It can be admissibly interchangeable. Both garage and dnb feature syncopated breakbeats and stay relatively bass heavy. They also are originated from the same early form of UK electronic/dance.
@@doblaireNo they can’t! This is a Garage beat not DnB. I’ve DJed and produced both genres for decades. They’re a completely different BPM and groove. In the late 90s and early 2000s there was actually a Garage vs DnB beef as to which was the best. It was like Nintendo vs Sega. Totally not interchangeable, people were falling out with each other for picking one side over the other.
@@leeharris5135 Everything you described CAN be interchangeable traits to take a song from UKG to DnB. I qualified my statement with 'can'. Slight relative changes to everything you described, such as the BPM and (groove?) can warp a song to either genre. I think what defines both are they tend to be heavier on the low end, and both for sure are usually two step (2&4) patterns.
@@doblaire The BPM change isn’t slight. Going from 130 to 170-180 BPM is a big shift and the DnB groove is defined by snare hits with the bass and percussion knitting it all together. Garage and other House sub genres are kick driven. The only thing they have in common is that they have underground urban roots. The history and origins separate them massively.
I really love when ppl shows the processing of all their drums and melodic stuff and not just the simple midi pattern, thanks for it new sub!!
Thanks :)
It's UK Garage tho, still great
this is actually so education damn. whoever runs social creative deserves bonus
love this tempo with the shuffle
This is more 2step breaks that DnB. However, solid production simple and effective.
I don't usually mix it like that, but this sounds fire
Actually a bop 🔊🎶‼️
This is UK garage, not dnb lol. but still sounds good.
inspiring stuff man, really goes to show that less is more!!
I had to buy the drum kit. Great tutorial.
Really dope. Subbed. Might cop this kit soon
great sound👏👏👏
great video man
uk garage is not dnb
It can be admissibly interchangeable. Both garage and dnb feature syncopated breakbeats and stay relatively bass heavy. They also are originated from the same early form of UK electronic/dance.
@@doblaireNo they can’t! This is a Garage beat not DnB. I’ve DJed and produced both genres for decades. They’re a completely different BPM and groove. In the late 90s and early 2000s there was actually a Garage vs DnB beef as to which was the best. It was like Nintendo vs Sega. Totally not interchangeable, people were falling out with each other for picking one side over the other.
@@leeharris5135 Everything you described CAN be interchangeable traits to take a song from UKG to DnB. I qualified my statement with 'can'. Slight relative changes to everything you described, such as the BPM and (groove?) can warp a song to either genre. I think what defines both are they tend to be heavier on the low end, and both for sure are usually two step (2&4) patterns.
@@doblaire The BPM change isn’t slight. Going from 130 to 170-180 BPM is a big shift and the DnB groove is defined by snare hits with the bass and percussion knitting it all together. Garage and other House sub genres are kick driven. The only thing they have in common is that they have underground urban roots. The history and origins separate them massively.
It sas beat dfk
great work keep it up
❤❤❤
Keep it up 👆 ☺
🙏🙏
dope af
cant find th efiorst pigments sample
the bpm is pretty low for "Tru" dnb but it souns mostly like jungle or somethin like that
Sorry but this is nowhere like Jungle.
brooo you forget the shakersss
cute chords ))
Is the “dnb” in the room with us now?
While cool, this is not my drum and bass. Maybe a more apt name would be Pop'N'Bass. Sounds like bubblegum pop with watered down drumbreaks.
i think it's ukg actually. doesn't really matter though in my opinion
sounds like it was done in the video runtime, not impressed.