mufakkas9731 2 месяца назад

    excellent, spot on, it was known at the time, not exacly that people wanted it, some midi cards had less and were usually preferred.

  • @MotoMarios
    @MotoMarios 2 месяца назад +1

    I like the science, there's some substantiality in the claims made here, but most of all I like the humour. The moment the microphone was put down yet the voice kept coming and the stethoscope appeared I laughed my eyes out.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Ah the magic microphone. Those vintage microphones pick up perfect audio without having to be plugged in 😂

    • @geejayreid
      @geejayreid 2 месяца назад

      @@DistortThePreamp Just ask Milli Vanilli.

    • @MotoMarios
      @MotoMarios 2 месяца назад

      @@DistortThePreamp lol :)

  • @goatsub8115
    @goatsub8115 2 месяца назад

    I have a roland sh-01a (the modern recreation) which I send midi to from my DAW and then record the audio. I've noticed that the timings of percussive sounds vary quite considreably, by several milliseconds, and perhaps up to about 10. It's possible to see this variation in timing against the grid even when you have say 4 bars of audio across the screen. At first I was a bit perplexed by this and thought it must be coming from the midi as the synth is basically a VST in a box, or so I thought, but maybe this is Roland's way of making it sound a bit more analogue. Sometimes it does seem to add a certain something, but on other occasions it's downright annoying and I have to go in and manually adjust the timing.
    Another great vid, keep up the good work!

  • @midlander4
    @midlander4 Месяц назад +2

    The key to sounding like the 80s is writing actual songs.

  • @VaughnGeorge
    @VaughnGeorge Месяц назад +1

    Great video ! Very interesting informative ! Thank you ! :-)

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      Oh awesome! Really appreciate you watching and taking that time to comment :)

  • @alleygh0st
    @alleygh0st 2 месяца назад +1

    My best tracks are made by a mix of machine sequencing, hand playing and some sound processing synced up to one of the machines (that I somehow have to hand start). .

  • @ldandco
    @ldandco 2 месяца назад +1

    you had me at "using science"

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      😂😂😂 There was a lot more science in the demo of this video that got abandoned! But is was 40 minutes of me drawing waveforms and explaining null tests and phase shifts and even I was getting bored 😂

  • @DavidHarry
    @DavidHarry Месяц назад +1

    It doesn’t matter if it’s a software or hardware sequencer the delays are inherent in the serial nature of MIDI.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      Absolutely true. But, here’s the kicker, there was no midi. I tested all sorts of configurations, but the one that really confused me was when I just hit play on the drum machine and still got drift. Not only that, but some arrive early. It’s *definitely* drift at the drum machine/sequencer level.

    • @DavidHarry
      @DavidHarry Месяц назад

      ​@@DistortThePreamp I produced a lot of music in the late 80s, early 90s and used more equipment than I can remember. One of my drum machines was the R8 and I can confirm that it reacted differently when using its own sequencer compared to being triggered. Although both had issues. Everything has a delay/latency, keyboards have latency, sequencers etc. There’s even latency on different I/O of the same type. The period of time you are talking about “80s drums”, presumably the earlier half, would mostly have been CV/gate triggering for sequencing, which had its own latency issues, although, similar to MIDI in it being serial. Then you also have to consider the type of tape synch being used to synchronise CV/gate sequencers to tape, which was likely FSK, which would have had its own issues due to a relatively low resolution pulse. Which would have also suffered issues with its square (pulse) wave being rounded due to the many issues with tape. Even once we started using SMPTE to MTC, the issues of tape synch were still part of the overall latency equation. In short, the issue you are talking about is not unique to any time period of music creation with sequencers. These offsets you talk about where also part of the early 90s dance sound. Most of us doing it seriously would have been using something like a Midex on an ST to get multiple parallel outputs, which was only used to mitigate the timing issues as much as possible but there were still there. Then compound that with SysEX and CC data and the issues are still very much relevant today. Like I said, the timing errors you are talking about are not unique to the period of music you are talking about. Any “sound” differences from one decade to another are going to be primarily due to the recording and mixing technology and less about the actual sound making machines and their inherent issues. Or put it another way. If The Human League had have recorded and mixed Being Boiled or Empire State Human using the exact same synths but recorded and mixed them 10 years later, they would have sounded very different. Cheers, Dave.

