Saturday, January 8

Ableton Live Tutorial: Flying Lotus' 'Camel' - Beat Deconstruction pt 1


Have you ever wondered what your favorite producers are thinking when they're
making beats? Dubspot instructor, Ableton Live expert and award winning music
educator, Pat Cupo, explains his concept of "Beat Deconstruction". In this tutorial,
Cupo takes a two measure loop of Flying Lotus' "Camel" from his Los Angles LP
(2008) and breaks down the beat into it's four main components: kick, snare,
hi-hat, and percussion, each having it's own dedicated clip in an audio track.
By using Warp Markers as visual place holders to highlight when and where each
component occurs in an audio clip, we can begin to understand how the beat was
conceptualized. Using the Slice to New MIDI function in Live set to slice the audio
at the "Warp Marker", new MIDI clips are created that contain a series of MIDI notes
corresponding to the Warp Markers from their original audio clips. Once this has
been done, all of the MIDI information is taken to the Arrangement View to view
the clips as a musical score. After a little editing, the music seems to pop out from
the screen and we can see the beat in it's entirety as if we programmed it ourselves.
See full article at http://blog.dubspot.com

www.dubspot.com

No comments: