Archive for October, 2007

Tutorial: Bass Research

Wub Midwest Dubstep ShirtThis week I’ll be visiting the classrooms of Antony Flackett at Massachusetts College of Art and Wayne Marshall at Harvard and Brandeis. Flackett (DJ Flack) is teaching a course called Beat Reseach: Music Art and Culture in the Age of Hip-Hop, while Marshall (Wayne&Wax) is doing one called Electronic Music: History and Aesthetics of Popular Music Since the 1960s. And yes, they’re also both resident rhythm-professors at the weekly Beat Research party which I’ll be spinning some tunes at this Monday.

This week Wayne’s class will be touching on Hardcore/Breakbeat, Ragga/Jungle, Drum’n'Bass, Garage/2step, and Grime/Dubstep and the production project for the students is to “create a track in either Hardcore, Ragga/Jungle, Drum’n'Bass, Garage, Grime or Dubstep style.” If there’s one thing all these styles have in common, it’s BASS; often a kind that I like to call “wub-bass” because of it’s wub-wub-wub-wub sound.

In the early ’90s, rave-music producers began focusing on basslines as a point of timbrel innovation. By the late ’90s drum’n'bass often had bass sounds like nothing anyone had heard before. That innovation could also be found in the development of garage/2step, and is still alive and well in dubstep, electro-house, and even some commercial hip-hop and dancehall.

I thought I would take this opportunity to present the following.

Tutorial: Create A Dubstep-Style Bassline

Here’s a short track I worked up for this demonstration:


Download: Full Track

This track only consists of two parts: the beat and the bassline. I started by making the beat which you can listen to below, but for the purposes of this tutorial I’m not going to go into how I made it:


Download: Beat

What we’re really looking at here is the bass; synthesizer-bass in particular. I used the Subtractor synthesizer in Propellerhead Reason for this tutorial because it’s relatively simple and has the same features that you’d find on almost any synth, including old analog ones.

The bassline — made up of 3 parts — is created by using 3 separate Subtractor synth modules. Here’s the first part:


Download: Synth-Bass-1

Here’s how I made it:

Bass Sequence

The picture above a is simple four measure sequence of four notes that make up the bassline. For those not familiar with Reason’s sequencer, those piano keys on the left side will give you an idea of what’s going on. But the audio file above sounds like more than just four sustained notes, right? That’s due to the magic of low frequency oscillators (LFO). Let me explain.

I begin by setting a sound generating oscilator (”Osc 1″) to a square wave (Click the images below to see them full size):

Subtractor Synth One Oscillator One

I also set a second oscillator to a square wave, but on this one I set the semitone off a few cents (-22 “Cent”), and then mix the two oscillator sounds together (see the “Mix” knob). This creates a slightly out of phase, rougher sound:

Subtractor Synth One Oscillator Two

Up to this point you’d be hearing four sustained notes playing in sequence. Here’s where the LFO comes in. I activate “LFO 1″ by turning up the “Amount” knob. I turn on the “Sync” button which synchronizes the rate of the oscillation to the tempo of the sequence (the beat). By turning the “Rate” knob I can change how fast the oscillation goes. I then set the LFO to control “F. Freq” (filter frequency). I’ll explain that further below, but in a nutshell, this is how you achieve the wub-wub-wub-wub sound on a note that would normally be sustained.

Subtractor Synth One LFO

I set the LFO to control the “Freq” slider on “Filter 1″. The filter controls what frequencies from the oscillator pass through. I have it set to “LP” (low pass) which only lets the lowest (bassiest) frequencies pass through. Depending on the “Amount” of LFO one sends to control the “Freq” one hears more or less of the frequencies that are being filtered out, creating the rhythmic, wub-wub-wub-type sound.

