Making Lo-fi hiphop on the new electribe sampler
Moderators: Sharp, X-Trade, Pepperpotty, karmathanever
Making Lo-fi hiphop on the new electribe sampler
so, when researching which sampler is best for creating loose (dilla style) drums for hip hop beats you hear about the fact that electribes lock you into a grid. In other words, you cannot create un-quantized drum beats.
I suppose people wish this was a possibility.
the question I have is this. Can't you just resample yourself playing drums sounds live (with the electribe) into the electribe to get that loose feeling? '
Cheers, Brett
I suppose people wish this was a possibility.
the question I have is this. Can't you just resample yourself playing drums sounds live (with the electribe) into the electribe to get that loose feeling? '
Cheers, Brett
Music heals.
Yes, you can do this. The issue then becomes the poor amount of sampling time.
Visit https://ghostwrittenclips.com for a FREE pack of robot-war/mech/cinematic fx samples. =)
Re: Making Lo-fi hiphop on the new electribe sampler
Have you investigated the SP404? This dude wrecks some loose hip hop:Brettt wrote:creating loose (dilla style) drums for hip hop beats
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2neMRqYkw_s
Visit https://ghostwrittenclips.com for a FREE pack of robot-war/mech/cinematic fx samples. =)
-
- Posts: 28
- Joined: Tue Jul 14, 2015 4:24 am
- Contact:
Sweet. Thanks for the input guys.
I have checked out the sp but I'd like to get the electribe to hook up to my volca sample.
Also, it's nice that you can input some "push" and "pull" .
Yesterday I input some negative swing into the volca sample. (alot of swing- like -50) and I got a real hard snap from the snare.
The whole reason I'm interested in the electribe is because I'm so tired of making music in DAW's. Ableton is amazing and I'm sure to use it in the future but I'd like to be able to create a full song without the aid of a computer. I think the electribe can get me there with help from the volca sample and my korg upright piano.
B.
I have checked out the sp but I'd like to get the electribe to hook up to my volca sample.
Also, it's nice that you can input some "push" and "pull" .
Yesterday I input some negative swing into the volca sample. (alot of swing- like -50) and I got a real hard snap from the snare.
The whole reason I'm interested in the electribe is because I'm so tired of making music in DAW's. Ableton is amazing and I'm sure to use it in the future but I'd like to be able to create a full song without the aid of a computer. I think the electribe can get me there with help from the volca sample and my korg upright piano.
B.
Music heals.
I've been using the ES2 a lot lately and a really great workaround is keeping a large memory card in the unit and saving your work as a "Project File" for each song you are working on. Using this method, you can dedicate the entire sampling time to a single song. It requires a little extra multi-tasking and managing of project files, but once your brain locks into the process, it really helps you focus on making better use of the limited sampling memory per song.sauce wrote:Yes, you can do this. The issue then becomes the poor amount of sampling time.
Just give it a few days using this method and you'll learn to open up the machine's potential a little more. And believe me, it does help force creativity. I've almost completed a full set of new demos using the sampler alone.
Roland Juno-60, SH-101, TR-606, MC-505, Casio CZ-101, Yamaha DX100, DX11, Kawai R-50e // Korg R3, microSTATION, Monotribe, MS-20 Mini, SQ-1, minilogue, electribe sampler, Volca series: Bass, Keys, Beats, Sample, FM, Kick, Moog Theremin
Care to detail the process a little bit?Re-Member wrote:I've been using the ES2 a lot lately and a really great workaround is keeping a large memory card in the unit and saving your work as a "Project File" for each song you are working on. Using this method, you can dedicate the entire sampling time to a single song. It requires a little extra multi-tasking and managing of project files, but once your brain locks into the process, it really helps you focus on making better use of the limited sampling memory per song.sauce wrote:Yes, you can do this. The issue then becomes the poor amount of sampling time.
