How do they do it?
How do they do it? Posted on: 06.04.2012 by Tori Rumer Hello friends,I have a question about a particular type of music production. One aspect of DJs i really like is when they can take a song and remix it so thoroughly that it sounds almost like a totally new track. Here are some examples Treasure fingers walking on a dream remix, or if you want some more power behind the sound check out some of SAVOYs track - what type of software and methods are used in remixing songs like this? thanks! | |
Marshall Aby 07.04.2012 |
Originally Posted by QUANCE
- obtain the stems from the producer and use them to construct your remix - tease solo instruments and parts from the original track by sampling/EQing/phase cancelling/filtering them ...any DAW will allow you to do this. Personally, I believe Ableton Live is quite helpful due to it's easy warping functions. |
Tori Rumer 06.04.2012 | Hello friends, I have a question about a particular type of music production. One aspect of DJs i really like is when they can take a song and remix it so thoroughly that it sounds almost like a totally new track. Here are some examples Treasure fingers walking on a dream remix, or if you want some more power behind the sound check out some of SAVOYs track - what type of software and methods are used in remixing songs like this? thanks! |
Roni Batchan 11.04.2012 | youtube is your friend man - there's gazillions of instrumentals and acapellas on there to play with. It really doesn't matter too much about the quality, as long as the bulk of the track is made up of original sounds. to be honest, a successful remix takes a couple of key elements/stems of the original track and uses them as a focus for a new track. (IMO) if you want to get hold of stems, i'm not sure if they're still running as frequently but beatport used to run regular comps where you can buy the stems to a song and remix it (winning an official release and opening set for deadmau5 or something like that) - you're unlikely to win straight away, but it's a good way of getting stems to big tunes. and as lethal said - i'd massively recommend ableton live for playing with samples. in my experience (bearing in mind i've settled with live for a while now) they make it so easy to stretch things out and chop up vocals. bit of a shameless plug, but since it's on my mind - i've been working on a track this afternoon, in which i took the mary j blige pella (ripped from the youtube vid below) and chopped and pitched it up - adding a bit of delay, compression and reverb. http://soundcloud.com/belch/nu-start-riddim-clip it's not quite a remix, but that shows how you can do this and make it your own... and it really doesnt take that long once you get the hang of it. |
Nedra Fresneda 10.04.2012 | If you mean separate the vocals from the instrumental, no. No DAW can separate cleanly an element from a mixed file. You could try some of the methods lethal posted before, depending on what you are after, these results will be good enough for you or not. |
Tori Rumer 10.04.2012 | Oh that's pretty sweet didn't know that - does ableton allow you to pull out vocal samples and nix the music behind? |
Nedra Fresneda 10.04.2012 | Some producers post the stems publicly (ie: Dada Life) |
Tori Rumer 10.04.2012 | It's really that easy to get clips from producers?? I see remixes online allll the time there's no way all those small djs can be contacting the producers for those. I guess it would make sense that like Wolfgang gartner, porter, and other big named people would be able to but there are countless daft punk remixes online it doesn't seem feasible that's how they would get the sound clips |
Marshall Aby 07.04.2012 |
Originally Posted by QUANCE
- obtain the stems from the producer and use them to construct your remix - tease solo instruments and parts from the original track by sampling/EQing/phase cancelling/filtering them ...any DAW will allow you to do this. Personally, I believe Ableton Live is quite helpful due to it's easy warping functions. |
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