Subtractor Synth One Filter

That was fun, but I want more BASS. This sound contains some bass but it also has a lot of higher frequency information. I want to make sure that this bassline will rattle peoples eyeballs when it’s played in the club so I added a second synth that’s playing the same notes as the first, but the sound is a straight sub-bass tone:


Download: Sub-Bass

You probably can’t hear that unless you have serious speakers or headphones. It’s very low. This new synth uses a sine wave which is cleaner sounding than a square wave, and no LFO, making for a pure, sustained bass tone.

Subtractor Synth Two Oscillator One

OK, that part’s easy. Now for the third synth; the one that sounds like this:


Download: Synth-Bass-2

This synth is very similar to the first one except that I detuned the pitch of “Osc 2″ a bit differently; 29 “Cent” this time:

Subtractor Synth Three Oscillators One and Two

Again, this synth is playing the exact same notes as the other two. The main difference here is the LFO. I have it set to a different rate. It’s faster and I have a higher “Amount” of LFO as well:

Subtractor Synth Three LFO

The other difference is in the way I have the “Filter Envelope” set. On the first synth I had it set so that the longer the note is held, the more the the low pass filter opens. On this synth I have it set so that the longer the note is held, the more the filter closes. The “A D S R” you see below the sliders of the “Filter Envelope” represent Attack, Decay, Sustain and Release. On this synth I have the sustain all the way down and the decay most of the way down, so that the envelope brings the filter frequency down over time.

Subtractor Synth Three Filter

When you put these three synths together they appear to be one complex and super-bassy sound because they’re all playing the same notes.

Here, give them a listen again:

this synth:

Download: Synth-Bass-1

+ this sub-bass synth:

Download: Sub-Bass

+ this synth:

Download: Synth-Bass-2

+ the beat:

Download: Beat

= the final track:

Download: Full Track

That’s it for now. Happy bass-making.

Mashup of the Week: “Apeboy (Lenlow’s Enyagy Edit)”

LenlowI meant to post my recent remix of Ghislain Poirier’s Blazin’ as mashup of the this week, but since I didn’t title the post as such y’all get a bonus.

You may have heard this one in my recent PTS mix. It’s from my friend Lenlow of the Mash Ave camp in Boston:

Download: Enya vs Prodigy; Apeboy (Lenlow’s Enyagy Edit)

Aceyalone ft. Zulu

Just want to give y’all a heads up that our boy Zulu has a guest spot on Aceyalone’s new album. You can peep the track on Zulu’s Myspace.

Here’s a video from the album featuring Chali 2Na & Bionik.

Boston Music Awards Nomination

Dear friends and loved ones,

Boston Music AwardsIt’s an honor to announce that that I’ve been nominated for “Outstanding DJ/Dance Act of the Year” in the 2007 Boston Music Awards.

No, I don’t live there anymore, but my Sonic Weapons album was composed and released while I was living there. And shit, I’m wicked Noahth Shoah forevah, baby!

There’s public voting at their website. If you feel so inclined, please vote for me.

Let the popularity contest begin!

Yours truly,

- DJ C

PS: I’m gonna do my best to try and make it to the show at the Orpheum Theater Saturday, December 1, 7:30pm.

BD1982 “The Bigfoot EP”

BD1982 “The Bigfoot EP”Our friend Starkey of the Trouble & Bass camp etc. just gave us the heads up that BD1982’s The Bigfoot EP will be dropping next week on the Seclusiasis label.

The EP is 6 tracks of oblong, texture-rich beats that reference hip-hop, dubstep, and dancehall among other things. Here’s a taste:

BD2982; Wooder ICE:

BD2982; Coelacanth Town:

You can hear more at BD1982’s Myspace.

Starkey also pointed us to a promo DJ mix for the release which, though somewhat poorly mixed, does contain some great tracks.

BD1982; Sharks Eat Bigfoot DJ Mix (Zshare) ->

Ghislain Poirier “Blazin’”

Ghislain Poirier BlazinGhislain Poirier’s new album on Ninja TuneNo Ground Under — has just been released in Canada and will come out in the U.S. in early ‘08. The first single from the album is Blazin’ which features ragga vocalist Face-T and has remixes by The Bug and yours truly.

