Greetings,
Robot
I might post some audio of what I got so far soon, but it needs some more work (well thats the good thing when coming from drum and bass -> processing + loud and clear mixdowns are first duty).

you obviously haven't got a very broad selection of dubstep. imobEErz wrote:going thru a list of about 100 of my recently added dubstep tunes in itunes i could only find one with a snare that doesn't fall on the 3rd beat (Hijak - Tears) so as to how "set in stone" it is...id say the majority of producers follow it
cheersBreakBait wrote:you obviously haven't got a very broad selection of dubstep. imobEErz wrote:going thru a list of about 100 of my recently added dubstep tunes in itunes i could only find one with a snare that doesn't fall on the 3rd beat (Hijak - Tears) so as to how "set in stone" it is...id say the majority of producers follow it
Tbf, that may say more about your tastes in dubstep than about dubstep as a whole. That may be what you like, but going through a stack of my favourite tunes I'd say maybe 50% or less of them have the snare on 3. So do what you like, really.bEErz wrote:going thru a list of about 100 of my recently added dubstep tunes in itunes i could only find one with a snare that doesn't fall on the 3rd beat (Hijak - Tears) so as to how "set in stone" it is...id say the majority of producers follow it
Slothrop wrote: And while I'm not one of these "dancefloor tunes are uncreative maaaan, it's far more artistic to write 7/8 450bpm IDMcore that no more than three people will ever listen to" people, a DJ who gets scared and confused if you put a snare somewhere other than the third beat isn't a DJ I'd spend much time worrying about.
I don't think this is true, maybe people with a narrow view of what dubstep is would think this.but it'd probably be hard for your tune to be accepted as dubstep if the snares were on 2 and 4 for the whole tune.
ye i spose it is...whiteboy marlow noah D orien rusko cluekid skream cotti jakes itchy robot 6blocc caspa clouds benga toasty boy darkstar distance were the main culprits to my claim. i guess if you like the different dubstep then you can do what you like in the sequencer.Slothrop wrote:Tbf, that may say more about your tastes in dubstep than about dubstep as a whole. That may be what you like, but going through a stack of my favourite tunes I'd say maybe 50% or less of them have the snare on 3. So do what you like, really.bEErz wrote:going thru a list of about 100 of my recently added dubstep tunes in itunes i could only find one with a snare that doesn't fall on the 3rd beat (Hijak - Tears) so as to how "set in stone" it is...id say the majority of producers follow it
bEErz wrote:beat me to it....was gona say summit about ur tunes being on the 3rd beat but u wer too quickBreakBait wrote: While a lot of people do just put the snare on the 3rd, (myself included)
This is totally totally totally at odds with the the music I listen to. Some people prefer half step and some people prefer other beats, but to say that dubstep has to be halfstep and if it's not got a snare on the third it's not dubstep is just plain wrong. I mean, there are so, so many classic tunes by Kode 9, Mala, D1, Burial, Horsepower, El-B, Skream and so on that don't fit the halfstep template, not to mention newer stuff by TRG, 2562, Geiom, Dusk & Blackdown, Martyn...d1rt1989 wrote:imo the snare falling on the third beat is what defines dubstep and separates it from the most similar styles to it, ie forms of garage, breakcore etc.
dubstep is of course evolving, and i dont want to get into an argument about pigeonholing, but it'd probably be hard for your tune to be accepted as dubstep if the snares were on 2 and 4 for the whole tune.
Slothrop wrote:This is totally totally totally at odds with the the music I listen to. Some people prefer half step and some people prefer other beats, but to say that dubstep has to be halfstep and if it's not got a snare on the third it's not dubstep is just plain wrong. I mean, there are so, so many classic tunes by Kode 9, Mala, D1, Burial, Horsepower, El-B, Skream and so on that don't fit the halfstep template, not to mention newer stuff by TRG, 2562, Geiom, Dusk & Blackdown, Martyn...d1rt1989 wrote:imo the snare falling on the third beat is what defines dubstep and separates it from the most similar styles to it, ie forms of garage, breakcore etc.
dubstep is of course evolving, and i dont want to get into an argument about pigeonholing, but it'd probably be hard for your tune to be accepted as dubstep if the snares were on 2 and 4 for the whole tune.
As I say, if you prefer halfstep then that's cool, but if you think it defines dubstep then either you don't know much about the scene or it's history or you're using dubstep to mean something other than what it is.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests