Re: RE: Drums?
2009/11/15 07:55:41
(permalink)
I'm a big fan of acidized loops. They are simple to use, readily available (some free, some very cheap) and they sound good (for the most part). I have a lot of Beta Monkey loops and they have a lot of shuffles. Also the tempos run the gamut from very slow to double kick speed metal type stuff.
When I first started using GTP, I thought I needed to have my drums mapped out, intricate and well, based in reality (can a drummer do this?). I set about asking a lot of questions and got a lot of interesting opinions but nothing that got me any further in my own abilities.
Finally I just stopped worrying about all that and found as I made tunes with loops, I began to figure out how to make them work for me. I found that I could easily slip edit clips to get just the one sound I wanted. I could cut them and place them in order to create more intricate drums than the unedited loops could provide. I wasn't creating anything super complex but they worked for my tunes.
My biggest discovery was that if I wrote a tune around one or two or three loops, I could go back after the tune was substantially done and rebuild a new drum track which was way more fun that trying to manipulate them during the creation of the tune. Lots of times the end result was a much more dynamic song.
Anyway, I got a lot of good comments about my drum tracks even though they were a hodgepodge of kits.
A lot of sites like Beta Monkey, Smart Loops have free loops for download too.
Good luck to you.