MULTIMEDIA

Deconstructed - Five Classic Bass Music Tunes And Discover Some Key Ideas (Part 5)

7/15/2013 9:15:09 AM

TNGHT - Higher Ground

TNGHT’s five-track Warp EP serves up a truly eclectic collection of sounds, reflecting the broad interests of the duo’s two members, Hudson Mohawke and Lunice. The 161bpm Higher Ground is a perfect example of a cross-genre bass music track, drawing influence from styles including Chicago juke and dubstep to deliver an upfront wall of claps, snares and hats in various rhythmic configurations, against an underlying half-time dub feel.

This could easily all go horribly wrong of course, but it doesn’t, and the key to this success lies in the beats programming and sound selection. The beast in particular mine the retro drum machine sounds found in classic Roland boxes, twisting and turning them in interesting ways. Other key sound selections include the ‘juke’-style repeated and sped-up vocal snatch that gives the track its name (if you’re looking for the source, seek out the Defected track Home by Julie McKnight).

TNGHT’s five-track Warp EP serves up a truly eclectic collection of sounds, reflecting the broad interests of the duo’s two members, Hudson Mohawke and Lunice

TNGHT’s five-track Warp EP serves up a truly eclectic collection of sounds, reflecting the broad interests of the duo’s two members, Hudson Mohawke and Lunice

Structurally, the track is very tight, and at a little under three and a half minutes long, it’s all done and dusted pretty quickly. Breaking things down into 16-bar sections makes it easy to spot the repetition – once we’re past the 16-bar intro, which kicks straight in with the vocal sample, the main action is in the alternating shift between the two main 16-bar sections. One of these is full-on and includes a bright horn sound and plenty of toppy hats and beats; in the other, the horn drops down in level and things are a fair bit more sparse. These sections basically alternate through the track to create a typical quiet/loud pattern.

The track isn’t quite as simple as it sound, however. Various subtleties are used to mix things up, such as low-pass filtering on the horns and dual layers of horns spread an octave apart. The result is that the drop sections are much more varied than the full-on sections.

As we mentioned earlier, the drum programming is key to the variation in the track, so we’re going to focus on the hats, snares, toms, claps and kicks in our two walkthroughs.

Snares and claps

The classic TR-808 and TR-909 will provide all the snare and clap sounds we need here, though a couple will need some extra manipulation. First up, there’s a straight-eighths (that is, playing on all the eighth-notes) ‘bounce’-style clap. This is a typical 808 clap with the decay tweaked a little to match the part.

Note the use of minimal beats programming using only a small number of carefully selected sounds

Note the use of minimal beats programming using only a small number of carefully selected sounds

Next up is a straightforward 909-type snare fill. This is playing to the half-time feel, three notes to a beat across two bars, but for the purposes of programming the part at our full tempo, we’re basically quantizing to 12/8 for each of the two bars.

The snare fill is doubled up with a pitched noise that makes it sound more like a tom fill, although it’s much thinner. We can achieve this using the Hi Conga sound from the 808. To get the pitch spread, the best bet is to sample the sound and play it across a key span. Another option is to pitch it at source on your drum instrument, although in this particular instance you may not find it possible to get all the correct pitches for the part.

The classic TR-808 and TR-909 will provide all the snare and clap sounds we need here

The classic TR-808 and TR-909 will provide all the snare and clap sounds we need here

Our two final sounds are the main snare, which is 808 in style but higher in pitch, and a very sharp high-pitched snare that comes in above the snare fill at the end of the horn drop. Again, an 808 snare is a good starting point. It won’t be high enough in pitch, however, so in both cases we can either stick the original sound in a sampler and play it higher up the keyboard, or use an offline process to pitch shift it upwards.

Although it’s possible to use example libraries for these sounds, the most flexible approach is to use drum machine emulations – that way you, can take full advantage of parameters close to those on the original hardware and fine-tune the sounds at source. Here we’re using the excellent emulations from Polish developers D16 Group.

Other  
 
Top 10
Review : Sigma 24mm f/1.4 DG HSM Art
Review : Canon EF11-24mm f/4L USM
Review : Creative Sound Blaster Roar 2
Review : Philips Fidelio M2L
Review : Alienware 17 - Dell's Alienware laptops
Review Smartwatch : Wellograph
Review : Xiaomi Redmi 2
Extending LINQ to Objects : Writing a Single Element Operator (part 2) - Building the RandomElement Operator
Extending LINQ to Objects : Writing a Single Element Operator (part 1) - Building Our Own Last Operator
3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 2) - Discharge Smart, Use Smart
REVIEW
- First look: Apple Watch

- 3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 1)

- 3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 2)
VIDEO TUTORIAL
- How to create your first Swimlane Diagram or Cross-Functional Flowchart Diagram by using Microsoft Visio 2010 (Part 1)

- How to create your first Swimlane Diagram or Cross-Functional Flowchart Diagram by using Microsoft Visio 2010 (Part 2)

- How to create your first Swimlane Diagram or Cross-Functional Flowchart Diagram by using Microsoft Visio 2010 (Part 3)
Popular Tags
Microsoft Access Microsoft Excel Microsoft OneNote Microsoft PowerPoint Microsoft Project Microsoft Visio Microsoft Word Active Directory Biztalk Exchange Server Microsoft LynC Server Microsoft Dynamic Sharepoint Sql Server Windows Server 2008 Windows Server 2012 Windows 7 Windows 8 Adobe Indesign Adobe Flash Professional Dreamweaver Adobe Illustrator Adobe After Effects Adobe Photoshop Adobe Fireworks Adobe Flash Catalyst Corel Painter X CorelDRAW X5 CorelDraw 10 QuarkXPress 8 windows Phone 7 windows Phone 8