Nice! I was just wanting to learn more about DnB-style snares, so this is perfect timing. As always, very clearly presented, and the info can be applied to other VSTs and DAWs. Also, nice cactus.
Really informative tutorial, def one of the best I've seen. Can I ask, would you then add reverb to the whole snare after that, or is what you've added sufficient. Thanks
If I understand what you've written... a lot of people use Ableton as it is the most advanced and user friendly DAW on the market presently. It has the newest update with the launch of Live 11 earlier this year. It is great not only for arrangement production but also for live performance. It's an incredibly powerful DAW.
@@BeckySaifMusic Ok seems you see ableton as the best daw for this modern age and genre very interesting what are your views of logic? excellent content please keep it coming?.
This is a very good tutorial! I only have 2 nitpicks though, even though they are subjective. Since about 2019 or so, the body of snares has gotten significantly shorter with a more pronounced pitch drop and related envelope, for a tighter sound that has still has body especially when mixed with a tuned acoustic snare. That way it takes up less space in the frequency and time realm, allowing the other instruments to have more space, since we will commonly sidechain the snare to the mid-range basses and other synth sounds. The other thing that sounds a bit off to me is that the transient was way too loud compared to the other elements. It can be lower in volume, especially if you add a transient shaper at the end of the processing chain.