  • @spacecitysprockets
    @spacecitysprockets Месяц назад +1

    That's because it was all still recorded on tape. Tape varies in speed as it spools forward > hence the out of time phasing. :)

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      Ah, that’s a good theory, but actually that’s not it. That could in theory produce a drift, but not an alignment problem. In other words the instruments wouldn’t move *against* each other. Also tape running at 30ips (or even 15ips) doesn’t drift that much. Meanwhile, one of the old Fairlight team has actually confirmed that there were indeed timing errors! Really appreciate you watching though, and taking the time to comment :)

    • @spacecitysprockets
      @spacecitysprockets Месяц назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp Thank you. I was speaking from experience. I tried to remaster something off 4 track cassette and recorded each track separately into my DAW and they don't line up. Also, sequencers back then did drift as well when using CV instead of Midi which was still brand new at the time.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      @@spacecitysprockets ah - 4 track compact cassette certainly does drift. And tape stretch, as I’m sure you know, is something of an occupational hazard. I remember we were all advised to not use BASF because apparently they stretched more. However, those cassettes are only running at 1.875 inches per second which is 16x slower than an typical multitrack. It’s those that I’m saying don’t really drift, assuming it’s properly maintained and setup. Certainly the SMPTE codes were pretty stable at 30ips. Very interesting comment though.

    • @spacecitysprockets
      @spacecitysprockets Месяц назад

      @@DistortThePreamp Thanks for answering my comments! I do remember in video editing suites during the 80s, we could only afford 1 generation on 1" tapes, so it was very touch and go to do layering (overdubs).

  • @georged822
    @georged822 2 месяца назад +3

    How to introduce temporal phase drift in Ableton? I have no hardware

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +2

      I’ve been thinking about this a lot. Here’s what I would do:
      1. Make sure your drums (and other midi instruemnts) are all on separate tracks.
      2. Load up a neutral 16th note groove from the groove pool that basically does nothing
      3. Add some randomisation to the timing. You might have to experiment to make sure that the randomisation sticks to within about 6ms either way.
      4. Apply this to each of the drums and instrument tracks.
      I haven’t tried this, but it should work. The important thing is that the instruments and drums drift AGAINST each other

    • @georged822
      @georged822 2 месяца назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp thank you I will try this! A producer named Noisia who produces some of the best sounding drum and bass tracks stresses his preference for making things sound organic and in motion so I am excited to implement your info as I struggle making my sound feel alive (let alone sound good!). I love the 80’s sound, my doodles always gravitate towards that style, thank you for all the videos! Your Duran Duran arpeggio video was amazing.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Oh thank you! Yes, I think people focus on timing to make things sound organic, but overlook the microscopic sound changes (that are sometimes a byproduct also of timing). I’ve had so many people asking me the “how do I do this in Ableton?” question that I might take a deep breath and figure it out.
      I think it will work, but if it doesn’t then another possibility (maybe a last resort) would be for me to create and give away a whole load of 16th note grooves (taken from my actual setup) for people to use, but with the idea that no two instruments use the same groove. Hopefully it won’t come to that because that sounds like a rather over-elaborate solution.
      Do let me know how you get on though.

  • @midlandsynthetics2841
    @midlandsynthetics2841 Месяц назад

    Most DAW's have a randomise timing option. I use Mulab and that has the option. My Roland W30 sequencer had it too. It's a time old trick.

  • @eduardo.bortolato
    @eduardo.bortolato Месяц назад +1

    My Roland MC50mkII still here

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      Oh wow! That’s the sort of sequencing cousin of my Roland R8 that was released around the same time. I don’t know it very well - I’m familiar with sequencing drums on the R8 which is a dark art, and I have a Roland MSQ-700 sequencer which is another dark art, but I bet it’s really good once you get to grips with it. Is that what you’ve found? You still use it!

  • @NickSalterNaCL
    @NickSalterNaCL 2 месяца назад

    Make some manual adjustments that take a few drum hits slightly off the grid and you are golden.

  • @lunarpollen
    @lunarpollen Месяц назад

    One would think that digital audio workstations would have an option/plug-in to introduce random tiny timing imperfections to the individual rhythm tracks in order to give it that feel.

  • @garethcoxmusic
    @garethcoxmusic Месяц назад +1

    Same for 90's HipHop drums coming off MPCs.

  • @unclemick-synths
    @unclemick-synths 2 месяца назад +1

    It's funny how some people obsess these days about timing just like pitch perfection. I never thought there was anything wrong when I was slaving my Atari to my Tascam 244. I learnt back then to avoid quantization.
    However, the problem I had was eagerness to fix flubs in Cubase instead of practicing till I got things right - a very bad habit that I carried forward to digital audio multitracking that not only stunted my growth as a musician but resulted in a vicious cycle of increasingly lacklustre performances.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Yes, that’s exactly right. Very important not to spend hours fixing and editing and you can re-take in about 5-20 minutes.

  • @Klangraum
    @Klangraum 2 месяца назад +1

    I noticed timing variations in the 90s with MIDI. The track arrangement in the sequencer was such that first drums, then bass, then solo, then pads (these were delayed again) came one after the other, to get the groove somewhat tight. This led to a certain 90s dance vibe. I don't know the situation in the 80s. But I guess that in addition to MIDI, there were also sync fluctuations and fluctuations in the devices, which explains the pre- and post-delay.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      That’s what I would have thought, but actually it’s baked into the drum machines. Those measurements were just from me programming a pattern and hitting play. No midi involved. Totally erratic.

