Fantastic video which shows you can stay firmly in 4/4 yet achieve great rhythmic sophistication and subtle nuances just with how you populate your beat divisions. Would love to hear Tim expand and go deeper with some of these ideas in a future video
Tim, I actually thought that the figures 5:4 and 7:8 were in fact a reference to odd time signatures; 5 quarter notes per bar and 7 eighth notes per bar. Frankly, I think Presonus have included these SPECIFICALLY for drum use - quintuplets and septuplets. Any thoughts would be really welcome because for me, it's an 'eh?' moment.
Really great video. The ramp up in the last example sound realistic - I'm guessing its a velocity thing? For some reason I can never get mine sounding 'realistic'. Good work.
You are a good teacher but please hear in Ghana there's a kind style of music called agbaja, which is triplet base on this video, can you play triplet drum patterns for me
greetings, I recently switched to the m1 mac and now I am having a lot of issues trying to quantize drums in studio one for example. On my windows machine if I wanted to quantize apart all I had to do was right-click on that part then choose quantize and it would apply the quantize value. On my mac it does not do that. In fact, it does nothing even when I highlight the midi notes in the editor. Is there a different way to do this on a mac. This is extremely annoying such that I find myself returning to my windows machine to get things done. can anyone tell me how I can apply to quantize to my notes as I do on my windows machine?
Fantastic video which shows you can stay firmly in 4/4 yet achieve great rhythmic sophistication and subtle nuances just with how you populate your beat divisions. Would love to hear Tim expand and go deeper with some of these ideas in a future video
Great suggestion! I'll have to do a decent amount of planning for a video like that!
Great video, very good explanation!
Glad you liked it!
Hello Tim, Loved the detailed explanation and demo. Regards!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Tim, I actually thought that the figures 5:4 and 7:8 were in fact a reference to odd time signatures; 5 quarter notes per bar and 7 eighth notes per bar. Frankly, I think Presonus have included these SPECIFICALLY for drum use - quintuplets and septuplets. Any thoughts would be really welcome because for me, it's an 'eh?' moment.
Time signatures are set up in the tempo map.
Really great video. The ramp up in the last example sound realistic - I'm guessing its a velocity thing? For some reason I can never get mine sounding 'realistic'. Good work.
You are a good teacher but please hear in Ghana there's a kind style of music called agbaja, which is triplet base on this video, can you play triplet drum patterns for me
Clearly useful! Thanks Tim
You're welcome!
You were predestined to be different(Romans 8:29), he who has an ear to hear, let him hear(Mark 4:9).
HALLELUYAH!(PRAISE YE YAH!)
greetings, I recently switched to the m1 mac and now I am having a lot of issues trying to quantize drums in studio one for example. On my windows machine if I wanted to quantize apart all I had to do was right-click on that part then choose quantize and it would apply the quantize value. On my mac it does not do that. In fact, it does nothing even when I highlight the midi notes in the editor. Is there a different way to do this on a mac. This is extremely annoying such that I find myself returning to my windows machine to get things done. can anyone tell me how I can apply to quantize to my notes as I do on my windows machine?
wow that's pretty awesome, i always used the Triplet feel.. but never knew what the other would do!! thanks so much!
You were predestined to be different(Romans 8:29), he who has an ear to hear, let him hear(Mark 4:9).
HALLELUYAH!(PRAISE YE YAH!)
in studio one is there time warp/warp grid function like in cubase? What tool is it?
need 1/128
Canelo Alvares look alike
I've gotten that a few times, one of those times was during a trip to Mexico!