UBANKRECORDS wrote:I'm a new MPC user and love it's features but a lot of it is difficult and confusing.
Of course! It's a big machine it does lots .. so does the Triton
Like trying to make a melody.
A melody? Huh? A melody is just a series of notes ... ?
I can never get my pads chopped like that dude Boondoc. Mine will just cut and sound awful even if hitting the pads at the exact count. I'm sure I'm doing something wrong
Oh do you mean chopping up a sample and creating a riff (or "melody" as you call it) out of it? If so well yeah that's the creative bit, that's the hard bit. For every dope chop Boondoc pulls off he probably makes 25 duff ones. You've gotta sift through the garbage to find the treasure my friend. Different machines might help you in the actual chopping but no machine is going to help you find the right thing to chop or the right way to chop it.
When I play the meloding when recording it sounds dope because I'm in sync but when it plays back its all outta wack.
Sounds like you have some kind of quantise on. Turn off quantise and you should get out what you put in.
The sampling is cool but creating keys and melodies with it isn't too impressive. I messed with a Triton and was BLOWN AWAY!
I'm not sure you can really compare the Triton and the 5k? You were blown away by what, the built-in sounds or the sequencing and sampling facilities? ROMplers like the Triton are designed to be impressive so you try them out in a shop and buy them on the spot. They do stuff like cover everything in big reverbs. Soudns great but you couldn't actually use the sound like that in a track, it wouldn't sit well.
I'm not for certain yet because I need a good sampler, I love the drums its just the melody part. I can never get my pads chopped like that dude Boondoc. Mine will just cut and sound awful even if hitting the pads at the exact count. I'm sure I'm doing something wrong.... Thanks guys
If you want to do what Boondoc does the Triton 'aint gonna help you! But it'd be a nice addition to the 5k. You might be doing something wrong I don't know. The whole chop sample to pad thing takes two approaches both ending in the same intention. You take a sample and you either chop it into exactly equal parts or you chop it up by transients (drum peaks) or melodic content (notes) and then ... here's the creative bit ... you stick em on the pads and bash the little devils any way you like until you get something interesting. If you aint sounding like Boondoc (or whoever) it's because you just aint good enough yet.
But if you keep working at it ... you will be.