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The Dubstep Scene Is Dying
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» sabinonstop a répondu le Sat 8 Mar, 2008 @ 2:38am
sabinonstop
Coolness: 92370
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Thats just typical Villalobos YO! His songs & rmx are even longer!!
its quite da sick track!The whole 2 cd is good i love the oldschool
vynil style cd sleeves!
I'm feeling honey i shrunk my br right now..
Good [+1]Toggle ReplyLink» JasonBeastly a répondu le Sun 9 Mar, 2008 @ 3:47am
jasonbeastly
Coolness: 76650
I'm intending to write some dubstep, despite all my quetching. I'm also writing drum and bass and breakcore, as well as IDM experimental stuff. The dubstep track we're currently working on is going to involve live drumming so there is a decent amount of variation. At the root though, it's still based around a predictable (which means I might change it) snare through reverb, at 140 bpm. Juno 106 for the mid range, Nord G2 doing the wobble bass. What I feel is essential to livening up the dubstep sound is to provide some resolution for the generally tense feeling of the track, and the incorporation of micro-edit fills.

Personal favourite right now is to use cymbal/kick hits and retrigger them on 64ths, slide the volume down, then back up, and having a moving bandpass filter on the insert. This is of course a classic jungle move, but it sounds sublime used over slow parts.

Other amazing trick is to seriously stutter the beat, or to do as Blake Market does and use alternate time signatures. This is all a ton of fun as well. This kind of innovation is appealing because it's essentially a fusion of ideas from other musical styles. Not just electronic either, there's just so much variation and potential with the rhythm.
I'm feeling lofty right now..
The Dubstep Scene Is Dying
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