Learn To Make Hip Hop

...Learn to make hip hop music. become a true beatmaker today.

description

...now browsing by tag

 
 

[Tutorial] Dr.Dre – Still Dre Remake _ How to remake a song in FL studio (read description).

Sunday, September 25th, 2011

Just a lil something in Fl studio ,,, i tried for more explaination , but it was too long (about 30 min) so i took a shortcut , lol , this is my remake of Dr.Dre Still dre , i’ve put translation in the annotations !!! so please rate comment . and subscribe if u like what i’m doing , and if u want more tutorials about Fl studio . peace ! ( if you want to hear the remake go straight to 6:13 ) Join me on Facebook : www.facebook.com Dr.Dre , Still Dre , Eminem , west coast beat , east coast , N-jom , NJ.OM , Hot beats , Masterz-banD , masterz-band , morroco beats , morrocan , beat maker , rap tazi , rap taza , Fl studio , Fruity loops , Reason , cubase , twilight , fred , Beat making .
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

How to make a beat:By Ryan Tedder-Old Vid Check Description for new Link

Wednesday, January 19th, 2011

myspace.com/ryantedder412 YO!!!! WHATS GOIN ON EVERYBODY! I’ve got tons of messages to respond to, sorry to everyone who I haven’t gotten back to yet. In this vid I give some advice to those who have asked me where to start when making hip hop and r&b tracks. Enjoy. Please Subscribe! RT
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

An Ode to the CD by CD Baby; Could You Really Love Music Buyers This Much?

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

A tower of plastic, and a photographic reflection on the strange physical form music took at the height of the CD. Photo (CC-BY-SA) William Hook.

Can music as a physical object have value and meaning again? For many music enthusiasts, that affection has turned back to the vinyl record, not the CD. (How many artists have we seen lately offering vinyl as the “premium” package for listeners?) At an extreme, there’s Alessandro Cortini’s SuONOIO, an album that has its own accompanying custom synthesizer.

But while we ponder this question, the one that seems the perpetual topic for music conferences and industry pundits, I turn instead to this (tongue-in-cheek) description of CD shipping. Given the record sales for many independent artists, maybe this parody isn’t actually so far-fetched.

If you’ve never ordered a physical CD Baby CD, you may not have seen it before. I can tell you it amused and delighted the person who got it, though (it wasn’t me), so never underestimate the value of caring for your musical customer.

Your CDs have been gently taken from our CD Baby shelves with sterilized contamination-free gloves and placed onto a satin pillow.
A team of 50 employees inspected your CDs and polished them to make sure they were in the best possible condition before mailing.
Our packing specialist from Japan lit a candle and a hush fell over the crowd as he put your CDs into the finest gold-lined box that money can buy.
We all had a wonderful celebration afterwards and the whole party marched down the street to the post office where the entire town of Portland waved “Bon Voyage!” to your package, on its way to you, in our private CD Baby jet on this day, August 6, 2010.
We hope you had a wonderful time shopping at CD Baby. In commemoration, we have placed your picture on our wall as “Customer of the Year.” We’re all exhausted but can’t wait for you to come back to CDBABY.COM!!

Thank you, thank you, thank you!
Sigh…
We miss you already. We’ll be right here at http://cdbaby.com/, patiently awaiting your return.

Yes, it’s parody. Yes, I’m doing a brief fluff blog post. (Refunds available.) Yes, I’m thinking about how some of this (sadly, not the private jet) might actually be possible as part of the music retail experience.

And really, don’t your fans and listeners deserve as much?

http://www.cdbaby.com/

Updated – do some people care as much as the imaginary employees in this description?

Absolutely. See a line of handmade CD cases on Etsy, a a how-to on CD cases, limited-edition handmade CDs used as a fundraiser, and a whole mess of handmade CDs and merch found at this project site — including a special giveaway at MUM concerts.

http://www.northernowl.blogspot.com/

Doing a special ritual when someone buys one — optional.

See original here:
An Ode to the CD by CD Baby; Could You Really Love Music Buyers This Much?

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Fender Custom Deluxe Telecaster

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Fender describes the new Custom Deluxe Tele as being “designed for the working musician”. What the company means by that is that it’s taken the vintage blueprints of this stalwart model and added some modern improvements – in the pickup, bridge, fret and tuner departments – to create an instrument that at a casual glance looks like a regular model but which performs like a highly-tuned thoroughbred.

At around the two grand mark this guitar isn’t what you’d call cheap, but we’ve become used to Anderson and PRS-type quality on even some regular production Fenders, so the relatively limited nature and that Custom Shop branding should appeal to the lucky folk able to afford this.

The Custom Deluxe Tele offers the kind of player-friendly mods that remove vintage idiosyncrasies and make for a more up-to-date version of a classic. The select ash body version only comes in two-tone sunburst and vintage cherry sunburst, and the latter of the two is what you see here.

“Don’t believe the Tele’s quiet good looks; this guitar could be the ultimate wolf in sheep’s clothing.”

