ok, so as far as cubase goes (which I also have at home) how can you make
bass sounds in it.
I am using purely software and experimenting with Fruity and Cubase.
I would prefer Cuabse as it is one of the market leaders in music
production...
do you just play your drum loop and in realtime record a bass line?



-----Original Message-----
From: Jimbo's Drunk again [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 2:54 PM
To: Drum & Bass Arena Discussion List
Subject: [dnb-prod] Re: Those amazing b-lines



Well, i don't use fruity and not too sure how it all works.  I, like many 
others am a cubase user.
The way i make basslines is to use either a virtual synth or hardware synth,

sampler and mess with them.

I can take it by this question that you have just started out in production 
side of things.  Don't worry, it will all present itself to you in time.
Put a new question out to some fruity users out there and they might help 
you.
Any cubase, reason, synth or hardware probs, give me a shout mate.

If there's a sampler type thing in fruity, get a sample cd and use that to 
produce your bass sounds.

Jimbo :o)





>From: "Johnson, Matthew" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: "Drum & Bass Arena Discussion List" 
><[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: "Drum & Bass Arena Discussion List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Subject: [dnb-prod] Re: Those amazing b-lines
>Date: Tue, 28 Jan 2003 14:33:29 -0000
>
>I am just wondering how to go about creating a bass-line over a drum 
>pattern
>I have already made.
>For example, lets say I am using Fruity Loops and have put a drum loop down
>at 180 bpm.
>now I want to create a bass-line over it.
>
>to do this at the moment, I just select the bass sound from the library and
>put it in the pattern window by placing it at different notes and cutting
>itself so that it doesn't overlap with previous notes I have programmed.
>
>I just want to now how the 'professionals' go about creating a bass line 
>for
>a track.
>and I mean an idiots-guide style instruction!!! ;-)
>
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Jimbo's Drunk again [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: Tuesday, January 28, 2003 12:46 PM
>To: Drum & Bass Arena Discussion List
>Subject: [dnb-prod] Re: Those amazing b-lines
>
>
>
>Please explain a little more.
>
>you see, you can have many types of bass sounds with many different note
>variations.  A piano sound isn't a very good sound to produce sub
>frequencies.
>With regards to how long should you keep a bass sound going, you have to be
>more clear.  Play with the ADSR to see what kind bass sound sounds best.
>Jimbo :o)
>
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