Pretty sure you're just talking about a tom roll? Don't really need to make anything. Just get some tom samples. If they come with like a "tom hi", "tom mid", and "tom lo", then great, you can make a roll by having like 4 hi's hit, followed by 4 mids and then 4 lo's or something like that. if you can only get one, just transpose it up and down to get different pitches.
dubunked wrote:Pretty sure you're just talking about a tom roll? Don't really need to make anything. Just get some tom samples. If they come with like a "tom hi", "tom mid", and "tom lo", then great, you can make a roll by having like 4 hi's hit, followed by 4 mids and then 4 lo's or something like that. if you can only get one, just transpose it up and down to get different pitches.
Im not sure if there toms, they sound very lively to me. Very acoustic, try making two tracks of your drums instead of one so the first drum can hit and let its tail finish and the hit the second drum hit before or during the tail or if your in Fl its easy to do drum rolls with its piano roll. Should go like 4 notes at your root note then another 3 or 4 notes at five halfsteps down and then a couple more notes another two down. Should go 1-5-7.
Maybe its sampled hits of an actual drum set? I can never find good live drum samples
Check out my youtube videos and Soundcloud
https://r3b_official.toneden.io/# Soundcloud
dubunked wrote:Pretty sure you're just talking about a tom roll? Don't really need to make anything. Just get some tom samples. If they come with like a "tom hi", "tom mid", and "tom lo", then great, you can make a roll by having like 4 hi's hit, followed by 4 mids and then 4 lo's or something like that. if you can only get one, just transpose it up and down to get different pitches.
Im not sure if there toms, they sound very lively to me. Very acoustic, try making two tracks of your drums instead of one so the first drum can hit and let its tail finish and the hit the second drum hit before or during the tail or if your in Fl its easy to do drum rolls with its piano roll. Should go like 4 notes at your root note then another 3 or 4 notes at five halfsteps down and then a couple more notes another two down. Should go 1-5-7.
Maybe its sampled hits of an actual drum set? I can never find good live drum samples
Do you even know what a tom is?
It's an acoustic drum
They're toms
2 keyboards 1 computer
Sure_Fire wrote:By the way does anyone have the stems to make it bun dem? Missed the beatport comp and would very much like the ego booster of saying I remixed Skrillex.
dubunked wrote:Pretty sure you're just talking about a tom roll? Don't really need to make anything. Just get some tom samples. If they come with like a "tom hi", "tom mid", and "tom lo", then great, you can make a roll by having like 4 hi's hit, followed by 4 mids and then 4 lo's or something like that. if you can only get one, just transpose it up and down to get different pitches.
Im not sure if there toms, they sound very lively to me. Very acoustic, try making two tracks of your drums instead of one so the first drum can hit and let its tail finish and the hit the second drum hit before or during the tail or if your in Fl its easy to do drum rolls with its piano roll. Should go like 4 notes at your root note then another 3 or 4 notes at five halfsteps down and then a couple more notes another two down. Should go 1-5-7.
Maybe its sampled hits of an actual drum set? I can never find good live drum samples
Do you even know what a tom is?
It's an acoustic drum
They're toms
I guess not ahah! Thought these were toms?
Check out my youtube videos and Soundcloud
https://r3b_official.toneden.io/# Soundcloud
TopManLurka wrote:FTR, requirements for being a 'head':
-you have to be youngsta
-you must have been in that infamous room of ten people.
-a DMZ release is preferable but not necessary.
-please note that being youngsta is mandatory.
They're drums like a kick or a snare. Frequency-wise, they lie in between a kick and a snare, between 50 and 200 hz usually. In fact, a lot of EDM/brostep producers layer a tom in for the "snare" part to give it more punch. But mostly, in electronic and acoustic music, they are just used for rolls.
I'm sure if you produce you have single shot samples of various drums, so go to
http://www.looperman.com download a drum roll stretch it to twice the size in audacity or whatever, listen carefully with headphones and try and recreate it, not the easiest way but a good way of learning...