I’ve taken this opportunity to make a second remix — a mashup if you will — that I’d like to share with y’all:

Download: DJ C (Ft. Ghislain Poirier, Face T, & T.I.); Blazin’ Hurts

You can purchase the tracks on the single from JunoDownload, Dancetracks Digital, and Digital-Tunes among others. I haven’t seen the 12-inch vinyl yet but it should be floating around out there soon too. The full No Ground Under album is also available in download from from Dancetracks Digital.

Ghislain Poirier; No Ground Under Video Promo:

RIAAdiohead

In it’s first week Radiohead’s new album In Rainbows was downloaded 1.2 million times and even though they Rainbow Riderallowed the “buyer” to choose what they want to pay — including nothing — it has apparently fetched an average of $8 per download. That means that they’ve brought in something like $10-million, which is more than the first-week sales of their previous 3 albums combined. Add to that the fact that there is no middle-man (label, distributor) involved, and that they spent little or nothing on promotions, and you’ve got a very wealthy band. Can anyone who still claims that downloading is bad for artists please take note here?

But here’s what’s really amazing: Only the top 2 best-selling albums on the Billboard chart this past week sold over 100-thousand copies, and there’s speculation that this coming week none will even be close to triple-digit sales. Radiohead’s album just completely blows theses sales numbers out of the water.

Meanwhile the RIAA continued to spend energy attacking universities and their MP3 Policestudents with a fresh round of pre-litigation letters this past week. If only they spent those resources doing research to keep up with current trends and developing their own new distribution models. Apparently the RIAA doesn’t find it embarrassing to keep spending lots of money suing college kids who enjoy music, while the world is passing them by and the bands that they supposedly represent detach themselves and come up with their own brilliant business models for selling downloads.

But wait, there’s more! Now internet service providers are getting into the act. It’s been reported that Comcast is Comcast Cencorship Handinterfering with users who attempt to share media files over broadband connections. This is presumably to try and stop file-sharing networks like torrents — even though there are many legit/legal uses for such technologies. Again, it’s a waste of energy. File sharing will continue to grow as new technologies emerge, and users will switch to service providers who let them use the internets in whichever way they like. Businesses should spend their resources getting ahead of the curve; figuring out how to take advantage of these technologies to sell media.

There’s a discussion of alternate music-biz models in the book The Future of Music, and one of the best The Future Of Music Bookideas is to create a small fee for media downloads, added to a user’s monthly bill for internet service. A huge pool of money would be built up with less than a dollar a month on the bill of each user. It’s not hard to figure out what’s being downloaded, and how much, using technologies that already exist and that data can be used to determine what artists should be paid for their works. Canada looks set to implement something similar soon, though it will only be on legal downloads. The better plan would be to allow people to continue downloading for free. At least it would feel that way because the fee on their monthly bill would be virtually unnoticeable.

Related: Defending The Pig - Oink Croak/rupture writes an enlightened article about file-sharing website Oink which was just shut down by authorities.

Update: Sure enough; no CD sold more than 77-thousand copies this past week.

Update: UK Charts Company to recognise album sales on USB Flash disks

One Duran; “Canned Heat” DJ Mix

Canned HeatDJ One Duran of the 1200 Problems crew in Chapel Hill/Carrboro, North Carolina runs a radio show there called New Science Experiment. I’ve been meaning to point you toward this interview he did with me for their blog where we talk about heedlessness (one of my favorite words), among other things.

