The Eighth Note Technique J Dilla Used for Donuts | Sample Breakdown Extended

00:12:06
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SL2msqnjqws

Ringkasan

TLDRJay Dilla, a legendary and influential hip-hop producer, is celebrated for his innovative sampling techniques, particularly in his final solo album, 'Donuts.' Created while Dilla battled serious illness, the album is noted for setting new standards in hip-hop production and leaving a significant legacy that inspired generations of artists. It features unique manipulations of samples that resemble a kind of musical puzzle-solving. The video explores how Dilla developed his sampling style and teaches viewers how to apply these techniques in their own musical creations. This method involves breaking down sounds into finer segments, allowing for creative freedom within digital audio workstations.

Takeaways

  • 🎧 Jay Dilla's innovative approach to sampling has left a lasting legacy in hip-hop.
  • 💿 'Donuts' showcases Dilla's unique ability to turn samples into musical puzzles.
  • 🖥️ The video provides insights into recreating Dilla's technique using DAWs.
  • 📀 Dilla's work influences the lo-fi hip-hop genre today.
  • 👨‍👩‍👦‍👦 Dilla's family background in music heavily influenced his career.
  • 🎚️ He used the MPC 3000 to craft timeless beats.
  • 🎨 Dilla treated samples as a painter would a canvas, arranging sounds with precision.
  • 🛌 'Donuts' was created while Dilla was in the hospital, adding emotional depth to the album.
  • 🎼 His manipulation of eighth-note chops created unique rhythms.
  • 🤝 Collaborated with major artists like A Tribe Called Quest and Erykah Badu.

Garis waktu

  • 00:00:00 - 00:05:00

    The video explores the significant influence of Jay Dilla on hip-hop, highlighting his second and final solo album, Donuts, as a foundational piece for the Lo-Fi hip-hop genre. The video discusses how Dilla's unique sampling techniques, such as altering the structure and time signatures of samples, set him apart in the industry. It also gives a brief overview of Dilla's background, emphasizing his innate musical ability from a young age and his impact on peers and various music genres. The narrative includes examples of his innovative work methods and the use of the MPC 3000 to create classics for prominent artists.

  • 00:05:00 - 00:12:06

    The focus shifts to a detailed analysis of one specific track from Donuts, "Don't Cry," illustrating Dilla's process of deconstructing entire records into smaller pieces, almost like a painter's canvas. By doing so, he crafted unique beats with new tempos and grooves, changing how samples were used. The method involves chopping samples into eighth notes rather than quarter notes, allowing for more nuance and precision in crafting a track's rhythm. The video also demonstrates these techniques using modern DAWs and emphasizes the importance of selecting and manipulating textures within a sample to recreate Dilla's renowned style.

Peta Pikiran

Video Tanya Jawab

  • Who is Jay Dilla?

    Jay Dilla, born James Dewitt Yancey, was a highly influential hip-hop producer known for his innovative sampling techniques.

  • What is 'Donuts'?

    Donuts is Jay Dilla's second solo album, which is instrumental and highly regarded for its innovative sampling techniques.

  • How did Jay Dilla influence the hip-hop genre?

    Jay Dilla influenced hip-hop through his unique sampling techniques and rhythms, creating complex harmonics and beats that inspired many artists and genres.

  • Why is Jay Dilla's album 'Donuts' special?

    'Donuts' is special not only for its groundbreaking music but also the poignant story of Dilla creating it while battling fatal illnesses.

  • What was unique about Jay Dilla's sampling techniques?

    Dilla's sampling involved intricate manipulation, spontaneous rearrangement, and layering that allowed him to 'speak' through music.

  • What equipment did Jay Dilla use for production?

    Jay Dilla often used the MPC 3000 for crafting his beats and samples.

  • What is the 'Dilla technique' in sampling?

    The 'Dilla technique' involves slicing samples into eighth notes to create a unique tempo and groove, allowing further creative layering.

  • How did Jay Dilla's family influence his music career?

    His mother was an opera singer and his father a jazz bassist, which influenced his early appreciation and understanding of music.

  • What are some artists that worked with Jay Dilla?

    Artists like A Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul, Erykah Badu, Common, and The Roots have worked with Jay Dilla.

  • What is the legacy of Jay Dilla's 'Donuts'?

    The album remains a seminal work in hip-hop, influencing the lo-fi genre and being celebrated for its inventive production.

