Drum sounds (dubstep like)

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Drum sounds (dubstep like)

Postby Rainbowjack » 28 Apr 2012 21:49

Okay, everyone here should know of The Living Tombstone, if not why not? Anyway, he has amazing drum sounds and I would like to know if anyone knows how to recreate his kick and snare specifically?

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Re: Drum sounds (dubstep like)

Postby the4thImpulse » 29 Apr 2012 02:39

I can't give any kind of tutorial on making a replica tobmstone kicks and snares but I can give advise on simple drum eqing and layering (which is nessasary knowledge to make great drums)

I wrote a quick little drum eqing guide that you should read first.

I really all comes down to the samples you pick and how you layer them together when thinking about frequency cuts/boosts, compression, polarity, and general volume. I spend a lot of time on my kicks and claps because to me they really drive a song so I suggets spening a lot of time working on the kick and snare instead of picking a sample and leaving it be.
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Re: Drum sounds (dubstep like)

Postby Icky » 29 Apr 2012 02:48

LT uses the pendulum kit samples in most of his older songs, and he usually uses a "kick hat snare hat kick hat" pattern. I've seen him livestream a few times and know that he barely EQs the kicks so if you keep them stock that should probably get you really close to his drums.

I think he recently switched to a different drum sample pack. I don't know which one, so you should probably ask the good man himself. But like I said, his older songs all use the pendulum kit samples.

Good luck being LT!
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Re: Drum sounds (dubstep like)

Postby Ozzwald » 29 Apr 2012 10:44

Here's a download to the Pendulum beats: http://dl.dropbox.com/u/56973452/Pendul ... are%29.rar

I advise layering these with different samples.
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Re: Drum sounds (dubstep like)

Postby Whitetail » 30 Apr 2012 12:51

To get serious dubstep sounds you're going to want to do a lot of EQing and sound shaping, very rarely will a sample sound passable as is.
Generally to get a good wubsteppy sound you'll want to boost the middle frequencies quite a bit of the sound, especially on the snare:

Example:
-Snare taken from the pendulum pack
http://www.mediafire.com/?nzl633kv2n9hqnm <- Sound as is
http://www.mediafire.com/?4c4r7chslmojyrc <- Middle frequencies boosted

Notice how it has a bit punchier, bit lower sound like most brostep snares tend to have?

Obviously it's going to take a little more work then that but that's the first step on the way there.

Other things to think about:

-Layering - this is one of the most useful things to do when forming drum sounds, basically piecing it together like a puzzle find the parts of different drum sounds that you like, EQ out the rest of the sound and then layer them over each other. While most sounds sound fairly weak on their own as a whole, most will have at least one part that they excel at (depending on where you get them from) - combining them in this fashion can you get you full powerful sounds if you piece everything together appropriately.
--It's a fairly common dubstep technique to layer a clap's upper frequencies over your snare to get a bit more pop to it. Just an example of the way this sort of thing can work

-Reverb - dubstep's pretty notorious for having a big airy sound to it, even in brostep the buildups tend to have a really open and reverby soundscapes. I'd suggest using an FX send for this sort of thing, busing the sounds to an auxiliary track where you EQ out the lower frequencies (bass sounds don't mix well with reverb) and run it through some verb. This way you can control how wet/dry the sounds are simply by how much you bus to the send, and it has your whole track running off a single reverb effect, saving some processing.

-Leave room for subbass - subbass is like the soul of dubstep, the last thing you want is your kick clouding out your wobbles subs. You can have the lower frequencies in the lighter areas, but it'll be to your best inteest to EQ out the lowest frequencies on your kick when the wobble bass comes in.



All in all the best advice I can give you though is don't try to be Tomb, be you - make your own style, make your own drums. Worship over a particular artist's sounds is never healthy for artistic development and then what happens should you actually succeed in recreating "his" drums? The novelty of the style is gone. Forge your own sound, don't obsess over someone else's - take inspiration, not total emulation.
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Re: Drum sounds (dubstep like)

Postby [voodoopony] » 01 May 2012 18:26

He gets his snare by pitchbending a tom and layering it with a 909 snare of some sort. It's the typical "oh shit nigga this dubstep is gonna be all Skrillex like" snare. I strongly recommend looking up to other artists for musical inspiration, particularly those who can properly mix or those who don't use the same snare frequently. For your health.
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