Let’s build a list of classic breaks. Michael Jackson- Ain’t No Sunshine The Honey Drippers- Impeach the President Billy Squier- The Big Beat Joe Tex- Papa Was Too Al Green- I’m Glad You’re Mine
Skull Snaps- It’s A New Day The Detroit Emeralds- You’re Getting A Little Too Smart Black Oak Arkansas- Hot And Nasty Van Halen- Dirty Movies Confunkshun- Got To Be Enough
It's a Grand Theft Auto resurgence. Boom to the bap this is hip hop not trap. My brain was saying the percussion is not in time and my heart was like chill its boom bap. I've really enjoyed watching and can't wait for the next instalment. Thank you.
There’s some young guys doing their thing with some classic boom bap vibes. I’m really liking what Cordae and Kota The Friend represent for this new generation.
Excellent video man! I'm always looking for Maschine Tutorials and I'm glad I came across your page. Keep up the great work. Looking forward to more tutorials. Subscribed!
I’ve used Maschine since 2013 and I’ve never used the drawing tool to program my drums, I’ve always tapped them in on the pads! I think I’m gonna start drawing them in now after watching this video and use these tips! I’m sure it’ll make the whole process of making beats seem fresh and new again!
Dope. Something I never used but am starting to get into is using the step sequencer. It’s been good for experimenting with different patterns while staying on the hardware while the beat is playing.
Good question. I’d say a fundamental principle of HipHop is the idea of taking something old and making something new. Flipping it and making it your own. Using and talking about drum breaks IMO pays tribute to the OGs that didn’t have the resources and tools that we now have. They only had old records and drum breaks for their drums. I’d feel like I wasn’t sharing the full story without mentioning drum breaks. So I’d say the advantage is “being true” to the genre.
Hey. I can definitely do that. Are there any steps that you get more caught up on vs others? Like deciding what slicing mode to use? Sequencing? Adding different elements?…
Let’s build a list of classic breaks.
Michael Jackson- Ain’t No Sunshine
The Honey Drippers- Impeach the President
Billy Squier- The Big Beat
Joe Tex- Papa Was Too
Al Green- I’m Glad You’re Mine
Skull Snaps- It’s A New Day
The Detroit Emeralds- You’re Getting A Little Too Smart
Black Oak Arkansas- Hot And Nasty
Van Halen- Dirty Movies
Confunkshun- Got To Be Enough
It's a Grand Theft Auto resurgence.
Boom to the bap this is hip hop not trap.
My brain was saying the percussion is not in time and my heart was like chill its boom bap.
I've really enjoyed watching and can't wait for the next instalment.
Thank you.
Glad I found this channel ❤️❤️❤️
Thanks for your support
Wow thank you so much man this was super helpful!!
Very well explained 👍
I'm loving this Boom Bap series! This is just what I needed as I recently started trying to create boom bap beats. 😁
Thanks Michael. I remember you looking for tips on Boom Bap and Jazz. 👍
@@BarryDanielMusic You've got a great memory :)
I subscribed.
Boom bap resurgence would be DOPE
There’s some young guys doing their thing with some classic boom bap vibes. I’m really liking what Cordae and Kota The Friend represent for this new generation.
Excellent video man! I'm always looking for Maschine Tutorials and I'm glad I came across your page. Keep up the great work. Looking forward to more tutorials. Subscribed!
Thanks bro. I really appreciate the support!!
I’ve used Maschine since 2013 and I’ve never used the drawing tool to program my drums, I’ve always tapped them in on the pads! I think I’m gonna start drawing them in now after watching this video and use these tips! I’m sure it’ll make the whole process of making beats seem fresh and new again!
Dope. Something I never used but am starting to get into is using the step sequencer. It’s been good for experimenting with different patterns while staying on the hardware while the beat is playing.
@@BarryDanielMusic Same here. The step sequencer always seemed weird to me for some reason lol.
Subscribed! Wow. Thank you for sharing gems with us!
Hey. Thanks so much for your support. It’s much appreciated! 🙏
Thank you so much! I need this lesson!
SUBSCRIBE
You’re welcome. Thanks for your support!
Good one
Thank you 🙏
Bit of a noob question, but why would you sample a break vs programming it in or doing it yourself? Any specific advantages to doing it this way? TIA.
Good question. I’d say a fundamental principle of HipHop is the idea of taking something old and making something new. Flipping it and making it your own. Using and talking about drum breaks IMO pays tribute to the OGs that didn’t have the resources and tools that we now have. They only had old records and drum breaks for their drums. I’d feel like I wasn’t sharing the full story without mentioning drum breaks. So I’d say the advantage is “being true” to the genre.
@@BarryDanielMusic really cool explanation, thank you.
I would say it's more so for the groove. Unless you're a world class finger drummer it's hard to program the groove of a real drummer
Very valid point as well.
I was wondering if you can do another video on sampling in machine like step by step
Hey. I can definitely do that. Are there any steps that you get more caught up on vs others? Like deciding what slicing mode to use? Sequencing? Adding different elements?…
yes like chopping and choke group
Like transients when you chopping samples manually from machine
Exactly. Knowing how to manually chop is such an important and transferable skill for any beat maker!
@@BarryDanielMusic right It takes of a lot of practice but I learned a lot from your videos 💯