@@noaharkadedelgado2318 just look it up and youll find multiple articles that state the information. it doesnt allow me to put links in youtube comments so i cant link the article
the way dilla took the "oohs" from every part of the song is crazy. my favourite chop/moment of the song is at 4:15 the "ooh's go down and up. You would've thought it was pitched but nah this man really had the ear to rearrange the sample to make it speak a different melody. Insane. And the way you recreated it is perfect I COULD NEVER.
Remaking a song is way more complicated than making a song. There is an aspect of randomness to any song you record. Trying to reproduce the same song takes skill.
Ok just saw the vieo. this is the greatest remake of the song. u a goat, u unbelievable. U just did the greatest instrumental song ever and one of the greatest rap songs ever. You did it very well
You missed the chopped intro and a few little audio quips here and there at the beginning, and the song starts again for a moment after it just plays with where the outro is I did everything you did thought step by step took me almost a full day supper impressive none the less thank you so much 🙏🏽🙏🏽
its called grouping, on windows by default its ctrl+g, on mac should be command+g i guess oh, and before grouping i selected all effects using ctrl+a/command+a
So when you take like a 3 second chunk and slice some of the fat out to make it shorter and more rhythmic with the grove, is that a fade your doing on the parts of the clip you're not using?
You should try ‘caught in their eyes’ off of 4:44 by jay z. No instrumentals for it exist and the sample chopping is so damn complex it boggles my brain
@@p.ii.5104 You can tell that it was done on an SP-303 as this fact was confirmed by Dilla's peers and his own mother. 29 out of 31 of the tracks were made with the SP-303 and a 45 record player.
@@3nthamornin there's conflicting stories about that, Idk if you've seen the documentaries. Egon said that he only ever seen him editing this album on pro tools in the hospital and that most of the tracks were arranged before he was in there permanently. You can't just trust Wikipedia, it can be edited by anyone. As for the beat, you can tell he used pad mute groups on the chops to make them all cut themselves off, which just suits how he made a lot of his beats on the mpc, it just makes more sense to me. But I will admit that I dont know for sure, it just seems more likely
@@p.ii.5104 I'm not referring to just wikipedia, there are plenty of articles that cite Karriem Riggins and others saying he used the SP-303. I have seen the docs but there are multiple sources that cite the 303. Using pro tools doesn't necessarily rule out the 303 either
Can’t believe I just witnessed someone speed run a song remake
To think that Dilla did this while sick and only having his ear and his MPC, unbelievable
I don’t even think he had the mpc…I’m sure it was the sp303 which is even more limited 🔥
@@Kayford1979 it’s scientifically impossible if he did it on a sp303
@@noaharkadedelgado2318 it actually was made on an SP-303
@@3nthamornin source
@@noaharkadedelgado2318 just look it up and youll find multiple articles that state the information. it doesnt allow me to put links in youtube comments so i cant link the article
Dope!! Crazy thing is Dilla probably made that on the MPC 3000. 30 year old tech. That man was ahead of his time.
He did it looks painstaking
Legend has it he didn’t even take longer than this dude on Ableton to make it
it was actually made on an SP-303
@@3nthamornin TELL'EM a real DILLA knows that
It was an SP 303 which was prolly harder to use
the way dilla took the "oohs" from every part of the song is crazy. my favourite chop/moment of the song is at 4:15 the "ooh's go down and up. You would've thought it was pitched but nah this man really had the ear to rearrange the sample to make it speak a different melody. Insane. And the way you recreated it is perfect I COULD NEVER.
this man was swinging around the playlist like spiderman
I tried to do the same thing, but i failed
This is so much complicated than what it seems, Dilla is the goat
I failed many times trying to remake this song.
Remaking a song is way more complicated than making a song. There is an aspect of randomness to any song you record. Trying to reproduce the same song takes skill.
Ok just saw the vieo. this is the greatest remake of the song. u a goat, u unbelievable. U just did the greatest instrumental song ever and one of the greatest rap songs ever. You did it very well
And to think... Dilla did that shit just for fun/practice never intended to be released
What an astonishing tribute
i could never imagine doing this by ear
I love that there are mofos out in the world that love this shit as much as I do
if anyone is able to make the B section in Face To Face by Daft Punk, that person would be a god.
I was hoping someone would do this. Thank you
FINALLY U DID DONT CRY. YESSSIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIR
Really thanks a lot for this video. Quite some game in here, also motivation and its just nice to see to dig how this beautiful track is put together
You missed the chopped intro and a few little audio quips here and there at the beginning, and the song starts again for a moment after it just plays with where the
outro is I did everything you did thought step by step took me almost a full day supper impressive none the less thank you so much 🙏🏽🙏🏽
Best remake i have seen yet, and you did it so quickly
what was that command you did at 7:38 to bring all those audio effects into an audio effects rack?
its called grouping, on windows by default its ctrl+g, on mac should be command+g i guess
oh, and before grouping i selected all effects using ctrl+a/command+a
@@kjepski ty kjepski you are a god 🙏🙏🙏
this is inspirational
So when you take like a 3 second chunk and slice some of the fat out to make it shorter and more rhythmic with the grove, is that a fade your doing on the parts of the clip you're not using?
This is a true remake
Killed it.
Holy Shit! whoah. Originally done on the 3000 WTF!?!? Amazing
this is so accurate good shit bro
good shit as usual
Was hoping you would do the intro. I can not seem to figure out how he did it in my own remake.
King is back!!! Pls make 1 more video about some daftpunk song
I just listened to J Dilla, ngl
You're a legend
Beautiful
this is sick
You should try ‘caught in their eyes’ off of 4:44 by jay z. No instrumentals for it exist and the sample chopping is so damn complex it boggles my brain
Nina Simone - Baltimore
@@SecondWizards yes yes I know the sample, but no one has tried recreating it.
Should I switch from FL to ableton?
Amazing job 👌🏼
God is good
And dilla did this all on the mpc... *mindblownemoji*
he actually did this on an SP-303 not an MPC... which is even more mind blowing in my opinion
@@3nthamornin nah this was for sure on the mpc, you can tell how the track is arranged
@@p.ii.5104 You can tell that it was done on an SP-303 as this fact was confirmed by Dilla's peers and his own mother. 29 out of 31 of the tracks were made with the SP-303 and a 45 record player.
@@3nthamornin there's conflicting stories about that, Idk if you've seen the documentaries. Egon said that he only ever seen him editing this album on pro tools in the hospital and that most of the tracks were arranged before he was in there permanently. You can't just trust Wikipedia, it can be edited by anyone.
As for the beat, you can tell he used pad mute groups on the chops to make them all cut themselves off, which just suits how he made a lot of his beats on the mpc, it just makes more sense to me. But I will admit that I dont know for sure, it just seems more likely
@@p.ii.5104 I'm not referring to just wikipedia, there are plenty of articles that cite Karriem Riggins and others saying he used the SP-303. I have seen the docs but there are multiple sources that cite the 303. Using pro tools doesn't necessarily rule out the 303 either
J dilla was created from god
God is good
10:46 final result
good job!
gang, why you add drums?
Respect
10:54
EPIC ! Geat job ! :O
Yessir
God created Malik Vickers