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How to create a moving break beat

Posted: Fri Dec 21, 2007 10:46 am
by hesed
This is a simple but very powerfull trick, i had experience this personally in many of my electro or break track. This trick it can be use on any sequencer. I use it on Ableton:

- take a midi track and create an empty clip

- write a break loop of 4 beat (also possible with more) 1-2-3-4

- create a new midi clip with 8 beat

- select all note in beat 1-2-3 from you loop and copy on the new clip

- now select 2-3-4 and copy on new after 1-2-3

- Now you have a new clip 1-2-3-2-3-4

- [Variation] is also possible toleave the clip with 6 beat if you work with 3/4

- in the last 2 beat you can put what you want or put a break with roll

- so you get a loop that give the feeling of moving every repetition.

- longer is the loop better come the effect

have fun.

Posted: Fri Dec 21, 2007 3:37 pm
by 4ace
Not sure i follow EXACTLY but i like the idea of going in and out of 4/4 to 3/4 time during a section of a song

Thanks

Posted: Tue Dec 25, 2007 12:49 pm
by Fledz
Yea you've lost me a little bit but I kind of like the idea. Can you post a save file or a screen cap?

Posted: Tue Dec 25, 2007 1:55 pm
by chapelier fou
I totally don't understand. :oops:

Posted: Tue Dec 25, 2007 5:21 pm
by DarkMatter
makes sense to me. thanks.

Posted: Tue Dec 25, 2007 5:40 pm
by chapelier fou
I am glad it makes sense to you! :D

Posted: Thu Dec 27, 2007 10:44 am
by rithma
i like it! i used to quantize a different amount of shuffle to te first 2 bars and the last, or nudge one perc hit at the end of the measure, little things like that breathe so much life and shuffle into the electronics.......

first post in a long time but im glad to know y'all are alive and kick drum

rithma music

Posted: Thu Dec 27, 2007 11:25 am
by mdk
i think what he means is if you have 4 bar loops running against each other they always loop together after 4 bars.

BUT if you take one of the tracks and make it a 6 bar loop then the whole thing will only repeat every 12 bars.

one way of doing that is taking bars 2 and 3 and repeating them then playing bar 4.

as the example says instead of going

bar 1, 2, 3, 4

you do

1 , 2, 3 then instead of 4 you do 2, 3, 4..to make 6 bars.

any clearer?

Posted: Thu Dec 27, 2007 11:57 pm
by chapelier fou
ha, okay. I thought it was a bit more crazy. Should I suggest the use of prime numbers?

Posted: Sat Dec 29, 2007 2:36 am
by Atomikat
An easier trick...I used to do that with audio/midi loops by taking a loop,duplicating it several times, changing the starting point of the loops and/or moving the loop braces around...the quantization to 1/32 and map this clips to the pc keys or a midi keyboard...voilá...instant breaks !!! :D

Posted: Sat Jan 05, 2008 2:39 am
by Ruso
one very nice trick to create good breaks is to write several 4 bar loops(or whatever time scale you work in) and to have em on one drum track mapped to different keyboard keys/pads and have launch quantization set to 1/8 (unless you work in a different time scale) and trigger them in different ways... you'll be surprised at the wicked grooves you can come up with. And then you can add another midi track to record the action from that track and then drag the recorded midi clip back to the drum track for final use ;)