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View Full Version : berghain/ostgut ton style kicks



CTRLS
18-01-2010, 09:34 AM
I've been trying to reverse engineer those big verby kicks (prime examples being len faki's bx3 and fengler's twisted bleach) but am coming up a little short. It sounds like they're midrange kicks on top of massive compressed 808s with processed verb. is there a specific technique to this or is just it a case of good craftmanship? how'd you guys go about it?

force
23-01-2010, 04:22 PM
Bump

I'd be interested to hear about some techniques for this as well

CTRLS
24-01-2010, 12:03 PM
Bump

I'd be interested to hear about some techniques for this as well

with sound they get i'm worried its one of those 'you need oldschool analog' cases.

one thing that's getting me pretty close is adding bit of verb to a kick, then parallel compressing it harddd. that gets the verb tail all distorted and if mixed in quietly with the original kick you can get a nice full, pumping sorta sound.

SlavikSvensk
25-01-2010, 02:23 AM
i don't think they are using actual 808s.

CTRLS
25-01-2010, 11:06 AM
i don't think they are using actual 808s.

what makes you say that?

for the low end layer it seems to me what you really need is just a basstone without too hard an attack. so wether its an overcompressed/verbed 808 or filtered acoustic rock kick or whatever shouldnt make a huge difference.

Jay Pace
25-01-2010, 06:49 PM
I think its more they've created a bassline and fused it together with a kick.
You could pretty much make this by making a kick with a big tail and envelope shaping the tail

Or you could just make a big rumbling sub, and have the kick tuned in so that it fuses with the bassline and sounds one and the same thing.

a X cell
25-01-2010, 07:02 PM
I think its more they've created a bassline and fused it together with a kick.
You could pretty much make this by making a kick with a big tail and envelope shaping the tail

Or you could just make a big rumbling sub, and have the kick tuned in so that it fuses with the bassline and sounds one and the same thing.
I listen to BX3 and it seems like it's this.
Some sort of sidechain with a tuned kick to the bass.

Veber
19-11-2010, 05:38 AM
a

Veber
19-11-2010, 05:39 AM
Or you could just make a big rumbling sub, and have the kick tuned in so that it fuses with the bassline and sounds one and the same thing.

I get good results with this idea.

Mattias_Fridell
19-11-2010, 11:34 AM
Use a 909 and or 808 kick, drop the decay on em. Add a reverb with much pre-delay (so it bumps in off-beat, measure and compare with offbeat hihats) and late / early reflections, set a lowpass filter in mono to about 200-400 Hz (add a high-pass and cut away 0-50 (or more) on the verb channel and send to the kick (experiment with the send value, it doesn't sound good using way too much).
Compress the kick a bit and remove some attack, add a low pass filter or EQ on that one too to reduce the click / attack transients and boost a little around the 200-300hZ while you remove some from 150-170hZ.

Experiment what frequencies works best for the kick in the current track or to the current kick. Notice you can get a nice effect not using the reverbs in mono for this but it gets more tricky with the low end phase problems but you can get around it, creates much nice space.
You can also add a distortion effect to the kick and use it in an additive way. Best is to not make the distortion too obvious, just create some grit to it.

There's lots of ways but the above is pretty much what I do usually.

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