    • @Klangraum
      @Klangraum 2 месяца назад

      @@DistortThePreamp Makes sense. Something that wouldn't have been on my radar at first. At second glance, of course, the processing speed of the commonly used 8-bit CPUs was also limited in order to fire samples perfectly on a grid.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Yes. It's particularly ironic with the Roland R8 drum machine -- that was promoted as having extremely high resolution. Instead of 32 notes per bar you could do 960 so you could, effectively, programme actual triplets and very detailed rhythms. Who knew that the actual timing error margin was way over this resolution. Not that it's not legit -- it's all legit. But, honestly, nobody knew, because nobody checked.

    • @T1F1400
      @T1F1400 2 месяца назад

      @@DistortThePreamp it would be really interesting if Roland knew that their older machines had timing inconsistencies, found the R8 to be too precise and re-introduced the inconsistencies so as not to lose the magic.

  • @janmuenther
    @janmuenther 2 месяца назад +1

    Oh and great stuff as usual

  • @TheStudioDrummer
    @TheStudioDrummer 2 месяца назад +1

    Great info! I did a Podcast Ep a few years ago about playing on the grid. "Groove" can be a complex topic. I'll add this: as I Zoom in on the GB/Logic Drummer, the hits have "temporal phase drift". The Humanize dial in this case is about 5%. With it off, the beats are lined up with each other but slightly ahead of the Grid. The dial for me is a bit unpredictable but it's something to check out. Enjoying your channel.👊🥂

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Oh that’s extremely interesting! And they’re not aligned, right? So the drift is on a per instrument basis? I think 5% sounds like a lot. I don’t know how the percentage is being calculated but you really only need a few ms of drift to get the effect. So glad you like the channel. Really appreciate the comment :)

    • @TheStudioDrummer
      @TheStudioDrummer 2 месяца назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp That's right- Not Aligned. The Humanize dial does not give you a number (I wish it did but I'm guesstimating, based on a full turn) so I sometimes zoom to a fixed amount and eyeball the instrument displacement.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      That’s a totally solid technique. There’s definitely a point when the brain can’t quite hear the timing differences but it can sense that the sounds are changing and the music comes ‘alive’. Very important IMO.

  • @Jauly
    @Jauly Месяц назад

    I can recommend the Akai MPC 5000 as your main hardware sequencer. It has a very sloppy timing and sounds absolutely gorgeous on it's own.

  • @travisguide4516
    @travisguide4516 Месяц назад +1

    What is interesting about this is that he is right have you ever heard a drum machine miss a entire note and leave you with a very small piece of static fuzz that is barely perceptible. It won’t happen very often but when it does it will shock you… maybe

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      Yes! My R8 gets confused sometimes and drops snares. It would be hilarious apart from when I’m tracking and don’t notice. Then I have to give it a strong telling off.

  • @corelur
    @corelur Месяц назад

    You should turn the stethoscope part into a short!!! love that part! 😂

  • @jussiniemi9560
    @jussiniemi9560 Месяц назад +1

    None of the people that miss the sounds of eighties, or the "eighties vibe", were actually born then. And the magic of the sounds were the first 127 presets of DX 7...

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      Haha! I can’t support you on the DX7 point (though it’s very funny) but you make a very good point about people feeling historical nostalgia for a time that they never lived through. I actually like synthwave, but it sounds *nothing* like ‘the 80s’.

    • @jussiniemi9560
      @jussiniemi9560 Месяц назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp exactly. I started loving electronic music after it started getting interesting. Which was propably the early nineties. For me the holy grail is the one trick pony of Roland 303. I still love that machine more than all my modular synths combined.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      I go through phases with my 303 (clone). Some months I’m using it for everything - regular synth bass as well as acid - but other months it doesn’t get as much use. I think it’s more flexible than people think though. Let The Music Play (Shannon) is a 303 and that’s a pretty solid slab of elctro disco.

  • @neilelkins2009
    @neilelkins2009 2 месяца назад +1

    I remember reading an interview with BT (the dance music producer) maybe 15 years ago where he pointed out the same thing, but the opposite way round. He was a bit obsessive about making stuff perfectly sample accurate, laying it out as audio on the Logic timeline, because he'd noticed MIDI timing was all over the place and sounded dated.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад +1

      Yes, this is what I used to do. We all used to talk about midi being ‘sloppy’ and we’re obsessed with being ‘sample accurate’. I’ve now gone the other way 😂

  • @acos21
    @acos21 2 месяца назад

    Somewhat related: Gigi Masin's 'Wind' album or his song "Clouds" is magical and uique because of this phenomenon.I t captured a certain emotion, the 80s. Impossible to replicate. Imperfection gives things soul and makes it timeless.

