that was what i meant by space, but yes punctuation with absolute silence works really well too, used as an actual rhythmic element.Ingemar wrote:agree with steevio, but also I would like to point out silence. I find short bursts of silence to be the foundation of a groove, a constant sound is seldom groovy, and if it is, it has a good dynamic range
How do you get your groove
Re: How do you get your groove
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Re: How do you get your groove
don't do it! my car got broken into twice, hit by a truck while parked and stolen all in the same yearCasanova808 wrote:Move to the south side of Chicago.
@ steevio
right on man, wiki actually defines having silence in between hits as one of the first essential components to a convincing beat. i know you meant actually removing a sound for a moment. but its the same more or less. the osc scope is good for that
another trick i found is to reference another song (not groove extract). but bring an actual sound of equal BPM into your project and make sure the first hit lines up on the grid, then see which sounds fall where relative to the straight grid. you can also use this to check which sounds have equal distance always in the groove and which ones are constantly moving
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Re: How do you get your groove
Some great suggestions here thanks.
Really like the idea of making a groove template from your own playing.
Also using delays I'll try.
Totally agree about space/silence... very Miles Davis "It's not the notes you play... It's the notes you don't play"
Really like the idea of making a groove template from your own playing.
Also using delays I'll try.
Totally agree about space/silence... very Miles Davis "It's not the notes you play... It's the notes you don't play"
Re: How do you get your groove
Yeah but you also made some serious grooves!NoAffiliation wrote:don't do it! my car got broken into twice, hit by a truck while parked and stolen all in the same yearCasanova808 wrote:Move to the south side of Chicago.
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- mnml maxi
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Re: How do you get your groove
groove comes natural, either you got it or you don't. IF you dont and your trying to get it, it will sound forced.
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Re: How do you get your groove
i copy and paste each drum sound into audacity. no quantizing, no sequencing, just beats laid down by hand. i build loops this way and then carve out the rest after i have a solid stone block of sound.
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Re: How do you get your groove
about 'either you got it or you don't' ... just do your own thing. everyone has their own inner funk. just play sounds that you like and eventually your inner funk will show itself. My inner funk happens to be oceans of distorted sad tone, but hey, you can't choose these things.
Re: How do you get your groove
That's bullshit mate! Did you read it somewhere? Hope you were being sarcastic...livecollective wrote:groove comes natural, either you got it or you don't. IF you dont and your trying to get it, it will sound forced.
Some get their grooves going straight away, some might have to work a bit harder and spend loads of time to get the groove on. Background noise/sound loops can also add quite a bit of groove or space. Also might not want to have too many sounds going on, sometimes less is more