Thank you. I have been looking for some good reason dnb tutorials. I normally make hard house & hardcore but I keep meaning ti do more dnb. Massive respect mate
Incredible! (no pun intended (general levy). Brought back a lot of jungle memories 😸. Would love to know more about your hardware / controller setup, seems to really free you up to get creative.
This guy really showcases what makes Reason such an awesome DAW. I've been a huge fan of this software since version 3 and still love it till this day. Ready for 13!
Holy Shit! That was pretty legit sounding right there. Very advanced for me as a beginner but very cool to see what's possible when you're a pro and know the DAW and its capabilities really well, and know how to assemble things and route signals to get what you want from it.
hey, did you by any chance find good tutorials that go more into the jungle directions but are also aimed at beginners? i really dunno where to start right now :)
If Jon's interested, hire this guy as a produce manager, advisor, patch & device designer or whatever! Awesome music & videos and his passion for Reason shines through!!! :)
i used to load a loop in dr rex, copy loop to track, then change the loop. the rhythm would be that of the first loop, but all the sounds or clips would be from the 2nd. then quantize. it could create some interesting beats.
That's in my own drum combinator..but maybe next time I will pass that on to you guys. Google "blu mar ten jungle jungle" and you can find some cool D n B sounds from way back👍
"THAT SOUND!" 😅haha - love the video! Very well done and really evaporating REASON LOVE from start to finish. Would love to see more content like this.
Excellent tutorial thanks! 😀❤ I've always found it a bit tedious trying to manipulate breaks and create variants within Reason but this seems like an a much easier and fun way. As for where that 1995 sound comes from, this is the earliest tune I've heard it in : ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-23Ti-T3T8h0.html
This is a great tutorial showing some excellent techniques! One thing I always wonder when I hear jungle / d&b is whether anyone actively buys or listens to it. It seems like a genre that is almost defined by sounding very similar to everyone else - if it doesn't stick to similar tempos, beats, chops, and production values it's not in the genre anymore. Is there an active audience who can tell one junglist from another or is this all just streaming playlist background music for hip salons these days?