The point is to show the beauty of the ash’s grain through the gloss nitro finish and it certainly lends interest to what is otherwise a pretty simple – dare we say plain – design. Cherry sunburst is not a colour for which Fender is particularly known, but most of those who’ve seen it think it’s a great choice for this Tele.

Neck-wise, we see some light figuring of the maple, adding that extra touch of class to an already fine looking guitar. While not exactly a baseball-bat, it’s a deliberate handful; a slightly slimmed down version of the early ‘U’-shape maple necks of Broadcasters and the first ‘blackguard’ Teles.

It’s hard to pick flaws, as the whole thing has been put together with robot-like precision while retaining the crucially organic feel that any musical instrument must have if it’s to insinuate itself into your life as more than just a tool.The finish is buffed mirror flat; you couldn’t get a cigarette paper between neck body join and the chrome hardware gleams.

Our Tele boasts Schaller locking and staggered tuners (less vital on a non-vibrato guitar but welcome nonetheless), and an upgraded modern bridge assembly. Unlike the traditional three-saddle ‘ashtray’-style Tele bridge, the Custom Deluxe’s is a flat, chromed steel base with a lip at the back into which the six saddle adjustment screws locate.

The bane of most Tele players’ lives is the intonation compromise of six strings sharing only three saddles. Our guitar’s six-saddle bridge fixes that in an instant and with each saddle solid brass but tastily plated in chrome, tone shouldn’t be sacrificed.

Although we could see it scaring faint-hearted guitarists away, in the palm this big neck feels very comfortable and even playing for some length of time is not a tiring experience. It’s no speed neck, but as speed players are unlikely to choose a Tele, its role as deliverer of great pop, blues, classic rock and country remains assured.

The 22-fret fingerboard (integral to the one-piece neck) features taller frets and a flatter radius. Allied to the chunky profile, this makes for a great sleazy feel. Dirty blues and skanky country licks fall off the fingers, while open chords feel like a light-strung acoustic – great for indie players. To anyone put off by our description of the neck’s size, we’d say give one a try and prepare to be converted.

(2 pages; go to page: 2)



Originally posted here:
Fender Custom Deluxe Telecaster

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Freeware: FreqEcho, Rocksichord

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

Starting with this article, we’re going to have a regular monthly freeware section here on ANR.

This time we’d like to introduce a couple of excellent new releases: FreqEcho from ValhallaDSP (a new company, created by Sean Costello, who worked also on AudioDamage Eos, one of our picks of the year in the recent Sonic Joy Awards), and the Rocksichord from SonicCouture.

FreqEcho, available as VST, AU, RTAS for both OS X and Windows systems is a “Bode-style frequency shifter + analog echo emulation = skull melting chaos. Perfect for dub, Dr. Who and all of your psychedelic needs. Sonic results range from subtle chorusing and double tracking to barberpole phasing and flanging to endless glissandos and runaway echos.”

Actually I think this description is spot-on, I’d have no better words to describe the FreqEcho. By the way, the plug-in has been available for some time without graphical interface, but I’m sure this simple and effective GUI will make it more appealing to users.
I’m really having fun with this little plug-in lately. I’d recommend trying it on different sound sources, from piano to percussions.

Get FreqEcho here

Rocksichord is a Kontakt library (requires v.3 or 4). The instrument sampled is the Rock-Si-Chord, or ‘Rocksichord’ electric harpsichord, made in the sixties by RMI.
This keyboard has been used by artists like Beach Boys, John Lennon, Genesis, Yes, Stereolab, Radiohead, Wilco, etc.

There’s a funny story behind this sample library, on SonicCouture’s website: “a certain Mikael Jorgensen from Wilco mentioned to us that he had started sampling his ancient RMI Rocksichord keyboard, but hadn’t the time to finish the looping and programing. We asked him how he would feel if we finished the job and offered it as a free download from the Soniccouture site.
Happily, he agreed, and if you’re reading this, you now have the result…”

Get the Rocksichord here

P.s: feel free to share with us your favorite freeware stuff…

Original post:
Freeware: FreqEcho, Rocksichord

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

iPad Gets Networked-MIDI Touch Controller: midipad for iPad, iPhone

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

Lovely layouts, but it raises the question: will we increasingly see software that simply looks like this, so that the touch controller and soundmaking software are one and the same?

The iPad could have its first killer controller app, if you like the looks of midipad. While just a series of screenshots at this point (also promised for iPhone, but not yet available), midipad promises some intriguing features: it’s pretty, it features lovely control layouts and widgets, and it makes use of MIDI networking to make setup and configuration a cinch (especially on the Mac).

  • It uses network-MIDI: connect and play. With support for the Zeroconf standard (what Apple calls Bonjour), and MIDI over network communication, the midipad can appear as another network device on the Mac. (It sounds as though you still need software to translate the network MIDI data on Windows, though more on that thought in a separate story.)
  • Pre-built layouts and controls: Buttons, trigger pads, sliders, ribbon controllers, rotary knobs, and pre-defined macro “blocks” like transport control combine to form studio, DJ, launching (as in Live), and effects layouts.
  • Submixes/multiple setups It’s a little sketchy in the description, but it sounds as though you can also combine different layouts.

