Getting Snappy Hip Hop Drum Samples
In this modern musical era, there is a lot of emphasis placed on the way snare and kick drum samples sound; specifically, whether they can cut through a mix of several different, heavy instrument tracks like strings and electric pianos. They way your samples sound in a tough mix is referred to as snap in a lot of circles. If you can get your main drum track to snap, your mix will be a lot easier to handle later, but you need to take care in your journey, as too much sound manipulation and be degrading.
Making your drums snap and pop isn't as hard as some others may lead you to believe. It's simply a matter of using compression that is well-adjusted to the type of samples you've chosen, and also is accented via other samples that you may choose to boost the effectiveness of the snare and kicks. EQ can also be used to emphasize the frequencies in which the instruments really keep their punchy bits. This can be found out via a spectrum analyzer quite easily. A wave editor can also help to gauge the volume-time dynamic.
Whether you are using software or hardware solutions to edit and change your drum samples, there are some features you should be aware of. The main feature is the likely inclusion of factory-shipped effect patches. It will be sound editors that have compiled the library of effects settings, so start to use them critically. Listen to the sound before and after applying the effect to gauge the impact, and then relate it to the settings on the device or software. Hopefully you will be able to base creative decisions based on your learning here.
Compression is probably the most useful quick fix to turn drab into 'fab' when it comes to snappy samples. Raising the volume everything below a low threshold with a fast release will bring interesting results to start with, but this is certainly no hard and fast rule, and in fact will sound downright ridiculous with certain samples. It's such an adapted art form, you've really got to have your go at it, and write down some of the settings.
When you're making notes on the settings you change, try to describe them in plain English - by that, I mean all the effects and the way they change the sound. If you can well and truly comprehend the way that a sound is effected by the different switches and level meters, you will be well-equipped to make real decisions in a studio environment. Keep a sheet that includes the different settings, supposed effects (according to the manual) and perceived effects (the stuff you hear).
Now as a final tip, I'd like to mention how important it is to have good drum samples. Not just good ones, but a solid selection to pick from. The less samples you have, the more time you're going to be twisting knobs and adjusting sliders, and therefore the less time you will have making an actual beat! So if you want to be able to easily convert the music in your head and lay it down into your program or workstation, expand your selection of sounds.
Came here looking for information on how to make beats? I've heard that before. Simplest way to start: get a good basic tutorial and some banging hip hop drum samples, then let creativity take over!
Filed under Electronics by .