Cool approach to layer the samples via sampler, thank you for sharing! Quick tip: if you want to add more randomness with vocoder (yeah, it really sounds nice on hats and snares) but preserve more of the original sound - you can group up the vocoder (cmd+g), then open "chains" tab on this group, and create another chain without the effects. Then you can adjust the levels of each chain by your taste. It's called parallel processing if I'm not mistaken :)
Oh learnt a lot. I didn't know u could layer sounds like that. I was thinking using a drum rack to achieve the same. this is so much easier! also I guess Shifting the midi just ever so slightly instead of a 1/16 or so is also a way to spice it up. so that all the HH dont land exactly on the same spot. is there a way to use the LFO to modulate the position of each MIDI note back and forth?
Thank you for this important information! I have one question - how much should the hats be panned (before the processing chain)? or should they be in the centre?
Great vid as always(: I like adding a rhythmic gate that emulates a hi-hat groove to my background noise, that way I can automate the depth of the gate to change the sound during the track
Yeah the H-Hat 2 Layers gives it a Nice bounce to the Track vs the Standard H_Hat Programming... Good stuff will use this when layering Claps , C Hats, Shakers..
I've studied a lot of great dance mixes and that vocoder noise trick will help the eq curve fit more in line with some of my favorites. REALLY great tips! Also also the SSL 9000 J smart man! Subscribed.
Picked up on something here, that you mentioned. You don't always cut the low end. I completely understand this, say under 350Hz, but with the limited low frequency range, say under 120Hz, would you cut anything that isn't sub/kick, to avoid muddiness? I have seen about 10 different answers to this and as a mastering engineer, I am curious as to your thoughts. Thank you!
Great question! I think you’ll get the most detailed and nuanced answer on EQing and when/how to cut things in this video: ua-cam.com/video/-lKbAuqiYpU/v-deo.htmlsi=ANa0nv2nwT_yfF8n
Corpus is crazy, I use it all the time to build grooves and also on basslines...Another trick with vocoder is to decrease the bands, that gives you sharper sounds
Audeze LCD-X. Hab mit denen letztes Jahr 3 Monate ohne festes Studio von der Toskana aus professionelle Mixes und Masters für meine Kunden erstellt. Sind brutal gute Kopfhörer.
@@pickyourselfofficial THX! Auweia, ich bin neidisch, aber in der Preisliga kann ich leider nicht mitspielen... Hast du andere Kopfhörer, die du empfehlen würdest, die vielleicht bis max. 500,- gehen??? Aktuell nutze ich seit Jahren Beyerdynamic DT-990 Pro... Nichts besonderes, aber auch nicht allerletzter Crap, wie ich finde... Ich bin auch nur ein kleiner Badroomproducer, allerdings dünkt es mich, tatsächlich in eine richtige Abhöre aufzurüsten (Neumann KH120 fänd ich toll)und dazu gehört auch, für mich, ein adäquates Paar Kopfhörer... Ich arbeite viel mit Headphones, vielleicht mehr, als man sollte, aber es ist für mich der perfekte "Modus via Tunnelblick". Die Abschottung, die ich mit Kopfhörern erreiche fördert meine Fokussierung, wenngleich ich auch ein Dulli bin und mich gerne in dieser Abschottung verliere und Blödsinn mache... stundenlang... Aber ich muss ja nicht abliefern, daher ist das völlig wurst, es soll halt Spaß machen und mir gefallen, mehr nicht. Bei nem Tausender aber schrecke ich zwar etwas zurück, verstehe dennoch, welche Qualitätsstufe da erreicht werden könnte und "brutal gute Kopfhörer".... DAMN, solch eine Beschreibung holt mich tierisch ab... :) Dein Master von "Transience" ist MÖRDER!!! Ich würde gerne mit dir in Kontakt treten (unverbindlich, Bro...), eigentlich um deine Preise zu erfragen. Verstehe, dass du die nicht öffentlich machst, aber wäre schon interessant zu wissen, in welcher "Liga" du dich wiederfindest... Also, feel free, I will contact you, but if you hear my "shitty work", you're probably gonna roll your eyes... Too much mistakes on the way to a perfect mix... I know. :) www.soundcloud.com/erzogsplinte um konkret zu werden. Höre - bei Neugier - selbst, wo ich gerade stehe... Ansonsten, danke für den Tip und prompte Reaktion! Remember this: "Techno, Techno all night long." 6 6 6 ❌❌❌
@@tol.M_ngo Ich bin ganz entspannt, schreib mir gerne ne Email und wir machen dann von da weiter ;) Die Audeze MM100 sind gerade noch so in deiner Liga und die klingen auch toll! Allerdings muss ich sagen dass man auch mit deinen Beyerdynamics + Sonarworks sehr weit kommt. Das wichtigste ist: Machen, machen, machen. „Earn your gear upgrade“ ist meine Philosophie ;) Ich höre nächste Woche im Studio in deinen SoundCloud Link rein! Schreib mir gerne ne Email über meine Website (Studio: copilco-productions.com)
Watch out for the next video on EQ mistakes (coming soon), I’ll explain exactly that in all detail. The short version: there isn’t an immediately audible downside, it’s more of a bad habit that (in sum on many channels) can deteriorate the fidelity of your sound. That being said, sometimes the “low cut every channel” philosophy can lead to clearly audible issues, for example if you cut something away that adds character. Example: many producers cut percussion tracks at 300Hz. But many snare drums and claps have a lot of their fundamental notes (and therefore energy) down there. This leads to a weaker percussion section. Let me know if that was helpful!