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Gulir Otomatis:
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    all right you sing it now show you how
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    my voice Would Have Made It unbelievable
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    [Music]
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    Donuts is the second and final solo
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    album from one of the most influential
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    hip-hop producers of all time Jay Dilla
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    so influential that papers have been
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    written on it and his techniques picked
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    apart and analyzed countless times with
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    a ton of Mythology surrounding its
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    creation and it's arguably the base
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    inspiration for the Lo-Fi hip-hop genre
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    today we're talking about this
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    intricately constructed beat
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    [Music]
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    so what made J Dillard the archetype for
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    hip-hop sampling heralded by his peers
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    influencing entire genres and future
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    Generations let's find out
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    [Music]
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    Series where we take a closer look at
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    some of the coolest sampling techniques
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    we've come across while making our
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    sample breakdowns dive deeper into the
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    historical context surrounding them and
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    show you how you can use these
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    techniques to expand your own sampling
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    toolkit James do it Yancey better known
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    as J dilla was born in Detroit Michigan
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    his mother Maureen ma duk sansi was a
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    former opera singer his father Beverly
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    duet Yancey was a jazz bassist his
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    mother would go on to say that Dilla had
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    Perfect Pitch and Harmony at only a
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    couple of months old mimicking intricate
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    sounds from songs perfectly early on J
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    dilla would form the rap group slum
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    village with his high school friends
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    [Music]
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    gaining a reputation for his funky bass
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    lines offbeat drums Innovative sampling
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    techniques and complex Jazzy harmonics
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    While others would sample cool Parts
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    they liked until it will manipulate his
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    samples to do what he wanted them to do
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    almost like he could speak through them
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    like in the slum Village track where he
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    changes the word
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    [Music]
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    to sound more like
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    or in this beat where he rearranges the
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    ending of the Grease soundtrack
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    [Music]
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    or when he layered a six count sample
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    over a four count B and made two
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    different time signatures work together
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    somehow
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    [Music]
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    or this beat where he took the baseline
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    from well you get the point to his peers
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    this was like witchcraft like Jimi
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    Hendrix guitar was his instrument the
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    sampler and the Wreckers were dilas his
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    production instrument of choice was the
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    MPC 3000 which he would use to craft
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    Timeless Classics for a lot of artists
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    Like A Tribe Called Quest De La Soul
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    Erykah Badu common The Roots just to
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    name a few
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    which brings us to donuts donuts is a
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    beat tape and instrumental album unlike
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    any other it was so special because it
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    was a complete departure from its
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    previous Styles it was like he had
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    invented something completely new
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    the album was released on the
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    anniversary of Dylan's birthday February
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    7 2006. unfortunately he would pass away
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    three days later
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    album was being worked on by J dilla
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    while battling a blood disease and a
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    disease called lupus finishing up the
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    album from his hospital bed it's
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    definitely his most well-known project
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    we'd like to think it's because of how
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    musically groundbreaking it was however
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    a large part of its popularity has to do
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    with the story surrounding it how he
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    made it from his deathbed and how these
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    songs were the last messages to his
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    loved ones how truthful that story is is
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    Up For Debate but the fact remains he
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    did speak through his music and he did
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    work on these tracks while battling the
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    diseases that would ultimately take his
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    life in his last interview that Jay
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    Dilla granted to Scratch Magazine in
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    November of 2005 he would briefly speak
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    on the album it's just a compilation of
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    the stuff I thought was a little too
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    much for the MCS that's basically what
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    it is you know me flipping records that
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    people really don't know how to rap on
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    but want to rap on there's a bunch of
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    that and one of the most unique beats on
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    the album and perhaps one of the most
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    impressive beats on the album from a
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    sampling perspective is Donut's 18th
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    track don't cry let's take a closer look
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    [Music]
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    dyla is essentially deconstructing the
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    record with surgical Precision at
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    different points along the entire
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    original composition instead of looking
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    at a certain Loop or section of the
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    record he's zooming out and looking at
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    the entire record as a canvas
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    [Music]
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    please
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    [Music]
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    the same way a painter spends time
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    crafting their palette of colors to
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    paint with Dilla extracts portions of
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    the sample along the entire timeline to
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    piece back together like a puzzle it's
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    this puzzle method that makes this track
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    so unique the other special part about
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    this track is how Dillo manipulates the
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    chops to form his own Tempo and groove
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    the sample is slower than dilla's final
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    track
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    [Music]
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    which means that normally if you picked
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    anything other than eighth notes your
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    chops would sound out of sync since all
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    the drums will be hitting too late
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    foreign
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    but because he does eighth note chops
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    he's forcing the sample to adhere to his
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    new speed
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    [Music]
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    pick and snare now hit where they're
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    supposed to and the added bonus to this
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    is that everything after each Kick and
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    snare hits just a little bit late by
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    doing this and not resorting to quarter
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    no chops he's more able to finely tune
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    the groove and Tempo also by focusing on
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    eighth note chops he's able to make the
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    puzzle pieces connect quicker creating a
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    tree as the chops and textures jump in
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    pitch and Melody between one another now
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    that we have the blueprint let's put it
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    to use in our own beats
