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Nice job! > -----Original Message----- > From: Douglas Baldwin [mailto:coyotelk@optonline.net] > Sent: Monday, September 24, 2007 9:22 AM > To: Rick Walker; Adam Hart; LOOPERS DELIGHT (posting) > Subject: Re: Drum machine PRE AMP??? > > Adam Hart wrote: > > Any thoughts or advice as to how to process > > the [drum machine] sound before it hits my PA?"" > > ...to which Rick Walker replied with some of the best advice you'll find > anywhere. > I would humbly add the following: > > 1) Rick wrote: > remember that drummers tend to have one hand stronger > than > another hand. > When I program prominent fills on snare or toms, I often take the time to > set up two different pads for each drum - a "left hand" pad and a "right > hand" pad. The left will be marginally softer and tuned marginally > differently. I will also offset the left hand so it's just a bit slower > (2%-5%) than a perfect subdivision of the beat. Sounds human to me! > > 2) Another "humanizing" trick is to record the bass and ride (cymbal/hi- > hat) > WITH quantization, and the snare WITHOUT. > > 3) Pull out some CDs with great drum tracks and A/B your patterns. Tune, > tune, tune those drums to match what you hear. Balance, balance, balance > too. > > 4) Overlay multiple drums with very slight offsets to get more reality. >My > favorite "sandwich" is a piccolo snare tuned down a bit for snap, a > timbale > for ring, and a way down-tuned deep snare, mixed very softly, for snare > rattle. > > 5) Don't pan too hard left or right. > > I only have two tunes on my web site, but they both have drum machine > tracks. > Here are links: > >http://www.thecoyote.org/index.cfm?go=1&component=music-download&id=173686 > >http://www.thecoyote.org/index.cfm?go=1&component=music-download&id=105737 > No, they're not looping tracks, so sue me for off-topic content ;-) > > Douglas Baldwin, coyote-at-large > www.thecoyote.org > coyotelk@optonline.net > > "The volume knob on your telepathy is your morality." > - Stephen Gaskin, The Farm