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  1. #1
    Junior Freak
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    Default tips on hi hat lines

    been trying to years to get them percussive techno hat lines that really roll when u filter out the bass etc.

    any tips on how to layer hats and use them to good effect

  2. #2
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    Try coupling a drum machine hat with a real world hat. Gets really nice results.

    Use 2 or 3 different hats and take a "less is more" approach

    Hats should push the track along and give a bit of fizz, don't go overboard on your patterns.

    You can make really simple effective hat patterns by just putting one on the offbeat, and playing around ever 16 bars or so, to keep variation. Keep the programming simple, but maybe adds some interesting effects or tonal changes.

    Off beat hats give a shuffle feel, on beat hats give a driving quality, figure our which the track needs.

    Try using a high pitch rim or tocky sound and incorporate it into your hat line, you can get interesting results using non hat sounds in your hat programming.

  3. #3
    Junior Freak
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    cheers im trying to make some really fat rolling percussive kinda hi hat stuff. im just trying to get it flowing nicely.

    the good old chugging techno kinda hats

  4. #4
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    well, you could always go for the classic hihat line CH CH OH

    Then compress the hats, and side chain them to the kick and you'll get a nice chug to it.

  5. #5
    Junior Freak
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    yeah im trying to get really fat full high end wishy washey percusiveness.

    like a fizzing kinda thing

    the thing im doing at mo has a few hats lines on top of each other but none are sidechained to the kick i might try that.

  6. #6
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    Hmm, I think I know what you are looking for.
    I`d suggest a very subtle bit of bit crushing or some harsh wave shaping, with the eq inserted after the effects and maybe a little top boost.
    I wouldn`t advice compressing the hats at all, leave that till the mastering stage.

    You might be talking about the schranze style of "fizzy" hats? which in that case, a touch of distortion, some overdriven sidechain compress.
    Solitary by nature.
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  7. #7
    Junior Freak
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    im not on about shranz type stuff. its really hard to explain. loads of techno tunes have the hats in on about. i think getting them right is the key to a good track. or plays a big part.

    the cha cha chikka chikka cha type of thang but really full on and faaat

  8. #8
    Junior Freak
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    yeah im not on about shranz style hats. just the kinda hats the feature in quit e a few techno tunes.

    very percussive and make a good loop when they r playing on there own.

  9. #9
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    Copy hi-hat patterns from rock songs, i do it and because of the quantisation on them they sound great, adds sparkly and intrest to an otherwise over used percussion element :)

  10. #10
    Junior Freak
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    wat do u mean by copying them? do u use the drum tabs or something?

  11. #11
    acieeeeeeeeeeeeed
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    he usually kidnaps the drummers and forces them to play the tracks whilst he records it:)
    Life is "trying things to see if they work"

    Finally getting around to updating my site
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  12. #12
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    You best bet, find some tunes on juno or something, link em up here, and I might be able to help.
    Other wise with verbal descriptions we can go round in circles for ever.
    Solitary by nature.
    Isolation is the gift.
    Does anyone have courage to stand apart any more?

    myspace.com/dirtybassgrooves
    http://www.myspace.com/dirtybassvoidloss
    http://www.subgenius.com

  13. #13
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    i recently had a huge hat revelation in the form of the the vsti drumazon.

    check that bugger out and see it phatten up your hat lines instantaneously.

  14. #14
    Junior Freak
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    hmmm drumazon . will look into that cheers.

    and yeah im off to find some samples

  15. #15
    Junior Freak
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    here is a short clip of the kind of hats i am reffering too

    http://www.mediafire.com/?4mj3xomguzc
    Last edited by techno_smack; 30-05-2007 at 03:27 PM.

  16. #16
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    OK

    Thats basically a white noise hiss.

    Theres two different hats there, one on the beat, one on the offbeat.
    Both are drum machine open hihats, the one on the beat has little to no transient so its just the trebly hiss tail thats been sampled. You can achieve this by taking a open hihat sample and just chopping the front of it off.

    The second has a slight transient and is on the off beat giving it the "chucka chucka chucka" sound and driving the drums along.

    The thing giving the fizz is the position in the mix. There's a lot going on in that track, the lead, the drums etc etc. Space has been made in a busy mix for the hats to fizz along the top. If you want that sound, you need to make a full mix with space for those hats. Otherwise no matter what you do you won't quite get the same effect.

    Anyways - the hats themselves are fairly straightforward. A basic 909 or 808 open hat (can be achieved in drumazon easily), two slightly different hats on the beat and the offbeat, onbeat without a transient, then just compress and maybe add a little distortion. Then filter off the low frequencies and make sure your mix is set up to accomodate them.

    Sorry if rambling. Boozy lunch
    :)

  17. #17
    Junior Freak
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    cheers jay, that was quite helpful.

    cant seem to make them sound anywhere near as good tho

  18. #18
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    They sound pretty washed out, as Jay said they have a white noise element. Didn't sound really high to me either (high as in airy), more crusty, midish... analogue :)

    This plugin might add to the experience:

    http://home.versatel.nl/breebaar/dow...erox/ferox.zip

    this -only demo, though, should at least get you into the sound ballpark:

    sonitex 1260 from

    http://www.otiumfx.com/

    or izotope vinyl; or some bitrate reduction. has the feeling of an old, crusty sampler. like old wutang records... deffo not hi-fi and not what i would want my highats to sound like but matter of taste as always.

  19. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by techno_smack View Post
    cheers jay, that was quite helpful.

    cant seem to make them sound anywhere near as good tho
    Well, its not so much the hats as the mix around them that makes them how they are.

    So maybe you need to work on your mix and worry less about your hats? A good mix will see everything fall into place. If your mix isn't balanced you won't be able to get the individual elements right no matter how hard you try.

    I spent ages trying to get kicks and hats right before I realised I needed to concentrate on the mix and not the kick/hat etc.

  20. #20
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    Ok, I`ve had a listen.
    Well, there`s a number of ways of achieving this.
    Firstly this type of over crushed fizz is an archetype of a badly produced record.
    Too much top end at the master, so when cut to vinyl (vinyl has restricted top end range) the tops have distorted in a very vinyl way.

    Whay you have here, is a standard Jazz Shaker loop. Doing the da-da-DA-da it also has a little forward swing/shuffle to it.
    There`s also what could be a tuned down 909 ride, that has been high passed and then stupidly over EQ`d on the top end.
    I think I can just hear a 909 closed hat on a 16 note constant hit in there too.

    To recreate this I would make a 16 note Shaker shuffle.
    A 16 note closed 909 shuffle (slightly out of quanitsation with the shaker shuffle)
    And wack either a 909 ride or a white noise ride from a drum generator.

    Send the whole lot to a buss, sidechain it to the kick, add some Fuzz/Wave shaping distortion, maybe a little valve saturation, a dab of reverb, and over cook the top end.
    Then make sure there`s a lot of room in the mix to accomodate it.

    OR

    Do the above without the distrotion etc, and totally overcook the high end, and let the vinyl cutter swear like a bastard and cut it, making those squashed distorted sounds.


    I think I get the general feel you are going for.
    Essentially you want the kind of hats that flow into each other, providing a constant gel between the kicks, so they sound as one instrument.
    Basically 16 note closed hats/shakes, combined with rides, long open hats, or long white noise hats, and then sidechained, will give this rolling, flowing beahviour to any hat pattern.
    Solitary by nature.
    Isolation is the gift.
    Does anyone have courage to stand apart any more?

    myspace.com/dirtybassgrooves
    http://www.myspace.com/dirtybassvoidloss
    http://www.subgenius.com

 

 
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