Hey ! I have been asked many times in the comments for more Reason 12 related videos, so here's a lengthy video on my Reason 12 jungle production techniques. I pretty much just go through a track i have recently made, and showing what i do and my philosophy on my workflow. Read the description for the Reason 12 project file download.
Haha bro i was feeling your rant that you faded out. I was ready to hear more. You're exactly right about capturing that old school diy vibe with minimal tracks. Shit, they where only working with 4 tracks on the amiga protracker
Hey, thanks a lot for this tips. I want to start make jungle music and this video helped me a lot :) for me jungle is revolution which music needs today :D
I guess I'm a bit late to the party, but: great video! Just bought AMIGO after your latest vid and am having lots of fun with classic DnB beat mangling 😎 - thanks for all the inspiration!
..I like your humor..I am talking about the oldschool vibe 🤣 I know exactly what you wanted to say with it..but I also always have the feeling I am 'preaching' it too much 😆 and again, an awesome track at the end ❤
I'm back 😂 firstly, Thanks for another great video. Secondly, thanks for the project file, I can learn a lot from the nnxt patches, look forward to the next video ❤
Love the vid! I used Reason in the early 2000s and made a lot of music with it but I agree, it never had the hardware sound I was after. The closest I've got is using the following 3 softsamplers: -Sonic Charge Cyclone (amazing emulation and free) -Emu X3 (windows only / find it on internet archive) -TAL-Sampler (not sure about the s1000 accuracy but has cyclic stretch!) I run these through PSP infinistrip and put softube tape on master bus using Ableton Live. PS I would love your opinion on the s1000 mode in TAL-Sampler.
Hey. I'll try making a video about it. In fact i made a video called "how i chop amen" . I don't chop in nnxt, i chop in soundforge, and then load those chops in to nnxt, and i do exactly same programming on my akai s1000.
Wicked tune! I miss this vibe so badly. Out of curiosity how did you learn your craft back in the day? Did you intuitively figure it out yourself or did someone show you? Great tutorial by the way, thanks for sharing the knowledge
Hey, thanks for tuning in :) I started recording my music when i was 6, that was in 1989, all i have used then was an acoustic piano that i had while growing up, a reel to reel recorder and i microphone Bit later, i got my first Casio synthesizer, i came up with all sots of multitracking ideas like using a couple of reel to reel / cassette recorders at once, recording live takes and stuff. When i was 12 i saved up enough money to go to a real studio and make my first proper recordings. That was early 90s, i was mostly just standing in the studio full of hardware and just showing another guy who was running the studio, what notes to play, while he was doing all the other technical stuff for me. The studio aspect didn't impress me at the time, other than this was the only way to record your music for me. Once i got my first PC at the age of 15, i could finally make my own "proper" music at home, but it took me forever to figure everything out myself. VSTs weren't around just yet, so my first recordings sound bad, i have tapes of my first attempts to make jungle at 15 :D So slowly i was building my skills, and as software programs evolved, so did I. Yet, most of what I do now, comes from me figuring out things back then, and in a way I still make music pretty much same way as I did some 25 years ago.
I'm not even a reason user but still highly interesting to watch 👍 How's mix translation working for you? Do you check your tracks on different speakers and possibly make some adjustments or does it just work right away?
Hey. I rarely check my mixes on other systems. But i should do that. I was listening to some of my already released tracks on my car speakers the other day and i didn't like some mixdowns, felt like bottom end needed some changes.
Hey ! I have been asked many times in the comments for more Reason 12 related videos, so here's a lengthy video on my Reason 12 jungle production techniques. I pretty much just go through a track i have recently made, and showing what i do and my philosophy on my workflow. Read the description for the Reason 12 project file download.
God bless you for that! Thank you!
Haha bro i was feeling your rant that you faded out. I was ready to hear more. You're exactly right about capturing that old school diy vibe with minimal tracks. Shit, they where only working with 4 tracks on the amiga protracker
Getting back into production after 10 years and this was a massive help/reminder :D Thanks
Nice one ! 10 years of break might feel like starting all over from zero :)
Hey, thanks a lot for this tips. I want to start make jungle music and this video helped me a lot :) for me jungle is revolution which music needs today :D
Nice one !
