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How to Chop Drum Breaks to Build Custom Drum Racks

  • marshallsoundz
  • Apr 4, 2017
  • 4 min read

Leave those lifeless preset drums behind and learn how to sample percussion.

Any producer who thinks outside the box knows that samples are a great source of inspiration.

I’ve sometimes found myself using the same drum libraries for weeks—and creativity slowing fading away. Although drum machines sound powerful, it’s hard sometimes to make dynamic, organic sounding rhythms. And let’s be real… there’s only one Buddy Rich.

The best way to get out of this rut is by using some groovy sampled drum breaks.

This article will teach you how to easily introduce rhythmic sampling in your productions. You’ll learn

  1. how to sample drum breaks in your DAW

  2. how to make your own custom drum rack.

This will give your sound more richness and originality—that pizzazz it was missing.


But before we get into it, let’s do a brief history lesson on the origins of the drum break and hear some examples.

What’s a Break?

In music, a break is an instrumental or percussive section at the beginning or middle of a song. It’s a breather for the musicians, an ‘open’ part. Often most of the elements of the song are removed and you only have the percussion or a simple melody.

Breaks are very popular in jazz, funksoul, and current electronic music.

For the music producer, a break—whether melodic or rhythmic—is a universe of creative possibilities.

The drum break is among the most iconic samples out there. From 90’s hip-hop to current pop, drum breaks have been one of the most recurring elements in modern production—and it always works wonderfully.

Here’s a good example of break sampling. Listen to the drum break from the beginning of The Sorcerer of Isis by Power of Zeus. Then hear how it was sampled, sped up, chopped and reused in In The House by Pete Rock (from 00:35):



In Search of the Perfect Drum Break

Now that you know what a drum break is, it’s time to find the perfect one for your music.

Nowadays, there’s tons of different ways to find drum breaks. Here are the simplest ones: download a pack online (like the free sample packs from Wavy) or research what samples are the most used by your favorite artists on (bless you, WhoSampled!). Be careful with copyright issues though.

Now that you found your drum break, let’s put it to work!

How to Sample a Drum Break

Screen-Shot-Wavy copia

The sample I’m using for this example is dive break, included in the #moments Wavy pack.http://blog.landr.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Dive-Break.mp3

  1. Import your drum break recording on a track in your DAW. I’m using Ableton Live in Session View.

  2. Listen back to it and find the part you want to sample.

  3. In your Sample Editor on the bottom: Double click on the exact spot you want your sample to start—this will create a Warp Marker.

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  1. Right click on the Warp Marker that you just made and select “Set 1.1.1. here.” This will make your clip start there each time you play it back. Now that you’ve established the beginning of your break, let’s find the end.

  2. To do that, play the clip as many times as you need to figure out its tempo. Do it with a metronome or mentally by tapping the rhythm with your hand or foot. For now, ignore the measures that appear on the bar above your track.

tapping-gif

For your sample to be neat and keep its groove when you loop it, it should be 1, 2, 4, 8, 16 or 32 beats. In our case, we want our sample to be 4 beats long (1 bar), so the end will be after the 4th beat.

  1. Double click to put another Warp Marker where you want your sample to end.

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Now that you have a beginning and an end point to your sample, let’s loop it.

  1. Look at the bar above your track and drag the end Warp Marker to the nearest measure—either 2, 3, 5, 9, 17, 33.

Look at it this way: if you drag your Warp Marker to the left, your sample will be sped up and shorter, if you drag it to the right it’ll be longer and slowed down.

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  1. Click on the beginning and select everything you’ve got between your two Warp Markers (your whole sample).

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  1. Right click and choose “Loop Selection.”

Turn on your metronome by clicking on the two circles next to 4/4 on the top left corner. Play back your sample to make sure it flows well.http://blog.landr.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Dive-Break-Looped.mp3

Congrats! You’ve just looped your first sampled break.

It sounds good? If the answer is yes, use this break as the starting point for a new track.


Since the possibilities are infinite, you have to work a little harder to make something original. So let’s not stop here.

Your sample contains tons of interesting drum sounds. Why not make a custom drum rack with it? For this you’ll need to learn to do some chopping.

How to Use Chopping

Basically, we’re gonna cut each sound one by one to make a different percussion pattern with them—all this thanks to MIDI.

  1. First, find each drum hit in your sample and identify them with a Warp Marker (double click). The more Warp Markers you’ll add, the more your sounds will be diverse and dynamic in the next step.

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  1. Right click on your sample and select “Slice to New MIDI track.” Then choose the option “Create one slice per: Warp Marker.”

MIDI SLICE EN

And there you have it! You just made a drum rack with the organic and rich sounds from your sample. Take a minute to identify at least a kick, snare and hi hat.http://blog.landr.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Dive-Break-Slices.mp3

Cool, right?

Creating Organically

Your turn to shine now. Experiment!

Change the tempo. Create different rhythms. Combine the sounds of your break with elements from other breaks. Layer drum samples with hits from digital drum machines (claps, kicks) to get a fuller sound. Let your drum break inspire your bassline and lead melodies.http://blog.landr.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Dive-Break-New-pattern.mp3

Add melodic elements from other samples. Add effects. Use transposition. Make loops and chops. When it comes down to it, chopping is a technique applicable to any sound. Why not make a drum rack from bird sounds? Chirp clap boom clap.http://blog.landr.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Dive-Break-Song.mp3

In theory, sampling is pretty simple, but it’s a whole art form. The more you do it, the better you get at it.  Discover the sampling wizard in you and make your drums come alive!

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