Hi Nolly. Great to see you guys teaming up together. If this course is anything like you're Vintage 30 analysis, we'll get some amazing insights into metal drum sounds. 🥁🎸😎
Nolly's balance between technical know-how, confidence, creativity and the true British gentleman chill vibe is -- well, perfect. I AM A KULTIST! This course is awesome -- finished it today. Gonna start on my drum mix tomorrow!
A kind reminder for everyone that a big room is the most important aspect to the rock drum sound. Along with the tuning. It took me 14 years to learn this.
I would say (and Nolly would too) that the live room needs to sound good, but really does not have to be that big at all. He also talks about this in the course. We went for a big room so Nolly could show more room mic options. Not because it necessarily sounds better.
True but the skill level required for getting these drum recordings and mixes is way higher than what’s required to get a killer bass sound. Just sayin.
The snare used on Nevermind is now owned by Ross Robinson. An indie band I play in used it a couple years ago to record a string of singles. Those bronze and brass snares really do have the sound. Really enjoying the content. Nolly seems fun to work with.
Nave is such a fantastic space, I've only been in once or twice but it's only twenty minutes away from me! So fun to see one of these videos taking place just round the corner
Thanx for a great video! As a pro drummer and drumkit tuner i must add that this difference between these snare sounds is hugely influenced by the difference of st dry and hd dry heads! It is comparable to remo powerstroke 3 vs emperror. Beside that remos in general are most resonant and least drum sound influencing drumheads of the main manufacturers. Evans are the most influencing - and least resonant ones. It's like if you wanna go oldschool, jazzy, or acoustic get remos, and if you wanna go fat and modern you reach for evans heads.
Oh yeah. They always have a lot of character. I personally tend to tune quite a bit deeper. But it's always the combination of tuning, miking and processing that defines the final snare sound. That's one of the really interesting aspects of this course.
Not in this one. This one is more about sound. We’ve got a dedicated editing course though: www.kohleaudiokult.com/courses/metal-drum-editing-masterclass
Such a good video. I'm just wondering. Is there any guitar loops out there in the metal community? I think that would be a cool thing. Maybee members can post instrumentals? Very hard to find good drumless guitar tracks.
@@BrofUJu I prefer the drum sounds of P2 for example compared to anything Periphery after that. Other than that, more raw like doom, grindcore or rock/punk sound.
@@jesse_colethis is a modern metal channel. Why are you wasting your time commenting on a video about modern metal production if you don't like modern metal production?
@@jesse_coleit’s all determined by what the music you’re recording requires. You can’t throw a country drummer on a Gretsch kit miked up for a country tone and hope it to cut through a wall of metal guitars and vocals. Aggressive and drastic music calls for equally aggressive and drastic mixing approaches to get everything that needs to cut through to cut through. It might not be to your taste but I’m sure there’s plenty of other channels that cater more to what you’re looking for.
Kind of a sad state of affairs that the bass player of the preeminent djent band needs to be a producer/sample producer because music won’t provide a living anymore🫤
I picked him up on the street. He was burning his bass because he was freezing so much and could not afford any firewood. I had mercy and gave him the job!
This video is only worth something to you if you have access to a professional studio!! Not a great explanation of HOW to setup your own recording process
Say hello to Nolly! Who's excited about the course?
Hello Nolly! 🙋♂🙋♂
HELL YEAH! 😎🙌🏻👏🏻
Hi Nolly. Great to see you guys teaming up together. If this course is anything like you're Vintage 30 analysis, we'll get some amazing insights into metal drum sounds. 🥁🎸😎
Hello nolly😁
I buy everything that has the Name nolly on it and I'm not even kidding. The way this dude share his wisdom is like a therapy Audio book
Nolly is an amazing talent! A true Gentleman as well!
*Djentleman
@@blakdaimond42 Indeed Djent!
Always appreciate Nolly dropping the Nolledge.
I do like that word you created
jajjaaj great comment!
I've already seen at least two in depth mixing courses by Nolly. Do I really need another one? Yes. The answer is yes.
That's the spirit!
Nolly's balance between technical know-how, confidence, creativity and the true British gentleman chill vibe is -- well, perfect. I AM A KULTIST! This course is awesome -- finished it today. Gonna start on my drum mix tomorrow!
Great to hear that Billy! 🤘
A kind reminder for everyone that a big room is the most important aspect to the rock drum sound.
Along with the tuning.
It took me 14 years to learn this.
I would say (and Nolly would too) that the live room needs to sound good, but really does not have to be that big at all.
He also talks about this in the course.
We went for a big room so Nolly could show more room mic options. Not because it necessarily sounds better.
@@KohleAudioKult I understand. I just noticed that a meter of more ceiling height made a night and day difference in my drum recordings.
I fully agree! Low ceilings can be a nightmare.
not necessarily have to be big, i think, just needs the room to capture the snare more than the other pieces of the kit.
Wow I love the way that brass snare sounds
that cusworth snare is absolutely unbelievable....
He's not just known for drum sounds. His bass tones are legendary.
True but the skill level required for getting these drum recordings and mixes is way higher than what’s required to get a killer bass sound. Just sayin.
@snapascrew indeed. Drums are an entire universe
The snare used on Nevermind is now owned by Ross Robinson. An indie band I play in used it a couple years ago to record a string of singles. Those bronze and brass snares really do have the sound.
Really enjoying the content. Nolly seems fun to work with.
Yes and yes.
1. I gotta get one of those snares as well.
2. Nolly is just as nice as he appears to be 🥳
Nolly……amazing. Love your walkthroughs! Also your discussion about Celestion. Huge thanks to you both 👊
Indeed. I think this course is his most intense walk-through ever!
as far as Metal production goes, Nolly's definitely on top of the game right now.