No pricing or availability yet, but you can peruse the site:

http://www.midipad.de/

The inevitable comparison will come to the Lemur, the pioneering multi-touch controller from JazzMutant. Those comparisons are fair, indeed. Certainly, the primary appeal I’ve heard from many Lemur users – unique control widgets available on the Lemur platform – are just software. There’s nothing stopping clever developers from making appealing controllers for the iPad (or other Android, Windows, or Linux pads, if any of those prove worthy). And the Lemur doesn’t support this intelligent use of the Mac’s network MIDI support for zero-configuration setup.

Some of the Lemur’s tradeoffs are reproduced here, too, however. Like the Lemur:

  • You sacrifice the tactile feedback of real hardware for flexibility.
  • It appears you have to create controls in advance, not on the fly.
  • The controls still largely emulate the interface paradigm of conventional hardware, rather than imagine new controls for a screen.
  • It’s just a controller, separate from a screen, rather than your sound-making software itself having this sort of touch interface.

Those aren’t necessarily criticisms: these kinds of controllers are clearly useful, and it’ll be great to see how this gets used. What I’d say is there’s an opportunity to design touch-based musical tools that aren’t just Lemur-style controllers. (Consider what happens if the sound-making software uses touch in place of the mouse – that could inspire an entirely new entire generation of software, not just one or two useful apps. We’re still just missing the appropriate hardware. More on that soon)

Actually, I only have one potential criticism, which is that while this low-contrast, white-background layout looks refreshingly different and pretty, it’d likely be blinding in a darkened performance environment.

But I’m looking forward to seeing how this works – and I imagine we’ll see a number of other similar apps available even from launch day on the iPad, with more to follow. I’m not buying an iPad, but I will be looking for early adopters who can report back. I am genuinely interested to see how the platform evolves and what developers design for it.

Thanks to everyone who sent this in, and yes, Synthtopia beat me to writing this up.

What about JazzMutant and Stantum?

I think this requires a postlude. JazzMutant is in no danger of going out of business, as far as I know. You’ll see one little line at the bottom of the about JazzMutant page:

“Since mid 2007 JazzMutant has become the Music & Media product division of Stantum Technologies.”

That line means everything. Stantum is a vendor in multi-touch technologies to OEMs, including makers of Windows 7-powered touchpads and laptops:
http://www.stantum.com/en/

One of the things I wrote back in 2004 was that I thought, cool as the Lemur was, eventually we’d see the touch display and the software making music, visuals, and the like merge into one and the same device. (Look at it this way: you don’t buy a separate computer to connect your mouse and keyboard to, do you?) Stantum is the sort of company that could enable just that sort of technology. The fact that they’ve stayed in the Lemur business seems to me to be very intelligent, because it means they continue to interface with musicians and DJs – many of whom have remained loyal to the Lemur. Even if you’re not in the market for a Lemur and get an iPad, Stantum remains one to watch. And if you get neither a Lemur nor an iPad but are interested in where touch is going, Stantum is definitely one to watch.

More on Stantum and the rest of the touch landscape soon; the iPad is important, I think, but partly because there is a bigger picture.

Read the original here:
iPad Gets Networked-MIDI Touch Controller: midipad for iPad, iPhone

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks

Sampling the Hammond Novachord

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009


Steve Howell, the sound library developer knows as Hollow Sun, is working on a very interesting new project: a “new library of the amazing (and incredibly rare) Hammond Novachord, a polyphonic analogue synthesizer released – can you believe – in 1939!!”, in collaboration with Dan Wilson of Hideaway Studios in Bath, England.

In Steve’s words: “this phenomenal instrument was many decades ahead of its time with divide down oscillators and separate envelopes and LFOs for each note offering full and true 72-voice polyphony 35 years before the ARP OMNI and Polymoog and the 5- and 8-voice polysynths of the 70s. Even now, some modern polysynths would blush with embarrassment at such a voice count!

nc_insides3.JPG

Dan has been busy renovating his instrument and has already put in many hours. However, Dan is going the extra mile and not replacing ailing components with modern equivalents (which would be the easy way out) because this could compromise and affect the original instrument’s haunting sound. Instead, he is painstakingly re-building components himself where necessary…
…Work has begun on this and tentative sampling sessions are beginning to reveal what lies ahead of us – textures that would not be out of place on a modern synth 70 years on in 2009 but with a strangely ‘earthy’ and ‘organic’ quality quite unlike I’ve heard before, full of flawed nuances and subtelty. The Novachord doesn’t generate sounds … it breathes them in gasps and grunts and squeals and whispers!”.

The pictures and the description have put the Novachord library on my “must keep an eye on this” list. What about you?

Thanks to Failed Muso’s blog for spreading the word about this…

View post:
Sampling the Hammond Novachord

Tell others about us:
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • MySpace
  • Reddit
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google Bookmarks