This Dude discovered one simple trick that allows you to achieve everything in music industry without extremely expensive gear: Learning. My fav channel.
Good video but I must correct you on several aspects. The beat, bassline and scratches are all sampled directly from "Poetry" by Boogie Down Productions. Doom actually did very little with the sample apart from a couple of chops and some filtering and eq'ing. The vocal hook and congas are sampled from "kiss of life" by Sade, again Doom did very little with the samples apart from some chopping and some eq'ing. Part of doom's production genius was it's simplicity and his choice of samples. His production was never that technical or complicated but of a very old school late 80s aesthetic. Which is apt because by the time Operation Doomsday was released he had been in the music industry for a decade and had already co-produced and co-wrote two amazing albums with KMD.
Wow! Really appreciated for the sharing! If I just use my ear I really couldn't tell exactly which parts are sampled and which are actually played and recorded, all I can say is 'genius'. Now I need to start the digging.
@@playpmfrom a personal perspective I'm the same age as Doom and have been a hip hop fan since the early 80s. So it's very easy for me to identify with his music, as the records and cartoons sources he sampled were exactly the same kind of stuff I was into when I was a kid. I respect it when someone who is not only from a different generation but also from a very different musical and cultural background can appreciate MF Doom and all the fantastic music he made during his lifetime. Peace. ✌️
Thanks for the upload. That's the first time I've seen someone to use a tool like that for actual research purposes - I mean learning.. which was the best implementation of this technology - in my opinion. :)
Stems on rip x is better than koala but if I export stems from koala to a free daw I feel like I could achieve what rip ex does using plugins to analyse pitch and frequency
Thanks for the breakdown. I use RipX a lot as well & also SPAN Frequency spectrum analyzer. I don't want the highs too high, lows too low, etc. Thanks & Keep sharing your knowledge. ✌
Super cool video, nice to see you doing something different . I love Mf Doom for the same reason, and also came for the flow and music. And the scratch shakers blew also my mind back then !
I used to have Moises, but clearly I prefer a one time purchase than a subscription haha... I will check this one. It's not the same, but for my work as a music transcriber an old trick is simply use a filter or a bandpass to isolate regions of frequencies. It's not the same, but for studying purposes it will do the trick. Plus, the style of music I study probably is not the one someone will use to train an Algorithm. Keep going with the hard work man!
Yeah, I found my learning process getting way easier with RipX, it even allows to export midi out to try other sound design result with the same composing, it's just way too easy to learn and cheat lol
You have nailed it my friend!To make great music is not about gear but understand how great tracks were made.That was a genius use of Boogie Down Productions drum break and how he flipped the scratches is just crazy!RipX is amazing and I probably need an up to date laptop to use it😂.Operation Doomsday is a classic and probably the the true pioneer of raw lofi hiphop. I think that he used a borrowed MPC,a turntable and a 8 track cassette recorder!
😂😂😂,Koala sampler is fantastic and really it’s all anyone needs to make awesome music in different genres.But I am loving Dawnbeat which is only on IOS though. It has the skipback feature and AuV3 can be used although it can crash the app but has autobackup.It’s not as polished as Koala but it’s a great complement.
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-zsfznaHTok0.htmlsi=wor-D-8C_onokHEs This is the breakdown of the samples and the history behind this iconic rekkid.
Awesome!! .. this App may come in handy .. I want to remix some of my older Tracks ..I have the 1/2 in tapes but no machine ..hopefully this will do the trick!!
Good points, however the weird thing about that stem separation software is that it's breaking out and separating layers that don't necessarily show how the music was actually created. To be more clear, that chordal sample is probably part of a fuller sample pulled from a record. I'm not an M.F. Doom Expert at all tho. I have friends that could break down where every sound came from and how it was put together. 😁
Thanks for suggesting! I think I tried it before, it only has audio to midi feature, not track separation like RipX, for me I prefer RipX to prepare everything for me to start learning.