Unfortunately when I returned to the studio I noticed that the tracks I had recorded from the recital hall had all been lost because I’d stupidly not saved them all in the audio files which gave me less to work with. I had less resources to work with than I’d hoped as the only tracks that had been saved were the drum sample recordings I’d made and a guitar track I’d DI’d into the ISA with my Boss ME-50 multi effects unit. So I decided to use the drum samples and then sample parts from my first task as there was usable material there.
As my original intention was to record improvised sounds and melodies on various instruments and rearrange them in ProTools. I found that with my limited amount of sounds to work with, using the sampler would give me more sounds to work with. This use of audio sampling is one thing that marked Trent Reznor above other contemporaneous producers. In an interview he said
“When sequencers started to be able to record audio, was a big turning point in how I wrote music,”
When producing his album The Fragile he moved over to ProTools from the previous program he’d worked with due to it shutting down midway through producing his album. His use of sampling audio and using them as sources for midi instruments is what I am doing in my second task due to lack of source materials. I am quite enjoying the sounds you get from the sampler as it transposes the timbre of the sounds you use as well which creates rich sounds when sampling vocals.
I recorded some takes of myself singing some ooh’s and ahh sounds to create a chords which sounded more human against my cut up hi-hat and snare samples which were very dry.
Here’s a recording of some of my drum sample takes.
I didn’t realise how easy it would be to use the sampler in ProTools. Although it took me a while to work out how to input the midi values into the grid and change velocities etc, I think I will definitely use the sampler again. First of all you need to find the section of audio that you wish to put into your sampler.
Then you need to add a new instrument track to your project. In the inserts bar of your new instrument track scroll down to instruments and select Structure Free. This is your sampler and it should look like this.
All you need to do then is select the grabber tool and drag your highlighted section of audio onto the box on the right. It should automatically have a sine wave set to MIDI channel A1. Remove this by right clicking on the bar on the right and change the MIDI channel to A1 for your sample. You can test if it’s working on the keyboard below. You can also change the attack, decay, sustain and release of your sample in the edit section on the right. This is exactly what I did with my singing samples and I quite like the effect.
For drums I used a hi-hat sample and instead of placing all hits on the same note in the MIDI arrange window, I used the pitch effects to emphasize gestures as I thought it would be more interesting than trying to replicate mechanic hits with the sampler. I also did the same thing with the snare drum but more with the intent of making complimentary tones.
One limitation of ProTools I discovered however is that it only allows you to use 4 Structure Free instruments at a time which forced me to place samples in the arrange window manually with cutting and pasting etc. For this however I used samples with rhythmic content that I had recorded on the hi-hat. They were not recorded to a metronome however which meant that they wouldn’t sync up perfectly to the beat. I decided to use them anyway as they had the off kilter drum rhythms that I like from hearing producer Flying Lotus.
Here’s an example of his hard at first to follow drums from his last LP Cosmogramma
Although Flying Lotus is extremely tight lipped about what programmes and software he uses to make his music in fear of people copying his style, he has often mentioned J Dilla as a source of inspiration. Although J Dilla innovated the out-of-time beats, I am mainly drawing from Flying Lotus’s Use of texture in his music.
I was not particularly pleased with my hi-hat sample recordings so I used a fuzz-wah plugin in ProTools to change the loudest frequencies of the sound. Here is a before and after.
Before (named incorrectly)
And After
And here are the settings in the fuzz wah insert.
As you can see on the right the sound is also put through a band pass filter which cuts off low frequencies and high frequencies depending on where you choose to filter the sound. I also used heavy compression to give it a slightly aged sound. As the hi-hats were recorded in the vocal booth of the studio it was a very dry sound, so to give the sound ambience I used a TL reverb plug in set to the medium church preset and boosted the recognition of higher frequencies as it is a hi-hat.
