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Sound Design / Timbaland techniques
« on: July 30, 2016, 01:07:19 pm »
So I was trying to recreate Timbaland's beat on Aaliyah's "Are You That Somebody" and I found an interesting way to create rhythm without using excessive kicks.
If you listen to the sound there's a hi-hat that hits with the kick, but on the offbeat you hear the hi-hat hit with the top of the kick and then later in the loop you hear the kick hit without the hi-hat/top combination.
So when I tried to recreate it I layered a hi-hat over a kick with a lot of click, and then I bounced it to audio. I then duplicated the audio clip and on the first one (we'll call it A) I lowpassed everything till you could only hear the mid/bottom end near 300hz. On the second audio clip (B), I used a hi-pass filter at 300hz to bring back the hi-end. After that I sent some of my low-end kick (A) to a small-room reverb send and eq'd that.
The next step is the fun part because you can play A and B as separate parts or together to create a kick pattern that has room for a bass line or something. For example if you're doing a 4x4 drum pattern the first two hits can be A and B together but then the last two can just be B. The A channel can also be used solo as like a lead in kick to restart a loop, it's subtle but there.
Anyhoo! If you notice anything else about timbaland please add it! He's a freaking genius.
If you listen to the sound there's a hi-hat that hits with the kick, but on the offbeat you hear the hi-hat hit with the top of the kick and then later in the loop you hear the kick hit without the hi-hat/top combination.
So when I tried to recreate it I layered a hi-hat over a kick with a lot of click, and then I bounced it to audio. I then duplicated the audio clip and on the first one (we'll call it A) I lowpassed everything till you could only hear the mid/bottom end near 300hz. On the second audio clip (B), I used a hi-pass filter at 300hz to bring back the hi-end. After that I sent some of my low-end kick (A) to a small-room reverb send and eq'd that.
The next step is the fun part because you can play A and B as separate parts or together to create a kick pattern that has room for a bass line or something. For example if you're doing a 4x4 drum pattern the first two hits can be A and B together but then the last two can just be B. The A channel can also be used solo as like a lead in kick to restart a loop, it's subtle but there.
Anyhoo! If you notice anything else about timbaland please add it! He's a freaking genius.