Drum Midi Files Reggae Music

Posted : admin On 19.01.2020

XLN Audio Reggae MIDI PakDrums are a critically important part of reggae music and it’s vital to get the rhythm right. That’s why we created the Reggae MIDI Pak. This Pak provides a big selection of classic beats and fills in styles like one drop, rockers, steppers, dancehall, ska and rocksteady. We also include great intro grooves and a large collection of drum fills ranging from established standards to slightly eccentric.With Addictive Drums and this Reggae MIDI Pak, you have everything you need to build an inspiring beat, get in to the vibe, and make amazing riddims of your own.The drummerNiklas Niskanen is an in-demand session drummer and composer based in Stockholm, Sweden. He can be heard playing drums for Swedish artists including Tove Lo, Vinsten, Loe and Monde Yeux.Homepage.

Midi

Hey All,I'm kind of a rookie with Ableton, as my specialty is more recording and playing live guitar, but I've recently been getting into the program more and have found a desire to produce a Dub music project (like real Dub - Scratch Perry, not dubstep).Bass, guitar, and keys are all pretty easy for me, I just play the live instrument and record my own loops. But, drums, are a different story. I know the basic reggae drum pattern (kick and snare/sidestick on the 3 - or the 2 and 4 depending on how you view it; and hihats on the off beat) So I can draw in those basic patterns and it sounds alright. But, I'd like to be able to dance on the hihat (swing it, I guess) and draw in some killer fills.My problem is that I suck at playing midi drums live, so drawing is what I usually do, and then apply a groove. So a few questions:1 - since GOOD reggae fills are kind of random, drawing them in has been a challenge.

Drawing them on a 16th note grid makes them sound INCREDIBLY robotic, which is anti-groovy. But, I know it's been done before to sound great - any old dub records show this. Does anyone have any advice for this?2 - Anyone know any good stock grooves (Ableton Suite to apply to reggae/dub?3 - What do you all think of the stock drum kits in Suite 8? Do they sound weak or is that just me?4 - Would it maybe just be worth buying the Prince Fatty pack from loopmasters and creating my own kits from their loops?Thanks,Pat.

Patrick.olson86 wrote:1 - since GOOD reggae fills are kind of random, drawing them in has been a challenge. Drawing them on a 16th note grid makes them sound INCREDIBLY robotic, which is anti-groovy. But, I know it's been done before to sound great - any old dub records show this.

Does anyone have any advice for this?Do you play enough with velocity? Drums are by nature an instruments with lots of dynamics, and if you play all the notes with the same velocity, it will sound like a machine gun instead of a drummerI'm not a drummer myself, but I know drummers use a lot of, which, to make a long story short, are notes played very softly and off-beat, and are very important to the realistic feeling.Groove is probably important too, but I've got the feeling that most reggae/dub prods are quite 'square' drum's wise. Patrick.olson86 wrote:3 - What do you all think of the stock drum kits in Suite 8?

Free reggae midi drum loops

Do they sound weak or is that just me?I was very disapointed by 'suite' generally, and the 'session drums' more specifically.Most producers I know use. Never tried it though.I use myself, which I find VERY good.However, for dub, with most drums you will have to make them fatter anyway, for example using a compressor, some reverb, delay and so on. Rick Snoman's 'Dance music manual' has a lot of tips on using compressors and effects in general (I don't produce dance music at all, and still consider this book as the holly bible ). Roey Izhaki's 'Mixing Audio' tooYou'll need a few 'low fi' effects too, if you're into Lee Perry's sound. One of my favourites is, which is free.For dub, also, is a must have, a free one too!My 2 cents. You're better off just taking some licks off of a decent sample CD.

I heard the Drum Drops Style Scott (Roots Radics) CD and it wasn't bad, certainly a lot better than a lot of purported 'reggae' sample CD's i've heard. There's a 'Horseman' one as well. Is it Horsemouth Wallace, or just some dude playing off his name? Dunno, haven't heard it. But a good set of samples, tear apart a kit and especially all the hi hat nuances and reconstruct or refine an existing beat. Easiest to do is the 'one drop' beat, or the 'flyers' style that was used extensively in Bunny Lee productions in the mid-70'sif it were me, i would reconstruct a classic tune or two completely so you can understand how it all fits together.

Drum

Reggae Midi Loops

Drums, bass, one guitar doubling the bass for the most part, and a rhythm guitar. Piano doubling a lot of the rhythm guitar, some organ maybe. But the two guitar format is a must - there are almost always two guitars in reggae.

Most of the songs are deceptively simple, but when you have a song that's complete, then you have something that you can work off for the dub. Remember, the vast majority of dub tunes were singles to begin with. Once you figure it out, you have a benchmark on how to get as close to that sound as you can. Believe me, 80-90% of it is the playing/arrangement.to get the hi hats right, just keep it simple and put a hi passed syncopated delay on them. Manual maquina de coser victoria 270e. Not a quantized one, but dial it in by ear and that will give you the rolling hi hat sound you hear on a lot of records. The delay would typically be on the whole drum kit/bass, but since it was viciously hipassed you didn't hear much of anything else. The famous Tubby 'big knob' Altec hi pass filter built into the console was very popular at one point (many producers wanting a dub mix would specifically ask for it), send it on to a delay and/or the Fisher spring reverb.

Waggle the 'big knob' switch and there you go.if you want to do traditional dub, just buss everything down to 4 tracks mono - that was the dominant format with Black Ark, Tubby's, and even Channel One in their earlier days. Bass and drums on one track, keys/guitar to another, anything else to the 3rd track, and horns/vocals to the last.

Much of the classic Studio One and Treasure Isle was just.two track. with overdubs- drums/bass on one, everything else on two and overdubbed vocals/etc. Onto another two track.Black Ark was a pretty low-tech affair (Soundcraft Series One 16 channel desk and Tascam 4 track) compared to Tubby's (early MCI custom built console and tape machines) or Channel One (API 1604 console and whatever they had for a 4 track deck, probably pretty decent like MCI).so to get a vibe kind of like Black Ark, use a Space Echo plug, Mu-Tron Biphase plug or something that does that, and maybe a spring reverb.

Maybe a cheesy organ beat box. Limit yourself in the technology department and make up for it elsewhere. Make sure you have a dirt floor. Buy or borrow a crying baby. Put chicken wire around your mix area and bury a microphone outside under a tree.it helps to be a whack job to get inside Lee Perry's head, i was never into a lot of what he did, but you have to hand it to the guy - he has done some great stuff in spite of being seemingly full-on batshit crazy at times.another irreplaceable aspect of getting that kind of feel is getting good players to play together in the same room - there's just no getting around that.

A lot of the bands and musicians that did sessions elsewhere - guys from Soul Syndicate, Now Generation, Revolutionaries, and other 70's A-listers that did sessions at the bigger, more formal studios - also played at Black Ark in a constantly rotating basis of temporary Upsetters, depending on whoever happened to wander by on any given day. For session guys, it was more relaxed scenario instead of the fast pace typical of places like Dynamic or Federal, and of 'time is money' producers like Bunny Lee. The clock was not running at Black Ark - there were no windows to know what time it was outside (probably for the better since Perry's home & studio were right in the middle of then semi-war-zone Waterhouse area of western Kingston).