Interview with DJ C on  WXYC blog ->

In the meantime he made this tasty new mix-up especially for the Mashit massive. It’s quite an up-to-the-moment mix of bass-quakers that’ll make you get crunk:

Download: One Duran; Canned Heat DJ Mix

  1. Turf Talk; Sic Wid It Is The Crew
  2. Lethal Bizzle; Babylon’s Burning the Ghetto (Spank Rock Mix)
  3. Buju Banton; Teaser
  4. Kardinal Offishall & Akon; Graveyard Shift
  5. DJ C; Come Back Version
  6. Ward 21; Lucy
  7. Ghislain Poirier ft. Face T; No More Blood (Megasoid Rmx)
  8. Modeselektor; The Dark Side of the Sun
  9. San Quinn; Do Ya Thizzle
  10. E Da Boss w/ Lateef & Gift of Gab; Go Left (Exile Rmx)
  11. K’Naan; Soobax
  12. Ninjaman; Hollow Point Bad Boy
  13. Deadbeat; Gimme a Little Dub
  14. DJ C and Zulu; Body Work (Murderbot’s Britneywork Refix)
  15. Samim/Pitbull; Heater (Claude Vonstroke Rmx)
  16. South Rakkas Crew (ft. T.O.K.); Carry Feelings
  17. U-Tern; Back to Trinidad
  18. Seiji & MC Dolores; Todo Mundo
  19. DJ Sega; Looka Here
  20. Psycho Tropic; Hypnosis
  21. Elevator Man; Frame of Mind
  22. TTC; Telephone (Ghislain Poirier Rmx)
  23. Neil Landstrumm; Rockers
  24. Jr. Gong w/ Bounty Killer and Eek-A-Mouse; Khaki Suit
  25. Breakage; Clarendeon
  26. M.I.A.; The Turn
  27. Tenor Saw & Cutty Ranks; Mr. Want It All

Vex’d & Starkey Philly / LA Dates

I wish I could go to one of these. If you’re going to be in Philly tonight, or LA on the 27th, make sure to catch Vex’d & Starkey (and Dev79 for the Philly show—his bday party!) This is Vex’d’s first proper US tour together and doing live PA, and the show on the 27th will be Starkey’s first LA appearance as well. www.seclusiasis.com for more info on the Philly show, www.droidbehavior.com for the LA gig.

M’Bot Re-Edits Mix

Here’s another mix! It’s mainly ’80s Italo- & Montreal disco, hi-NRG, & synth pop, with a lot of super-duper-exclusive re-edits that you’ll never ever hear anywhere else (unless you come see me play out). No grand overarching theme like the New Beat mix; just a lot of tracks I like strung together.


Download: Chrissy Murderbot; Oct. 2007 Disco Re-Edits

Tracklist:

  1. 52nd Street; Can’t Afford (Murderbot Re-Edit) (Factory / UK / 1984)
  2. The Flics; Take It Easy (Murderbot Re-Edit) (Tanga Label / Italy / 1984)
  3. Vivien Vee; Give Me A Break (Banana Records / Italy / 1979)
  4. Was (Not Was); Wheel Me Out (Murderbot Re-Edit) (Antilles / US / 1980)
  5. Hotline; Fantasy (Murderbot Re-Edit) (Il Disc 8 / Italy / 1982)
  6. Pet Shop Boys vs. Adonis; It’s A Sin / No Way Back (Murderbot Re-Edit) (EMI / UK / 1987; Trax / US / 1986)
  7. Sphinx; Collision Remixed (Murderbot Re-Edit) (System Music / Italy / 1982)
  8. Vera; Ready For Love (Matra / Canada / 1983)
  9. Geraldine Cordeau; Space & Time (Matra / Canada / 1984)
  10. Depeche Mode; Personal Jesus (Murderbot Re-Edit) (Mute / UK / 1989)
  11. Climax Orchestra; Interaction (Murderbot Re-Edit) (Challenge / UK / 1984)
  12. Boytronic; You (Paul Dakeyne Remix) (Rush Records / Germany / 1986)
  13. Lauren Grey; Putting the Night on Hold (Murderbot Edit) (Dice Records / US / 1986)
  14. Thelma Houston; Love Machine (Murderbot Re-Edit) (Motown / US / 1979)
  15. Gino Soccio; Les Visiteurs (Murderbot Re-Edit) (Celebration / Canada / 1979)