@@pickyourselfofficial very informative and helpful, thank you!! i have been making this mistake on claps/snares for sure... will avoid in the future. thanks!
@@pickyourselfofficial you shouldn't be teaching these things, you barely know what your talking about. A good reason not to cut all of the low-end using a high pass filter is ringing and pre-ringing. There are no wrong answers in mixing but its important to note that having a steep cut leads to ringing. In fact, a steep low cut on a signal result in an increase in volume most times, because of the ringing added to the signal. This happens even more for linear phase eq's. Pre-ringing, like all anomalies of audio; could be applied in a way that compliments the music. Audio is a gray area, anyone promoting blanket rules to their mixes has no business teaching audio production.
@@davidcache that’s exactly what I’m saying in several videos. Including the upcoming one on EQs, so calm down. Without the unnecessary hate, your comment would have been a useful contribution.
This video aims at producers who already know some sound design that gets them to this point. For them, this is the perfect starting point and it would be tedious to go through all of the setup. But don’t worry, I take the feedback seriously and will also do some more sound design tutorials that start from scratch. It’s impossible to cater to every group in every video. I have to choose and I hope you can understand that.
FREE Guide - Finish at least one great-sounding song per month: pickyourself.com/framework
I really like learning about "zone" in sampler, and the different hi-hats in different notes, thank you and keep it up
Awesome, so good to hear that you’ve learned something! 💯
Cool approach to layer the samples via sampler, thank you for sharing!
Quick tip: if you want to add more randomness with vocoder (yeah, it really sounds nice on hats and snares) but preserve more of the original sound - you can group up the vocoder (cmd+g), then open "chains" tab on this group, and create another chain without the effects. Then you can adjust the levels of each chain by your taste.
It's called parallel processing if I'm not mistaken :)
What a great addition to this workflow, thanks for sharing! 💯🙌🏻
Oh learnt a lot. I didn't know u could layer sounds like that. I was thinking using a drum rack to achieve the same. this is so much easier! also I guess Shifting the midi just ever so slightly instead of a 1/16 or so is also a way to spice it up. so that all the HH dont land exactly on the same spot. is there a way to use the LFO to modulate the position of each MIDI note back and forth?
Agree with the layering. a little bit of sound design in our sequence goes a long way. nice vid!
Thank you for this important information! I have one question - how much should the hats be panned (before the processing chain)? or should they be in the centre?
Good work and content !
Great vid as always(: I like adding a rhythmic gate that emulates a hi-hat groove to my background noise, that way I can automate the depth of the gate to change the sound during the track
just the video i was looking for. thanks bro
Yeah the H-Hat 2 Layers gives it a Nice bounce to the Track vs the Standard H_Hat Programming...
Good stuff will use this when layering Claps , C Hats, Shakers..
Awesome, glad you got something out of this!
I've studied a lot of great dance mixes and that vocoder noise trick will help the eq curve fit more in line with some of my favorites. REALLY great tips! Also also the SSL 9000 J smart man! Subscribed.
Awesome, what a pleasure to read this!
Great vid man, im struggling to get humanised feel on open hats, going yo try frequency shifter! Great idea
Always amazing :)
Love your videos!
Wie immer ein gutes Tutorial! Wäre aber schön wenn du auch darauf eingegangen wärst, wie man hi-hats im mix platziert. Trotzdem daumen hoch :)
Picked up on something here, that you mentioned. You don't always cut the low end. I completely understand this, say under 350Hz, but with the limited low frequency range, say under 120Hz, would you cut anything that isn't sub/kick, to avoid muddiness? I have seen about 10 different answers to this and as a mastering engineer, I am curious as to your thoughts. Thank you!
Great question! I think you’ll get the most detailed and nuanced answer on EQing and when/how to cut things in this video: ua-cam.com/video/-lKbAuqiYpU/v-deo.htmlsi=ANa0nv2nwT_yfF8n
Corpus is crazy, I use it all the time to build grooves and also on basslines...Another trick with vocoder is to decrease the bands, that gives you sharper sounds
It's SO good!
Thank you!
My pleasure! 💯
Great video once again. How about a video doing syncopated claps? Or on syncopation in general.
Ahh, nice idea! Thanks, I’ll put it on my list :)
Loved it!
❤
You rock man. Nice.
Thanks a million for the kind words!
Really great content! It be cool though to see how to achieve the final result with ableton stock plugins only:-)
Yeah, I think I’ll try to do a full mix walkthrough with only stock plugins just to show that it’s totally doable:)
nice content!
Thanks, I really appreciate it!
Eine Frage: Was sind das für verrückte Kopfhörer, die du aufhast???
Die würdest du sicherlich auch empfehlen, richtig? :)
THX!
