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  1. #1
    Junior Freak
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    Default Fusing the kick with the bassline

    Hello all.

    Allot of minimal stuff by Samuel L Session* the kick seems to blend in completely with the bassline to form one smooth continuous sine wave modulation.

    * - there's no "s" in his name huh? I can never remember :P

    I've decided to try do this myself, but I always find modulating a plain sine in Absynth never really gets that thump (no crack). When overlay a clicky sound it kinda sounds too stressed, and not nearly as smooth as SLS's stuff. It's REEEALY HARD to do this right apparently! I suppose putting some really heavy compression on the sub frequencies and almost none on the mid-uppers may help, but I'm away from my production machine now, so I'll have to experiment tommorow. Dunno? How do you guys recommend approaching this sorta track?

    Been a while. by the way... I just realised how much I miss this place! Guess I'll be posting again soon. First night out for 8 months (SERIOUSLY) is what made the difference! God I needed that dance!

    Cheers,

    Dan

  2. #2
    BOA Mod
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    Can you post up a brief example of this daniel or link to a tune which features it so we can hear what you mean?

  3. #3
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    would be better to post example of what you mean.

    generally, eqing them so they both sitting well together + adding some nice compression and maybe sidechain could do the trick...
    "Computer games don't affect kids, I mean if Pac Man affected us as kids, we'd all run around in a darkened room munching pills and listening to repetitive music."
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  4. #4
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    Sometimes the attack and punch of the kick is matched to the attack and punch of the deep bass.

    So you get the effect of two kicks - the kick from the drum, and the kick from the sub.

    Not sure if thats what you meant, but its a technique that gets used a lot - matching the characteristics of bass synth to match the kicks. Not too difficult to do either...

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jay Pace View Post
    Sometimes the attack and punch of the kick is matched to the attack and punch of the deep bass.

    So you get the effect of two kicks - the kick from the drum, and the kick from the sub.

    Not sure if thats what you meant, but its a technique that gets used a lot - matching the characteristics of bass synth to match the kicks. Not too difficult to do either...
    This should work even better if both the drums and the bass stem from synthesizers where the adsr settings can be freely adjusted.

    Another idea might be to ''vocode' a kick over a bassline. And yet another might be to use a kickdrum sample as an I(mpulse)R(esponse) in a convolution reverb and use that over the bassline.

  6. #6
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    To put it simply, it`s all about compression.
    In the case of SL Sessions anyway.
    Pounding grooves used to do this a lot too.
    I am not here but my ghost still lingers

  7. #7
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    ive started doing this recently... and it seems to really bring the power out in kicks,

    NOT eq'ing.
    or minimal eqing. for ages and ages, ive been over eqing everything, and its only now that i believe that without going mad with it, u can really get big drums.

    maybe a teeny bit of eq to tuck your bassline under. so thats what ive been up to :)

  8. #8
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  9. #9
    It is inevitable.
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    Quote Originally Posted by danielmarshall View Post
    Hello all.

    Allot of minimal stuff by Samuel L Session* the kick seems to blend in completely with the bassline to form one smooth continuous sine wave modulation.

    * - there's no "s" in his name huh? I can never remember :P

    I've decided to try do this myself, but I always find modulating a plain sine in Absynth never really gets that thump (no crack). When overlay a clicky sound it kinda sounds too stressed, and not nearly as smooth as SLS's stuff. It's REEEALY HARD to do this right apparently! I suppose putting some really heavy compression on the sub frequencies and almost none on the mid-uppers may help, but I'm away from my production machine now, so I'll have to experiment tommorow. Dunno? How do you guys recommend approaching this sorta track?

    Been a while. by the way... I just realised how much I miss this place! Guess I'll be posting again soon. First night out for 8 months (SERIOUSLY) is what made the difference! God I needed that dance!

    Cheers,

    Dan
    best way to do it is to use AudioGlue. Bonds even the toughest of Audio surfaces.

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    Bás Ar An Impireacht

  10. #10
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    You can also sidechain a dynamic eq on the b-line with the kick. Find out where the kick is hitting, and then notch it out of the b-line using the kick as the trigger.

  11. #11
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    Its always possible that the kick *is* the bassline lol
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  12. #12
    Junior Freak
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    yeah ive always found the best way to make kick n bass smack is to compress the **** out of a long 808 kick. it doesnt have much upper bass/mid punch but for pure weight at proper volumes you cant beat it, you certainly dont need a bassline to beef it up.

    another thing i do a lot is to put a steep LP over a kick and have it follow an envelope with a v quick decay, this brings the frequency content of the kick down to meet the bass n the both seem to gel a lot tighter.

 

 

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