Finally!! Love you both guys. Thanks
That John Tempesta snare is on it's way to be one of the GOATed snare.
wow I was loving the Tempesta but that Cusworth is awesome and huge
guys a living legend in the modern metal space
Nolly and Buster Oldeholm are the best Guys at their Work we have
Nave is such a fantastic space, I've only been in once or twice but it's only twenty minutes away from me! So fun to see one of these videos taking place just round the corner
Thanx for a great video! As a pro drummer and drumkit tuner i must add that this difference between these snare sounds is hugely influenced by the difference of st dry and hd dry heads! It is comparable to remo powerstroke 3 vs emperror. Beside that remos in general are most resonant and least drum sound influencing drumheads of the main manufacturers. Evans are the most influencing - and least resonant ones. It's like if you wanna go oldschool, jazzy, or acoustic get remos, and if you wanna go fat and modern you reach for evans heads.
This Neumann KMS is a nice surprise! Sounds really good!
Indeed. There were quite a few positive surprises for me in this course.
Looks like a fantastic course, thank you!
2:33 casually referencing St. Anger
I hate how good the source tone on that snare already is :O ;)
"I'm more of a 3.2 guy, going in." - Hear that, buddy.
Amazing content, even that bit was good enough for me to improve my sound drastically.
Great to thear that!
it's funny how without knowing it I have the same taste in snare drums and skins as nolly and I really like his snare drums
Oh yeah. They always have a lot of character.
I personally tend to tune quite a bit deeper.
But it's always the combination of tuning, miking and processing that defines the final snare sound. That's one of the really interesting aspects of this course.
Awesome!
God tier snare sound for me is John Dolmayan Toxicity album, System of a Down, tight cracky
Adam's a genius
Cusworth snare has less ring and sounds more like NYHC / Steward Copeland type thing, which is my jam.
buying this shit asap!
13:31 13:38 instant Chad Smith vibes ;)
In this course, we will able to see the editing process?
Not in this one. This one is more about sound.
We’ve got a dedicated editing course though:
www.kohleaudiokult.com/courses/metal-drum-editing-masterclass
Awesome, looks great 🔥
Two legends in one place - consider me signed up 🤟🏻🙌🏻
Thanks and welcome!
The Neumann kms105 is marketed as a supercardioid. Nolly says Hypercardioid. Is there a difference?
Hypercardioid would hypothetically have even less bleed than Supercardioid. But the microphone in question is hyper, not super.
Such a good video. I'm just wondering. Is there any guitar loops out there in the metal community? I think that would be a cool thing. Maybee members can post instrumentals? Very hard to find good drumless guitar tracks.
We have lots of different metal multitracks inside the Kohle Audio Kult Academy.
@@KohleAudioKult I will take a look
Legend! Gonna have to cheat on my URM sub.. tehehe!!
Great! As always... What eq's where you using on the way in?
The one he uses in the video is a Stam Audio 1073 type EQ
Damn, that Neve EQ really did wonders. Stealing it :)
Do it!
NOLLY! NOLLY!
Where can I stream that intro and outro song?
It’s part of the course. That’s the only way to get it
You mean the Tama bell brass?
what a difference with the hw EQ on the way in
“Well… certainly not like a St. Anger snare or anything like that” 😂
Can subtitles be activated on the course?
Sorry, no.
Ok thanx @@KohleAudioKult
Neumann is going to sell a lot of KMS 105 ... LOL
Which microphone are you using?
And which microphone were you using with Nolly?
Aren’t going to just trigger and quantize them anyway?
Nope. That the whole meaning of the course!
Nolly didn't even use a snare sample on the latest Periphery album, only a kick sample.
@@BrofUJu And still sounds like overproduced drum vst. His sound is too "perfect".
@@HenritheHorse I mean, sure, entitled to an opinion. What's a metal drum sound you prefer? Especially more technical music
@@BrofUJu I prefer the drum sounds of P2 for example compared to anything Periphery after that. Other than that, more raw like doom, grindcore or rock/punk sound.
12:55😂❤
SHUT UP AND TAKE MY MONEY :O Jeeeez...
Subtitles in spanish please
Why isn't he running the snare sound through your guitar plugin, Kolah!?? That's heresy!
You mean the Grundstein? Haha, right! 🤪
Now, YOU TOO can make your bass drum sound like a metronome click and your snare sound like a mallet on a sheet-metal roof.
Are you trying to say the drum sound on the last Periphery album isn't good? Lol
@@BrofUJu I'm sure by "modern metal standards," it's a classic.
@@jesse_colethis is a modern metal channel. Why are you wasting your time commenting on a video about modern metal production if you don't like modern metal production?
@@jesse_coleit’s all determined by what the music you’re recording requires. You can’t throw a country drummer on a Gretsch kit miked up for a country tone and hope it to cut through a wall of metal guitars and vocals. Aggressive and drastic music calls for equally aggressive and drastic mixing approaches to get everything that needs to cut through to cut through. It might not be to your taste but I’m sure there’s plenty of other channels that cater more to what you’re looking for.
@@zer0dave Thanks for the lecture.
nolly likes to drink beer i guess
Maybe…
I'm sure he does now...
maybe, but he's definitely a coffee guy.
Kind of a sad state of affairs that the bass player of the preeminent djent band needs to be a producer/sample producer because music won’t provide a living anymore🫤
I picked him up on the street. He was burning his bass because he was freezing so much and could not afford any firewood.
I had mercy and gave him the job!
Well there it is, the dumbest fucking thing I’ll read all day.
This video is only worth something to you if you have access to a professional studio!! Not a great explanation of HOW to setup your own recording process
The course is packed with general information about recording drums. Tuning, mic positioning etc. No matter where and how you record! 🤘