Audeze LCD-X. Hab mit denen letztes Jahr 3 Monate ohne festes Studio von der Toskana aus professionelle Mixes und Masters für meine Kunden erstellt. Sind brutal gute Kopfhörer.
@@pickyourselfofficial THX!
Auweia, ich bin neidisch, aber in der Preisliga kann ich leider nicht mitspielen...
Hast du andere Kopfhörer, die du empfehlen würdest, die vielleicht bis max. 500,- gehen???
Aktuell nutze ich seit Jahren Beyerdynamic DT-990 Pro... Nichts besonderes, aber auch nicht allerletzter Crap, wie ich finde...
Ich bin auch nur ein kleiner Badroomproducer, allerdings dünkt es mich, tatsächlich in eine richtige Abhöre aufzurüsten (Neumann KH120 fänd ich toll)und dazu gehört auch, für mich, ein adäquates Paar Kopfhörer... Ich arbeite viel mit Headphones, vielleicht mehr, als man sollte, aber es ist für mich der perfekte "Modus via Tunnelblick". Die Abschottung, die ich mit Kopfhörern erreiche fördert meine Fokussierung, wenngleich ich auch ein Dulli bin und mich gerne in dieser Abschottung verliere und Blödsinn mache... stundenlang... Aber ich muss ja nicht abliefern, daher ist das völlig wurst, es soll halt Spaß machen und mir gefallen, mehr nicht.
Bei nem Tausender aber schrecke ich zwar etwas zurück, verstehe dennoch, welche Qualitätsstufe da erreicht werden könnte und "brutal gute Kopfhörer".... DAMN, solch eine Beschreibung holt mich tierisch ab... :)
Dein Master von "Transience" ist MÖRDER!!!
Ich würde gerne mit dir in Kontakt treten (unverbindlich, Bro...), eigentlich um deine Preise zu erfragen. Verstehe, dass du die nicht öffentlich machst, aber wäre schon interessant zu wissen, in welcher "Liga" du dich wiederfindest...
Also, feel free, I will contact you, but if you hear my "shitty work", you're probably gonna roll your eyes... Too much mistakes on the way to a perfect mix... I know. :)
www.soundcloud.com/erzogsplinte
um konkret zu werden.
Höre - bei Neugier - selbst, wo ich gerade stehe...
Ansonsten, danke für den Tip und prompte Reaktion!
Remember this:
"Techno, Techno all night long."
6 6 6
❌❌❌
@@tol.M_ngo Ich bin ganz entspannt, schreib mir gerne ne Email und wir machen dann von da weiter ;)
Die Audeze MM100 sind gerade noch so in deiner Liga und die klingen auch toll! Allerdings muss ich sagen dass man auch mit deinen Beyerdynamics + Sonarworks sehr weit kommt. Das wichtigste ist: Machen, machen, machen. „Earn your gear upgrade“ ist meine Philosophie ;)
Ich höre nächste Woche im Studio in deinen SoundCloud Link rein! Schreib mir gerne ne Email über meine Website (Studio: copilco-productions.com)
just curious, why is it a bad idea to filter out the lows on a channel if not necessary? thx for the tips BTW, I've subscribed!
Watch out for the next video on EQ mistakes (coming soon), I’ll explain exactly that in all detail. The short version: there isn’t an immediately audible downside, it’s more of a bad habit that (in sum on many channels) can deteriorate the fidelity of your sound. That being said, sometimes the “low cut every channel” philosophy can lead to clearly audible issues, for example if you cut something away that adds character. Example: many producers cut percussion tracks at 300Hz. But many snare drums and claps have a lot of their fundamental notes (and therefore energy) down there. This leads to a weaker percussion section. Let me know if that was helpful!
@@pickyourselfofficial very informative and helpful, thank you!! i have been making this mistake on claps/snares for sure... will avoid in the future. thanks!
@@pickyourselfofficial you shouldn't be teaching these things, you barely know what your talking about.
A good reason not to cut all of the low-end using a high pass filter is ringing and pre-ringing. There are no wrong answers in mixing but its important to note that having a steep cut leads to ringing. In fact, a steep low cut on a signal result in an increase in volume most times, because of the ringing added to the signal. This happens even more for linear phase eq's. Pre-ringing, like all anomalies of audio; could be applied in a way that compliments the music.
Audio is a gray area, anyone promoting blanket rules to their mixes has no business teaching audio production.
@@davidcache that’s exactly what I’m saying in several videos. Including the upcoming one on EQs, so calm down. Without the unnecessary hate, your comment would have been a useful contribution.
Audeze LCD X
Couldnt you just use a drum rack and load multiple samples
Yes, you totally could!
🎉
🙌🏻🖤
activate your windows
As usual, you omit all of the set-up. I'm learning and want to follow along. Where do I start? No clue, because you don't share that.
This video aims at producers who already know some sound design that gets them to this point. For them, this is the perfect starting point and it would be tedious to go through all of the setup. But don’t worry, I take the feedback seriously and will also do some more sound design tutorials that start from scratch. It’s impossible to cater to every group in every video. I have to choose and I hope you can understand that.
Not exactly tricks or secrets though. Standard recording techniques that people have done for decades.