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    all right so to recreate this technique
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    we're going to come into tracklib we're
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    going to go over the tracks and to
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    narrow this down we have filters up here
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    I'm just going to actually use the like
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    mid 60s to late 70s I'm also going to
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    narrow it down by genre so I'm going to
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    use the r b and soul genre as well it'll
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    filter out the entire library and
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    catalog on track live and now I'm able
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    to browse each track and one cool thing
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    we can do now on tracklib is change the
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    pitch
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    now to accomplish The Dillard technique
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    we're not so much looking for something
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    that inspires Us in terms of like a
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    section or a four bar Loop we need to
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    look more for textures we're looking for
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    Kick Drum hips snare hit strings that
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    might sound like pads small guitar lines
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    maybe a lyric or two so I've actually
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    found the track that I want to use
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    already it's by the fabulous Waller
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    family I'm gonna download this track and
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    import it into my Daw so let's listen to
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    the entire track and isolate what we
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    want
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    so immediately I heard a couple
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    different things right I heard a kind of
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    bell chime sound within here
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    that itself is a pretty cool sound
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    and then the word baby
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    baby baby
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    so with the word baby you get that piano
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    hit in the back
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    [Music]
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    when the vocal is held out this long
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    it's basically acting like a synth that
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    point because you can take the beginning
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    of the vocal chop or you can take a
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    section within that held note because
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    now it's going to sound like a sin
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    right so now you have a sound that isn't
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    necessarily a word it's not a lyric it's
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    just a sustained note that you can
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    utilize that's essentially what we're
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    talking about when we're talking about
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    textures so these are the types of
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    things that you start listening for in
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    the record and I'll show you guys how to
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    chop it up so that you can do the eighth
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    note sequence so that things start
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    making a little bit more sense as you're
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    putting them together so let's just take
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    this one section right here
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    you can do this uh with any Daw but
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    essentially I would take this into
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    somewhere where I could slice up the
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    samples with my controller right I can
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    trigger it from my pad or I can just
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    trigger it from a midi note but I use
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    the the Ableton push
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    there's the actual chop that I want
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    right here it is in the actual track and
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    then here it is me trying to slice it up
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    most producers when they chop up you
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    would do a quarter note chops you would
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    count quarter notes in your head
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    two three four you have one two three
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    four right
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    [Music]
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    essentially you can just play those four
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    chops in order or you can rearrange
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    those chops but what Dilla did is that
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    this top would actually move to the left
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    here so he would have eighth note chops
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    so now I have twice as many things to
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    hit in the melody so he would do
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    something like this
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    you can jump from this section of the
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    record at 53 seconds over to this part
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    of the record at 57 seconds if that's if
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    that's how it sounds good to you in your
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    in your head right and that's
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    essentially what you do you're you're
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    basically looking for the chops that you
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    want now I'm gonna go through the entire
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    record and do what you just saw there
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    all right so now that I have these chops
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    I'm actually just gonna go ahead and try
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    and figure out how to piece them
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    together now one thing I like to do I'll
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    just drag in like a a drum Loop now this
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    is just to generate ideas because I have
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    a backing track to actually go to so
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    let's see what we come up with here so
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    what I'm going to do is I'm going to
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    come over to my Ableton push and
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    essentially what I'm doing is just
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    triggering different elements and I can
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    show you guys how it gets printed to
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    MIDI afterwards but
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    for this part really all I do is play
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    throughout the chops see if I can find
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    like a four bar Loop and then from there
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    I just let my imagination take over
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    [Music]
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    as I'm repeating things that might not
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    make sense there's certain parts of
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    those elements that I like that I'm
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    trying to keep so I'm trying to remember
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    those parts and then take out the one
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    chop that I don't like
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    [Music]
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    I think I kind of like that so I'm gonna
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    I'm just gonna go with that for now
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    [Music]
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    and I just created a two bar section
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    here uh you know one part was a little
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    bit repetitive and then the second part
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    was a different section that I repeated
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    Villa kind of evolved his track that's
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    essentially how he was doing it right he
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    found one section that worked really
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    well together and then figured out how
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    to uh meld that into the second section
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    so let's take a look at the chops I have
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    here so you can see all this is doing is
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    basically triggering these slices that
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    you see down here in my Daw so you could
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    actually just come in here in MIDI and
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    play around you can use a keyboard for
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    this you don't necessarily need a push
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    controller or an NPC or anything like
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    that you can do this with any software
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    as well that second chop right here
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    that vocal choir that comes in I don't
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    like that part so here you can literally
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    just take the midi and move it around
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    right you can just play around with it
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    that's the beauty of midi now is I can
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    go here and change that chop to whatever
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    I want actually that sounds better than
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    the the chop that was there before
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    essentially you can put these puzzle
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    pieces together in any way shape or form
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    this is how I chose to do them and this
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    is how I recreated the the Dilla
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    technique
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    [Music]
Tags
  • Jay Dilla
  • Donuts
  • hip-hop
  • sampling
  • music production
  • MPC 3000
  • beat making
  • slum village
  • lo-fi hip-hop
  • Detroit music