How do you sort drum samples?
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- KVRist
- 177 posts since 11 Feb, 2005
Hi,
I noticed that I have some folders with only kicks, snares or hihats in it. Would you sort it? How would you do it? I thought I could maybe sort them into folders that describe the sound (i.e. "909ish", "snappy", metallic", "full", "oldschool" for snares). How would you name them?
bye,
Chris
I noticed that I have some folders with only kicks, snares or hihats in it. Would you sort it? How would you do it? I thought I could maybe sort them into folders that describe the sound (i.e. "909ish", "snappy", metallic", "full", "oldschool" for snares). How would you name them?
bye,
Chris
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- KVRAF
- 6937 posts since 4 Jun, 2004 from Utrecht, Holland
Does it really matter??
I would probably name them differently than you would 
My MusicCalc is temporary offline.
We are the KVR collective. Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.
We are the KVR collective. Resistance is futile. You will be assimilated.
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- KVRAF
- 10597 posts since 13 Jun, 2004 from Alberto Balsam
random shit like "Gaykittens.wav" or "omglol.wav" to keep things interesting
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Reverse Engineer Reverse Engineer https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=9129
- KVRAF
- 4968 posts since 23 Sep, 2003 from Glasgow
I have a folder with 1,917 single hit samples (hats, kicks, snares, pings, pipes etc etc) but very few (maybe 50 tops) have what could be called a descriptive name. Most are like "ghir.wav or 534634.wav or xy1.wav, xy2.wav and so on.) Like chase says, it keeps things interesting when you can't pinpoint a single sample you want.
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- KVRian
- 991 posts since 16 Feb, 2005 from USA
i keep my drums in the folders they came in when i got them. i guess you are talking about random drum sounds you acquire. for those, i just made a folder called net drums and throw them all in there.
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- KVRian
- 701 posts since 2 Apr, 2004 from London
.[quote]Like chase says, it keeps things interesting when you can't pinpoint a single sample you want.[/quote
Yeah sometimes randomness is the key. It can lead you interesting directions, or just confuse and fustrate you.
Yeah sometimes randomness is the key. It can lead you interesting directions, or just confuse and fustrate you.
Musicmaker: "I'm playing all the right notes, but not neccesarily in the right order" Eric Morecame : Comedy Bhoddisatva
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Reverse Engineer Reverse Engineer https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=9129
- KVRAF
- 4968 posts since 23 Sep, 2003 from Glasgow
It's not half as frustrating though as when you get the thought in your head that says "why the f**k does everything i do sound like something everyones already done"yemski wrote:Yeah sometimes randomness is the key. It can lead you interesting directions, or just confuse and fustrate you.
- KVRAF
- 9064 posts since 1 Aug, 2003
Sort drum samples? Just say no.
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- KVRian
- 701 posts since 2 Apr, 2004 from London
Well, if this begin to happen divorce yourself from what everyone else is doing. Take influences from other areas of culture, books,film the visual arts, theatre etc. Or alternatively listen to music you would'nt normally listen to for inspiration,Ethiopian panpipe gangsta rap or Country and western drum and bass. You could also try what I just did and fling a series of random genres together to form a new one. Who knows maybe you could discover something you might actually like.It's not half as frustrating though as when you get the thought in your head that says "why the fcuk does everything i do sound like something everyones already done"
Musicmaker: "I'm playing all the right notes, but not neccesarily in the right order" Eric Morecame : Comedy Bhoddisatva
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Reverse Engineer Reverse Engineer https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=9129
- KVRAF
- 4968 posts since 23 Sep, 2003 from Glasgow
That's more or less was i do as a "hobby"yemski wrote:Well, if this begin to happen divorce yourself from what everyone else is doing. Take influences from other areas of culture, books,film the visual arts, theatre etc. Or alternatively listen to music you would'nt normally listen to for inspiration,Ethiopian panpipe gangsta rap or Country and western drum and bass. You could also try what I just did and fling a series of random genres together to form a new one. Who knows maybe you could discover something you might actually like.It's not half as frustrating though as when you get the thought in your head that says "why the fcuk does everything i do sound like something everyones already done"
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- KVRist
- 263 posts since 17 Jun, 2005 from Holding your humor hostage at your home
Easy, by function, snare samples under that and so on.
Black text on a white canvas, do racist people close their eyes when they read a book?
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- KVRist
- 34 posts since 9 Apr, 2005
yeah youve all hit on the point of sorting too strictly. But doing randomly i catch myself overusing ones I am familiar with, ignoring others, and wasting time previewing ones Id forgotten when Im sick of the ones I get stuck using.
so ... try a functional approach - describe obvious limitations AND unique characteristics of the sample in the actual filename: limitations (cut for no natural decay; hh tip closed etc) and unique characteristics (what reminds you of - 909). that way youll instantly know which ones are inflexible and which aint.
plus if you break em into too many folders its hard to constistently compare. maybe only folder differentiate kit piece types "kck snr tom hh cymb ride skin shaker woodblck"
approach is undrated
so ... try a functional approach - describe obvious limitations AND unique characteristics of the sample in the actual filename: limitations (cut for no natural decay; hh tip closed etc) and unique characteristics (what reminds you of - 909). that way youll instantly know which ones are inflexible and which aint.
plus if you break em into too many folders its hard to constistently compare. maybe only folder differentiate kit piece types "kck snr tom hh cymb ride skin shaker woodblck"
approach is undrated
definition of arrogance = 'when curtains rise I commence'
