Now I’ll start building the drum beat! Creating A Syncopated Drum Beat Open the Mixer and right click on a Insert Track and choose Link Selected Channels -> Starting From This Track (or press SHIFT+CTRL+L) and the Sampler Channels will be automatically assigned to Mixer Tracks starting from your chosen track. Here’s a tip how you can assign them all at once: in the Step Sequencer, right click on each Channel Selector so that it’s green. Now, I assign each sample to a free mixer track. Anyway, this was the method I used to find the samples I’m using in this tutorial. Of course, any sample can be made to work together via proper tweaking (tuning, EQ’ing, compression, etc), but I’ve found it’s much much easier and faster to have a rather large collection of samples, cycle through them and use replacing to find a working combination. The thing is, there needs to be a some kind of drum sequence playing to be able to hear whether the samples work together or not. Sometimes I end up replacing all the samples I originally choosed for. Then, while the beat is playing, I start replacing the samples I’m not happy with – on-the-fly. I’m relying on the Deadmau5 XFER sample collection again and dropping the sample to an empty Sampler Channel and renaming/coloring it.įew words about choosing the drum samples: Usually, when I start building a beat, I firstly throw in a basic set of samples, build a basic, rough drum sequence and press play. I picked mine from the BHK Essentials Vol 3 sample pack (btw, that is an awesome sample pack for Drum & Bass as well).Īnd finally, the open hihat (ride cymbal works well too). A standard short closed hi-hat will do fine. I’ll drop my chosen snare sample to an empty Sampler Channel, rename it to ‘snare’ and use the same color as with the ‘kick’. I could’ve used layering with the snare as well: layering two or three snare samples together (and mixing in some claps too) and boosting slightly the 180-200Hz area a bit with a peaking filter with narrow bandwidth would’ve most likely given me a punchy snare sample I’m after for. I found a nice snare from the Deadmau5 XFER pack. 909 style basic snare samples, with a bit longer tail seems to work pretty well. A hip hop hand claps (and I mean those sloppy ones) or short and too dry snares wont work as good. It needs to be punchy – mostly in the 180-200Hz area. Right kind of snare is very important for a hard hitting Dubstep beat. After finding a nice kick sample, I drop it to an empty Sampler Channel and rename it to ‘kick’ and also I’m gonna use colors to keep things organized (that is done by right clicking on the Channel in the Step Sequencer and selecting ‘Rename / color…’ from the menu): I could’ve also created my own kick drum by using layering (check out my tutorial on how to layer a kick drum or search more on Youtube), but I’m happy with the samples I found in that Deadmau5 sample collection. these kind of kicks can be found in many of those free house or trance sample packs available in the net. The kick really needs to be punchy, short, sharp and hard-hitting…. I mean, those 808 -style low hip hop boom kicks doesn’t seem to work very well (and there’s most likely going to be some mixing issues as the 50Hz and below area will just get too crowded as the bassline is going to be ruling that frequency range). First, the kick: I’ve found that a kick drum with a power and punch in around the 100-120Hz area and not too long sub tail works well in Dubstep. I’ll start a new FL Studio project and set the project tempo to 140bpm (in Dubstep, tempo is usually around 140bpm). Instead, I used the Deadmau5 XFER commercial sample pack for thatĪlright, let’s get this thing rollin’! Choosing The Drum Samples In my example beat, I used some really cool third-party plugins (all free!): Glitch by Illformed, CMT Bitrcusher, Rough Rider by Audio Damage and Le456 by LePou.Īlso, I didn’t create my own drum samples. For a Dubstep beat, you’ll need to create a syncopated drum rhythm using punchy kick, punchy snare with a touch of reverb (big snare is important in good Dubstep beat!), plus some hihats and a modulating (wobble) bassline with wall shaking sub bass tones. I managed to put it together by listening some commercial Dubstep tracks on Beatport and made notes what are some of the most essential elements in this genre and based on that created my own. In fact, the example beat you’re about to hear is my first ever Dubstep beat. Now, to be honest, I’m not an expert in this genre. In this tutorial, I will show you how to make a Dubstep beat in FL Studio (or how I created one).
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