  • @cassettedisco6954
    @cassettedisco6954 16 дней назад +1

    Excelente análisis amigo eso que mencionas de desfasar por milisegundos el kick y snare es bastante interesante ya que sabemos que aunque se sincroniza no era exacto y lo que dices que el hardware de las máquinas tienen alma y vida es un gran descubrimiento para mí , saludos desde la tierra del taco 🌮 México 🇲🇽

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  15 дней назад

      ¡Me alegro mucho de que te haya gustado el vídeo! Espero que los subtítulos hayan sido lo suficientemente buenos :) ¡Saludos desde Londres!

  • @replaceablehead
    @replaceablehead 7 дней назад +1

    Also, weren't they all synched to an SMPTE track on the tape machine? Wouldn't that do more to account for drift than anything to do with the clock in the drum machine?

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  6 дней назад

      @@replaceablehead Yes, that might account for some drift in overall time, but not changes in alignment between hits.

  • @JohnKutski
    @JohnKutski Месяц назад +1

    Great video, really interesting! Just to play devils advocate, the latest version of ableton live allows you to 'loosen' the quantized notes by a random amount within a specified range. Would that not have the same effect if you programmed your drums in a piano roll? In Cubase there is an option to similarly randomise velocity with a range which i use on things like pianos just to give them a bit more of an organic feel as i can't play well at all so usually rely on hard quantizing, then using this to add some humanity back in :)

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад

      Yes, it basically would! I was overstating for comic effect when I said the computers were dead - you can absolutely do what you’re suggesting, and in any case ‘grid music’ can sound fantastic! Having said that, I truly believe that this sound (ie the way the sound combinations change because of micro-alignment issues) is fundamental to why 80s music sounds the way it does. By the time the 90s came along it had been ‘fixed’. And the issue didn’t exist in the 70s.

  • @JamieMallender
    @JamieMallender Месяц назад +1

    Great video! Can I ask a question please? I have some synths and drum machines from the 80's. I'm a huge RX11 fan! I like to use either Cubase or Cubasis on my iPad to sequence them because I have noticed slight timing discrepancies that I like very much. You think this would be exaggerated by using the drum machines sequencer?

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      @@JamieMallender Interesting question. In my experience it’s different but not necessarily exaggerated. And to be honest all you really need is enough of a timing discrepancy that every combination of hits sounds ever so slightly different to the brain which, again in my experience, seems to happen before you actually notice definite timing errors. I suppose that’s a long way of saying I don’t think it would be exaggerated. But, even if it were exaggerated I don’t think it would be better. One thing you should absolutely experiment with though is tracking in the audio from the drum machine and then fitting the grid to whatever audio was captured (usually the kick drum) so then you have a daw grid but it’s following the crazy timing. I do this by creating a tempo map. This makes for an extremely flexible workflow and basically means that you should even be able to overdub drum patterns having ‘taken’ the drums. What drum machines and synths do you have btw?

    • @JamieMallender
      @JamieMallender Месяц назад +1

      @@DistortThePreamp That's very interesting. I shall definitely experiment with that, thank you. I have a TX7, Poly 800, FB-01, RX17, RX11, DR-550, a soundmaster SR88 and from the early 90's a DR-5 and a QY22. I've used some of these things in my videos. I like composing with a combination of hardware and software.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  Месяц назад +1

      That’s a very interesting gear list. I wonder if you might like a rompler like the Proteus 1 to go with your FM and analogs? I don’t think romplers sound good enough to build a whole song around, but they can be fantastic for layers or supporting sounds. You basically use presets (with a bit of tweaking) and the obvious ones are the Emu Proteus, the Korg M1, or the Roland JV 1080 (or the 2080). It sort of depends on what kind of music you make, but I’ve got the first two and really wish I had a JV. As I said, I would never rely on them for a whole track, but if I want to reach for strings, brass, vibes, etc they are a great thing to try. Just a thought…

    • @JamieMallender
      @JamieMallender Месяц назад

      @@DistortThePreamp am I right in saying the Proteus is a rack mount? That could work for me. I don’t have room for any full size synths. My studio is full to bursting mostly with guitars and basses. But yeah, that sounds like it might be a solid purchase, thank you. ✌️✌️

  • @Niesrind
    @Niesrind 2 месяца назад +1

    Surely there are some "timing humanizer" plugins for the computer making it alive also.

    • @DistortThePreamp
      @DistortThePreamp  2 месяца назад

      Yes, that’s true. I was a bit unfair about computers. Humanisers should do it if they’re applied to all the instruments, plus, and perhaps more importantly, there really isn’t anything wrong with ‘grid music’. I’m a huge fan of deadmau5 and all of his stuff is locked in very tight with no drift (although he uses a lot of evolving sounds). Still, the ‘computer is dead’ joke was too good to miss ;)