Generation loss from bouncing down tracks on tape, on the SP 1200 you lose bit depth, and recording samples at 45rpm's and pitching them back down to their natural pitch, the ringing you often hear on beats made on that machine in the higher frequency spectrum is aliasing. Two other examples of aliasing are if you look at the wheels of car while you are both going 60mph/95kph and the wheels look like they are spinning backwards, thats another example of aliasing that we experience through the loss of information from what is happening and how fast our brain can process that information. Then a digital visual form of aliasing is like in early 3D video games when the number of pixels that a machine could display to show a scene was low enough yet close to the number of DPi of the screen you would see edges of objects "run" when the object is being rotated on screen. Anyways that sound is aliasing, but you also can purposely create that via ring modulation.
Thanks for making this. I am watching this through multiple times
This is so awesome!!! Cheers!!
Cheers Claude 🍻
It's cool to introduce the artist like that !
Mr scruff is my favourite dj go see him play a 5 or 6 hour set and you’ll understand 👍
Andy,s pause button hip hop mix tapes are legendary in mcr.
❤
he just doesn't age! What a legend!
Karl pilkington really knows his music huh?!
Huge injustice that you only have one like on this minted comment.
@@Super1275gt 😂 thanks 🙏
Only posted a few hours ago so perhaps justice will prevail!
New album on its way? ❤
seems like it 😊 I wondered why he was suddenly doing an interview lol
Oh yeah. Great 🔥🔥🔥
The new MPC is really good.... imagine what Scruff would do with 8GB of RAM?
i bet he got a mpc live 2 or X
@@opticalman6417 a couple at least :)
It's good for hip hop but from what I've heard, I don't think it's that great for house and techno or even most of electronic music
limitations are often what make things magical.
WOW!
40:56 Yep, Absolutely True! Ahaha
I prefer coffee myself...
he said on the old 12 bit machines you lose a lot of definition
the correct term is generations you lose generations
Generation loss from bouncing down tracks on tape, on the SP 1200 you lose bit depth, and recording samples at 45rpm's and pitching them back down to their natural pitch, the ringing you often hear on beats made on that machine in the higher frequency spectrum is aliasing. Two other examples of aliasing are if you look at the wheels of car while you are both going 60mph/95kph and the wheels look like they are spinning backwards, thats another example of aliasing that we experience through the loss of information from what is happening and how fast our brain can process that information. Then a digital visual form of aliasing is like in early 3D video games when the number of pixels that a machine could display to show a scene was low enough yet close to the number of DPi of the screen you would see edges of objects "run" when the object is being rotated on screen. Anyways that sound is aliasing, but you also can purposely create that via ring modulation.
@@donnydarko7624 thank you for your kind insight
@@donnydarko7624 cool comment