Another technique I employed in my piece is time-stretching which was famously first heard on English DJ Goldie’s record terminator. With this effect you can change the playback speed of a sound without changing its pitch. This technology was first made available with the release of the Akai S-3000, a hardware device created for DJs to slow or speed up songs to synchronise with each other for live sets.The TCE tool (time compression editor) in ProTools is mainly used to synchronise out of time vocal lines and tidy things up for your mix, but I used it to extend a short sample of the phrase ‘are you ready’ that I’d taken from a guitar recording when I asked Adam if he was ready to record. It had quite a faint audio signal and no rhythmic coherence with my piece so I chopped up each word and placed them in time with the beat. I kept the words “are” and “you” the same speed and used the TCE tool to stretch the word “ready” playing it 4 bars later in the mix.
I also used the RTAS Multi Delay Effect insert(factory default setting) on this channel for the samples as the rhythmic effect worked well in the mix.
The TCE tool can be selected from the menu bar at the top as one of the options in the drag down menu of the trimmer tool. Seen below sporting a blue square. To use the tool, select the section of audio you would like to change and simply drag from either side to the length you require.
I remember this effect most distinctly from the song Break 4 Da Reload by the UK Garage duo called Oxide and Neutrino where the DJ Neutrino sampled the quote “Can everyone stop getting shot?” from Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels and used time-stretching to repeat the quote before MC Oxide started his rappety rap.
Reverb effects
On my vocal sampled midi instrument I set up an aux bus channel with a long spring reverb insert so I could automate it to abruptly stop with the attack of the snare drum to play with the idea of sounds in space and increase attention to the snare. I used the reverb initially to warm the texture of the vox instrument but I noticed I could do more with it simply by cutting the volume at certain points. Here’s a picture of what it looks like in the project. I believe it works quite effectively at some points.
One effect I used on the snare drum was reverse reverb which is an effect a lot of people commonly associate with being heard on Kevin Shields unique guitar sounds from My Bloody Valentine. He actually only used this process in treating his guitar on a few occasions. Due to the mystery surrounding the highly innovative noise-pop album Loveless however many music critics cited his use of effects as mainly chorus and reverse reverb. Another technique he did with his guitar playing was his unique use of whammy bar which he held while strumming so he could emulate the effects of a warped vinyl, a complaint many people made when mistakenly returning vinyl records of the album. In an interview he says how he created this technique.
“I was trying to imitate string bending and slide-playing, which I couldn’t really do. I thought maybe if I tuned two strings to nearly the same pitch and then bent them with the wang bar, maybe it would sound like I was doing that. I borrowed a nice Jazzmaster from a friend, but it had a re-made tremolo that was really big. So I put tape on it to keep it from going all the way into the socket.”
He did however use reverse reverb on acoustic guitar on MBV’s debut album Isn’t Anything released in 1988 on the track Soft As Snow But Warm Inside. Combined with his use of the whammy bar it creates quite a unique effect as you can hear here
From the same interview with guitargeek I’ve quoted from above that can be found at the url http://guitargeek.com/chat/showthread.php?threadid=95434 , he talks intriguingly about his reasons in rejecting previous guitar effects and quite deeply about the use of new effects in the studio.
“It gets back to primitive survival instincts,” he says, “the ability to localize sounds in space–that feeling when you’re in the woods and a twig snaps or something rustles in the underbrush and your heart starts pounding. I’d like to achieve something like that with a guitar effect.”
Kevin Shields effects the entire acoustic guitar track with this effect whereas in mine I kept the original snare sound and mixed in the reverse effect at around 20% so it was more of a background addition to the song. I also found that it works well with the call and response between the hi-hat and snare drum heard around 0:54 where the hi hats play triplets, followed by the snare. Combined with the automated volume on the reverb aux channel for my vocal sample pad, I feel I’ve used techniques in my production akin to the way Kevin Shields describes by playing with the idea of space.
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At 1:44 in my track the sound panned widely in the stereo field that sounds like thousands of snooker balls being hit was created by using the ring mod effect on my Boss ME-50 pedal and plucking muted strings near the pick ups. On its own it sounds like this.
Side Chaining
As I’ve already spoken about how to use side chaining in ProTools I will only mention that I side chained the hi-hat samples to the bass kick as well as the vocal sample pad to make the piece sound more redolent of house music.






























