Tag Archives: sampling

Production tip – drumsticks and the perils of patch browsing

Two tips in one post today. Why? Because they’re short and sharp and I need something to fill the looming postaweek deadline!

Drumsticks

I’m not a drummer, however, a couple of weeks ago I took delivery of a £2.99 pair of drumsticks from eBay. Having recently invested in an Alesis Palmtrack, I’ve developed the ‘found sounds’ sampling bug. Whether it’s me making silly noises with my mouth or banging spanners together, I’ve managed to create all manner of richly dynamic percussive sounds for use in my tracks. What’s better, they’re not from a sample CD, nor are they nicked from another record (two past times I indulge in equally and having nothing against, incidentally). They’re mine, I made them and no one else can claim to be their keeper. A bit like fitting your own bathroom, there’s a tangible sense of pride in that.

But… there’s only so many noises you can make by hitting things with your hands and there’s nothing quite like the tactile feedback of a drum stick, hence my purchase. It’s something I highly recommend any aspiring producer/beat maker/sonic experimentalist has a bash at, literally. Not only can you hit things more accurately and procude variations in timbre and tone, you can also use them to enter 64th note drum frills and hi hat patterns if you’ve got a midi controller with some decent pads on it. Give the latter a try – you won’t be reaching for the quantise button afterwards, I promise.

One slight problem, you will look like a tit walking around the house hitting things with drum sticks.

The perils of patch browsing

I’ll keep this one short. If you’re browsing the patch bank of a synth and come across something which appears to fit the track, stop and use it (although, please fiddle with it a bit to make it your own). If I could have a pound for the number of times I’ve gone past that point, hunting pointlessly for some kind of patch nirvana, I would have a lot of pounds. And no music. There’s a reason you liked it… so stick with it.

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A Brief Review of pHATmatik PRO

pHATmatik PRO - audio choppage at it's easiest

pHATmatik PRO - audio choppage at it's easiest

Having never been a fan of using multiple audio applications to get one result, I was delighted to find the answer to my sampling and chopping needs, in the form of pHATmatik Pro.

In all honesty, since I’ve moved over to a Mac, Logic Pro and almost 100% soft synths, I’ve been thoroughly put off sampling due to the aforementioned arse-about-face way of achieving anything.  Back in the days of Cubase, midi ports, a horrendous number of leads and my trusty Korg Triton I would happily sample audio into the latter, chop the samples up and assign them to keys.  Granted, even this process was a little long winded, but it beats having thirty-six programs open and transporting one 3gb WAV file between them all in various different stages of transformation.

Anyway, I digress.  If you’re still reading, you presumably want to hear a little more about pHATmatik (why they have emphasised ‘HAT’ I have no idea – there’s nothing titfer about it).  Put very simply, pHATmatik let’s you very quickly chop up an audio file into either 16 or 32 pieces and automatically assigns them to keys on your controller keyboard – all with one click of the mouse.  Simple, and massively effective.  I’m yet to delve into the more advanced features but these include independent parameters for each slice, tempo-synced delay, comb and resonant filters.

In all honesty, though, if your sampling simply amounts to creative play with slices of someone else’s work, pHATmatik has that uncanny ability to inspire.  On my first sitting with it I knocked out a somewhat simple remix of Stevie Wonder’s Bad Mamma Jamma. Not the most incredible thing you’ll hear this year, but when you consider it took me just a couple of hours and that included the time taken to sample and chop the track up, it’s clear how powerful this plugin is.  Download my track here (8mb, but I cant be bothered to re-bounce it, sorry).

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