Just give it a few days using this method and you'll learn to open up the machine's potential a little more. And believe me, it does help force creativity. I've almost completed a full set of new demos using the sampler alone.
Re: Making Lo-fi hiphop on the new electribe sampler
of course u can sample live drums into the electribe u can chop breaks with air in fron of the drum hits to give the note nudge fx.Brettt wrote:so, when researching which sampler is best for creating loose (dilla style) drums for hip hop beats you hear about the fact that electribes lock you into a grid. In other words, you cannot create un-quantized drum beats.
I suppose people wish this was a possibility.
the question I have is this. Can't you just resample yourself playing drums sounds live (with the electribe) into the electribe to get that loose feeling? '
Cheers, Brett
Also u can use the groove template and groove depth of the drum hits to further move the notes around to get the feel ur looking for also u have the swing so there are many methods of getting the un quantised sound that u seek.
the electribe is close but the workflow and restrictions make it very frustrating it sounds great and is quick in certain regards and long winded in others.
but everything can be fixed with updates but will these things be done its looking unlikely as even with the petition the requests are done from a electro/techno non hip hop mindset so the features that a hip hop producer might want are not really well represented within the feature requests.
soundcloud.com/jknowsis
MPC studio|Microkorg & XL|Reface CS & DX|Minilogue|Volca FM
MPC studio|Microkorg & XL|Reface CS & DX|Minilogue|Volca FM
-
- Approved Merchant
- Posts: 235
- Joined: Mon Jul 27, 2015 4:48 pm
Just for the record, you cannot record non-quantized. The machine always quantizes to 16th notes.PureSecksPirate wrote:If you hand play the drum samples as you record, as opposed to writing them in via the sequencer, it will record your slightly off time (human) loose feel and groove to it. The only drag is that you can't do anything in between.
I thin that has been established but the korg can also do 1/32 as the max resolution.musicmagus wrote:Just for the record, you cannot record non-quantized. The machine always quantizes to 16th notes.PureSecksPirate wrote:If you hand play the drum samples as you record, as opposed to writing them in via the sequencer, it will record your slightly off time (human) loose feel and groove to it. The only drag is that you can't do anything in between.
korg should update this and provide more options including an off setting I have made this clear but this still has not found a way onto the petition feature request list.
soundcloud.com/jknowsis
MPC studio|Microkorg & XL|Reface CS & DX|Minilogue|Volca FM
MPC studio|Microkorg & XL|Reface CS & DX|Minilogue|Volca FM
-
- Full Member
- Posts: 131
- Joined: Fri Feb 06, 2015 5:01 pm
Are they not talking about resampling drum playing - in which case the sampler would "record" the audio as you play it... and so the sequencer wouldn't lock it to the 16th notemusicmagus wrote:Just for the record, you cannot record non-quantized. The machine always quantizes to 16th notes.PureSecksPirate wrote:If you hand play the drum samples as you record, as opposed to writing them in via the sequencer, it will record your slightly off time (human) loose feel and groove to it. The only drag is that you can't do anything in between.
Korg MonoPoly, APC 20, Ableton Live, NI Massive, Bass Station rack.
-
- Approved Merchant
- Posts: 235
- Joined: Mon Jul 27, 2015 4:48 pm
I'm not sure, that's why I posted. I guess I wasn't clear either.colulizard wrote:Are they not talking about resampling drum playing - in which case the sampler would "record" the audio as you play it... and so the sequencer wouldn't lock it to the 16th notemusicmagus wrote:Just for the record, you cannot record non-quantized. The machine always quantizes to 16th notes.PureSecksPirate wrote:If you hand play the drum samples as you record, as opposed to writing them in via the sequencer, it will record your slightly off time (human) loose feel and groove to it. The only drag is that you can't do anything in between.
You can Re-sample yourself playing with no quantization whatsoever.
You cannot record into the sequencer unquantized.
Stuff someone who doesn't own the box the might want to know.