❤🙏🏻🙏🏻Love your videos and your underground , minimalist approach to jungle .So refreshing and inspiring
Fantastic video!! Its so good to see you putting out another jungle video you have been missed! Solid tune btw!
Hey, thanks !
Superb mate, so good to see more of these from you!
I guess I'm a bit late to the party, but: great video! Just bought AMIGO after your latest vid and am having lots of fun with classic DnB beat mangling 😎 - thanks for all the inspiration!
..I like your humor..I am talking about the oldschool vibe 🤣 I know exactly what you wanted to say with it..but I also always have the feeling I am 'preaching' it too much 😆 and again, an awesome track at the end ❤
Outstanding video! Thanks a lot for opening the curtains to your workflow. Have a great and creative day :)
Thanks. As long as it's inspiring, i am happy !
I'm back 😂 firstly, Thanks for another great video. Secondly, thanks for the project file, I can learn a lot from the nnxt patches, look forward to the next video ❤
Thanks for tuning in :)
Love the vid! I used Reason in the early 2000s and made a lot of music with it but I agree, it never had the hardware sound I was after. The closest I've got is using the following 3 softsamplers:
-Sonic Charge Cyclone (amazing emulation and free)
-Emu X3 (windows only / find it on internet archive)
-TAL-Sampler (not sure about the s1000 accuracy but has cyclic stretch!)
I run these through PSP infinistrip and put softube tape on master bus using Ableton Live. PS I would love your opinion on the s1000 mode in TAL-Sampler.
This was really useful. I really like your approach, thank you!
I love the track actually I love all your jungle dnb tracks!!!🥁🥁🥁
great information, thank you for the video as always, hope everything is well.
:3
Support from Italy, really ispiring. I just discover you on AM
Can you show how ypu chop the Amen break in the nn-xt or any other break ? Trying for the first time to make some jungle :-)
Hey. I'll try making a video about it. In fact i made a video called "how i chop amen" . I don't chop in nnxt, i chop in soundforge, and then load those chops in to nnxt, and i do exactly same programming on my akai s1000.
@@IJOSoundVideo I am a Reason user sp any sampler within Reason would be cool :-) I normaly make 90s House but I want to try doing some Jungle :-)
respecta , cool sht ! keep it alvive !
Wicked tune! I miss this vibe so badly. Out of curiosity how did you learn your craft back in the day? Did you intuitively figure it out yourself or did someone show you? Great tutorial by the way, thanks for sharing the knowledge
Hey, thanks for tuning in :) I started recording my music when i was 6, that was in 1989, all i have used then was an acoustic piano that i had while growing up, a reel to reel recorder and i microphone Bit later, i got my first Casio synthesizer, i came up with all sots of multitracking ideas like using a couple of reel to reel / cassette recorders at once, recording live takes and stuff. When i was 12 i saved up enough money to go to a real studio and make my first proper recordings. That was early 90s, i was mostly just standing in the studio full of hardware and just showing another guy who was running the studio, what notes to play, while he was doing all the other technical stuff for me. The studio aspect didn't impress me at the time, other than this was the only way to record your music for me. Once i got my first PC at the age of 15, i could finally make my own "proper" music at home, but it took me forever to figure everything out myself. VSTs weren't around just yet, so my first recordings sound bad, i have tapes of my first attempts to make jungle at 15 :D So slowly i was building my skills, and as software programs evolved, so did I. Yet, most of what I do now, comes from me figuring out things back then, and in a way I still make music pretty much same way as I did some 25 years ago.
I'm not even a reason user but still highly interesting to watch 👍
How's mix translation working for you? Do you check your tracks on different speakers and possibly make some adjustments or does it just work right away?
Hey. I rarely check my mixes on other systems. But i should do that. I was listening to some of my already released tracks on my car speakers the other day and i didn't like some mixdowns, felt like bottom end needed some changes.
that's a nice tune man
Glad you liked it.
🥲 dope stuffe ...
what kind of audio interface do you use ?
Hey. Arturia, but audio interface has mostly zero impact on anything .
I like your videos a lot. But this is the most terrible introduction I've ever seen on a RUclips video. 😂 I love how honest you are. Stay as you are.
:)
First 😂
Hi bro, i'm doing, i hope you too. Nice video thank you.